diff options
author | James Vasile <james@hackervisions.org> | 2011-09-29 23:40:39 -0400 |
---|---|---|
committer | James Vasile <james@hackervisions.org> | 2011-09-29 23:40:39 -0400 |
commit | c36a9146a0f58dee7ba1bff9ac7c6745d7b06845 (patch) | |
tree | 7036fc42c0ed906bf63a46b0a0a1f4b6939094dc /vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process | |
parent | 73f273430864926d0d47339af871b41b224ad9ec (diff) |
add cherrypy in the vendor dir and a symlink to it
Diffstat (limited to 'vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process')
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/__init__.py | 14 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/plugins.py | 681 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/servers.py | 418 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/win32.py | 174 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/wspbus.py | 393 |
5 files changed, 1680 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/__init__.py b/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/__init__.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f15b123 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/__init__.py @@ -0,0 +1,14 @@ +"""Site container for an HTTP server. + +A Web Site Process Bus object is used to connect applications, servers, +and frameworks with site-wide services such as daemonization, process +reload, signal handling, drop privileges, PID file management, logging +for all of these, and many more. + +The 'plugins' module defines a few abstract and concrete services for +use with the bus. Some use tool-specific channels; see the documentation +for each class. +""" + +from cherrypy.process.wspbus import bus +from cherrypy.process import plugins, servers diff --git a/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/plugins.py b/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/plugins.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..488958e --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/plugins.py @@ -0,0 +1,681 @@ +"""Site services for use with a Web Site Process Bus.""" + +import os +import re +import signal as _signal +import sys +import time +import threading + +from cherrypy._cpcompat import basestring, get_daemon, get_thread_ident, ntob, set + +# _module__file__base is used by Autoreload to make +# absolute any filenames retrieved from sys.modules which are not +# already absolute paths. This is to work around Python's quirk +# of importing the startup script and using a relative filename +# for it in sys.modules. +# +# Autoreload examines sys.modules afresh every time it runs. If an application +# changes the current directory by executing os.chdir(), then the next time +# Autoreload runs, it will not be able to find any filenames which are +# not absolute paths, because the current directory is not the same as when the +# module was first imported. Autoreload will then wrongly conclude the file has +# "changed", and initiate the shutdown/re-exec sequence. +# See ticket #917. +# For this workaround to have a decent probability of success, this module +# needs to be imported as early as possible, before the app has much chance +# to change the working directory. +_module__file__base = os.getcwd() + + +class SimplePlugin(object): + """Plugin base class which auto-subscribes methods for known channels.""" + + bus = None + """A :class:`Bus <cherrypy.process.wspbus.Bus>`, usually cherrypy.engine.""" + + def __init__(self, bus): + self.bus = bus + + def subscribe(self): + """Register this object as a (multi-channel) listener on the bus.""" + for channel in self.bus.listeners: + # Subscribe self.start, self.exit, etc. if present. + method = getattr(self, channel, None) + if method is not None: + self.bus.subscribe(channel, method) + + def unsubscribe(self): + """Unregister this object as a listener on the bus.""" + for channel in self.bus.listeners: + # Unsubscribe self.start, self.exit, etc. if present. + method = getattr(self, channel, None) + if method is not None: + self.bus.unsubscribe(channel, method) + + + +class SignalHandler(object): + """Register bus channels (and listeners) for system signals. + + You can modify what signals your application listens for, and what it does + when it receives signals, by modifying :attr:`SignalHandler.handlers`, + a dict of {signal name: callback} pairs. The default set is:: + + handlers = {'SIGTERM': self.bus.exit, + 'SIGHUP': self.handle_SIGHUP, + 'SIGUSR1': self.bus.graceful, + } + + The :func:`SignalHandler.handle_SIGHUP`` method calls + :func:`bus.restart()<cherrypy.process.wspbus.Bus.restart>` + if the process is daemonized, but + :func:`bus.exit()<cherrypy.process.wspbus.Bus.exit>` + if the process is attached to a TTY. This is because Unix window + managers tend to send SIGHUP to terminal windows when the user closes them. + + Feel free to add signals which are not available on every platform. The + :class:`SignalHandler` will ignore errors raised from attempting to register + handlers for unknown signals. + """ + + handlers = {} + """A map from signal names (e.g. 