[New-bugs-announce] [issue21204] published examples don't work

jmaki report at bugs.python.org
Sat Apr 12 03:50:40 CEST 2014


New submission from jmaki:

Would you consider putting examples given in official documentation as part of release testing?  e.g. (from official python.org documentation):
----------------- snip ---------------------

An example of how a pool of worker processes can each run a SimpleHTTPServer.HttpServer instance while sharing a single listening socket.

#
# Example where a pool of http servers share a single listening socket
#
# On Windows this module depends on the ability to pickle a socket
# object so that the worker processes can inherit a copy of the server
# object.  (We import `multiprocessing.reduction` to enable this pickling.)
#
# Not sure if we should synchronize access to `socket.accept()` method by
# using a process-shared lock -- does not seem to be necessary.
#
# Copyright (c) 2006-2008, R Oudkerk
# All rights reserved.
#

import os
import sys

from multiprocessing import Process, current_process, freeze_support
from BaseHTTPServer import HTTPServer
from SimpleHTTPServer import SimpleHTTPRequestHandler

if sys.platform == 'win32':
    import multiprocessing.reduction    # make sockets pickable/inheritable


def note(format, *args):
    sys.stderr.write('[%s]\t%s\n' % (current_process().name, format%args))


class RequestHandler(SimpleHTTPRequestHandler):
    # we override log_message() to show which process is handling the request
    def log_message(self, format, *args):
        note(format, *args)

def serve_forever(server):
    note('starting server')
    try:
        server.serve_forever()
    except KeyboardInterrupt:
        pass


def runpool(address, number_of_processes):
    # create a single server object -- children will each inherit a copy
    server = HTTPServer(address, RequestHandler)

    # create child processes to act as workers
    for i in range(number_of_processes-1):
        Process(target=serve_forever, args=(server,)).start()

    # main process also acts as a worker
    serve_forever(server)


def test():
    DIR = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), '..')
    ADDRESS = ('localhost', 8000)
    NUMBER_OF_PROCESSES = 4

    print 'Serving at http://%s:%d using %d worker processes' % \
          (ADDRESS[0], ADDRESS[1], NUMBER_OF_PROCESSES)
    print 'To exit press Ctrl-' + ['C', 'Break'][sys.platform=='win32']

    os.chdir(DIR)
    runpool(ADDRESS, NUMBER_OF_PROCESSES)


if __name__ == '__main__':
    freeze_support()
    test()
----------------- snip ---------------------
does not work on windows...

Regards,
John

----------
components: Cross-Build
messages: 215957
nosy: jmaki
priority: normal
severity: normal
status: open
title: published examples don't work
type: behavior
versions: Python 2.7

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Python tracker <report at bugs.python.org>
<http://bugs.python.org/issue21204>
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