'SIGTERM') to handlers (e.g. bus.exit).""" + + signals = {} + """A map from signal numbers to names.""" + + for k, v in vars(_signal).items(): + if k.startswith('SIG') and not k.startswith('SIG_'): + signals[v] = k + del k, v + + def __init__(self, bus): + self.bus = bus + # Set default handlers + self.handlers = {'SIGTERM': self.bus.exit, + 'SIGHUP': self.handle_SIGHUP, + 'SIGUSR1': self.bus.graceful, + } + + if sys.platform[:4] == 'java': + del self.handlers['SIGUSR1'] + self.handlers['SIGUSR2'] = self.bus.graceful + self.bus.log("SIGUSR1 cannot be set on the JVM platform. " + "Using SIGUSR2 instead.") + self.handlers['SIGINT'] = self._jython_SIGINT_handler + + self._previous_handlers = {} + + def _jython_SIGINT_handler(self, signum=None, frame=None): + # See http://bugs.jython.org/issue1313 + self.bus.log('Keyboard Interrupt: shutting down bus') + self.bus.exit() + + def subscribe(self): + """Subscribe self.handlers to signals.""" + for sig, func in self.handlers.items(): + try: + self.set_handler(sig, func) + except ValueError: + pass + + def unsubscribe(self): + """Unsubscribe self.handlers from signals.""" + for signum, handler in self._previous_handlers.items(): + signame = self.signals[signum] + + if handler is None: + self.bus.log("Restoring %s handler to SIG_DFL." % signame) + handler = _signal.SIG_DFL + else: + self.bus.log("Restoring %s handler %r." % (signame, handler)) + + try: + our_handler = _signal.signal(signum, handler) + if our_handler is None: + self.bus.log("Restored old %s handler %r, but our " + "handler was not registered." % + (signame, handler), level=30) + except ValueError: + self.bus.log("Unable to restore %s handler %r." % + (signame, handler), level=40, traceback=True) + + def set_handler(self, signal, listener=None): + """Subscribe a handler for the given signal (number or name). + + If the optional 'listener' argument is provided, it will be + subscribed as a listener for the given signal's channel. + + If the given signal name or number is not available on the current + platform, ValueError is raised. + """ + if isinstance(signal, basestring): + signum = getattr(_signal, signal, None) + if signum is None: + raise ValueError("No such signal: %r" % signal) + signame = signal + else: + try: + signame = self.signals[signal] + except KeyError: + raise ValueError("No such signal: %r" % signal) + signum = signal + + prev = _signal.signal(signum, self._handle_signal) + self._previous_handlers[signum] = prev + + if listener is not None: + self.bus.log("Listening for %s." % signame) + self.bus.subscribe(signame, listener) + + def _handle_signal(self, signum=None, frame=None): + """Python signal handler (self.set_handler subscribes it for you).""" + signame = self.signals[signum] + self.bus.log("Caught signal %s." % signame) + self.bus.publish(signame) + + def handle_SIGHUP(self): + """Restart if daemonized, else exit.""" + if os.isatty(sys.stdin.fileno()): + # not daemonized (may be foreground or background) + self.bus.log("SIGHUP caught but not daemonized. Exiting.") + self.bus.exit() + else: + self.bus.log("SIGHUP caught while daemonized. Restarting.") + self.bus.restart() + + +try: + import pwd, grp +except ImportError: + pwd, grp = None, None + + +class DropPrivileges(SimplePlugin): + """Drop privileges. uid/gid arguments not available on Windows. + + Special thanks to Gavin Baker: http://antonym.org/node/100. + """ + + def __init__(self, bus, umask=None, uid=None, gid=None): + SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus) + self.finalized = False + self.uid = uid + self.gid = gid + self.umask = umask + + def _get_uid(self): + return self._uid + def _set_uid(self, val): + if val is not None: + if pwd is None: + self.bus.log("pwd module not available; ignoring uid.", + level=30) + val = None + elif isinstance(val, basestring): + val = pwd.getpwnam(val)[2] + self._uid = val + uid = property(_get_uid, _set_uid, + doc="The uid under which to run. Availability: Unix.") + + def _get_gid(self): + return self._gid + def _set_gid(self, val): + if val is not None: + if grp is None: + self.bus.log("grp module not available; ignoring gid.", + level=30) + val = None + elif isinstance(val, basestring): + val = grp.getgrnam(val)[2] + self._gid = val + gid = property(_get_gid, _set_gid, + doc="The gid under which to run. Availability: Unix.") + + def _get_umask(self): + return self._umask + def _set_umask(self, val): + if val is not None: + try: + os.umask + except AttributeError: + self.bus.log("umask function not available; ignoring umask.", + level=30) + val = None + self._umask = val + umask = property(_get_umask, _set_umask, + doc="""The default permission mode for newly created files and directories. + + Usually expressed in octal format, for example, ``0644``. + Availability: Unix, Windows. + """) + + def start(self): + # uid/gid + def current_ids(): + """Return the current (uid, gid) if available.""" + name, group = None, None + if pwd: + name = pwd.getpwuid(os.getuid())[0] + if grp: + group = grp.getgrgid(os.getgid())[0] + return name, group + + if self.finalized: + if not (self.uid is None and self.gid is None): + self.bus.log('Already running as uid: %r gid: %r' % + current_ids()) + else: + if self.uid is None and self.gid is None: + if pwd or grp: + self.bus.log('uid/gid not set', level=30) + else: + self.bus.log('Started as uid: %r gid: %r' % current_ids()) + if self.gid is not None: + os.setgid(self.gid) + os.setgroups([]) + if self.uid is not None: + os.setuid(self.uid) + self.bus.log('Running as uid: %r gid: %r' % current_ids()) + + # umask + if self.finalized: + if self.umask is not None: + self.bus.log('umask already set to: %03o' % self.umask) + else: + if self.umask is None: + self.bus.log('umask not set', level=30) + else: + old_umask = os.umask(self.umask) + self.bus.log('umask old: %03o, new: %03o' % + (old_umask, self.umask)) + + self.finalized = True + # This is slightly higher than the priority for server.start + # in order to facilitate the most common use: starting on a low + # port (which requires root) and then dropping to another user. + start.priority = 77 + + +class Daemonizer(SimplePlugin): + """Daemonize the running script. + + Use this with a Web Site Process Bus via:: + + Daemonizer(bus).subscribe() + + When this component finishes, the process is completely decoupled from + the parent environment. Please note that when this component is used, + the return code from the parent process will still be 0 if a startup + error occurs in the forked children. Errors in the initial daemonizing + process still return proper exit codes. Therefore, if you use this + plugin to daemonize, don't use the return code as an accurate indicator + of whether the process fully started. In fact, that return code only + indicates if the process succesfully finished the first fork. + """ + + def __init__(self, bus, stdin='/dev/null', stdout='/dev/null', + stderr='/dev/null'): + SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus) + self.stdin = stdin + self.stdout = stdout + self.stderr = stderr + self.finalized = False + + def start(self): + if self.finalized: + self.bus.log('Already deamonized.') + + # forking has issues with threads: + # http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/000095399/functions/fork.html + # "The general problem with making fork() work in a multi-threaded + # world is what to do with all of the threads..." + # So we check for active threads: + if threading.activeCount() != 1: + self.bus.log('There are %r active threads. ' + 'Daemonizing now may cause strange failures.' % + threading.enumerate(), level=30) + + # See http://www.erlenstar.demon.co.uk/unix/faq_2.html#SEC16 + # (or http://www.faqs.org/faqs/unix-faq/programmer/faq/ section 1.7) + # and http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/66012 + + # Finish up with the current stdout/stderr + sys.stdout.flush() + sys.stderr.flush() + + # Do first fork. + try: + pid = os.fork() + if pid == 0: + # This is the child process. Continue. + pass + else: + # This is the first parent. Exit, now that we've forked. + self.bus.log('Forking once.') + os._exit(0) + except OSError: + # Python raises OSError rather than returning negative numbers. + exc = sys.exc_info()[1] + sys.exit("%s: fork #1 failed: (%d) %s\n" + % (sys.argv[0], exc.errno, exc.strerror)) + + os.setsid() + + # Do second fork + try: + pid = os.fork() + if pid > 0: + self.bus.log('Forking twice.') + os._exit(0) # Exit second parent + except OSError: + exc = sys.exc_info()[1] + sys.exit("%s: fork #2 failed: (%d) %s\n" + % (sys.argv[0], exc.errno, exc.strerror)) + + os.chdir("/") + os.umask(0) + + si = open(self.stdin, "r") + so = open(self.stdout, "a+") + se = open(self.stderr, "a+") + + # os.dup2(fd, fd2) will close fd2 if necessary, + # so we don't explicitly close stdin/out/err. + # See http://docs.python.org/lib/os-fd-ops.html + os.dup2(si.fileno(), sys.stdin.fileno()) + os.dup2(so.fileno(), sys.stdout.fileno()) + os.dup2(se.fileno(), sys.stderr.fileno()) + + self.bus.log('Daemonized to PID: %s' % os.getpid()) + self.finalized = True + start.priority = 65 + + +class PIDFile(SimplePlugin): + """Maintain a PID file via a WSPBus.""" + + def __init__(self, bus, pidfile): + SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus) + self.pidfile = pidfile + self.finalized = False + + def start(self): + pid = os.getpid() + if self.finalized: + self.bus.log('PID %r already written to %r.' % (pid, self.pidfile)) + else: + open(self.pidfile, "wb").write(ntob("%s" % pid, 'utf8')) + self.bus.log('PID %r written to %r.' % (pid, self.pidfile)) + self.finalized = True + start.priority = 70 + + def exit(self): + try: + os.remove(self.pidfile) + self.bus.log('PID file removed: %r.' % self.pidfile) + except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit): + raise + except: + pass + + +class PerpetualTimer(threading._Timer): + """A responsive subclass of threading._Timer whose run() method repeats. + + Use this timer only when you really need a very interruptible timer; + this checks its 'finished' condition up to 20 times a second, which can + results in pretty high CPU usage + """ + + def run(self): + while True: + self.finished.wait(self.interval) + if self.finished.isSet(): + return + try: + self.function(*self.args, **self.kwargs) + except Exception: + self.bus.log("Error in perpetual timer thread function %r." % + self.function, level=40, traceback=True) + # Quit on first error to avoid massive logs. + raise + + +class BackgroundTask(threading.Thread): + """A subclass of threading.Thread whose run() method repeats. + + Use this class for most repeating tasks. It uses time.sleep() to wait + for each interval, which isn't very responsive; that is, even if you call + self.cancel(), you'll have to wait until the sleep() call finishes before + the thread stops. To compensate, it defaults to being daemonic, which means + it won't delay stopping the whole process. + """ + + def __init__(self, interval, function, args=[], kwargs={}): + threading.Thread.__init__(self) + self.interval = interval + self.function = function + self.args = args + self.kwargs = kwargs + self.running = False + + def cancel(self): + self.running = False + + def run(self): + self.running = True + while self.running: + time.sleep(self.interval) + if not self.running: + return + try: + self.function(*self.args, **self.kwargs) + except Exception: + self.bus.log("Error in background task thread function %r." % + self.function, level=40, traceback=True) + # Quit on first error to avoid massive logs. + raise + + def _set_daemon(self): + return True + + +class Monitor(SimplePlugin): + """WSPBus listener to periodically run a callback in its own thread.""" + + callback = None + """The function to call at intervals.""" + + frequency = 60 + """The time in seconds between callback runs.""" + + thread = None + """A :class:`BackgroundTask<cherrypy.process.plugins.BackgroundTask>` thread.""" + + def __init__(self, bus, callback, frequency=60, name=None): + SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus) + self.callback = callback + self.frequency = frequency + self.thread = None + self.name = name + + def start(self): + """Start our callback in its own background thread.""" + if self.frequency > 0: + threadname = self.name or self.__class__.__name__ + if self.thread is None: + self.thread = BackgroundTask(self.frequency, self.callback) + self.thread.bus = self.bus + self.thread.setName(threadname) + self.thread.start() + self.bus.log("Started monitor thread %r." % threadname) + else: + self.bus.log("Monitor thread %r already started." % threadname) + start.priority = 70 + + def stop(self): + """Stop our callback's background task thread.""" + if self.thread is None: + self.bus.log("No thread running for %s." % self.name or self.__class__.__name__) + else: + if self.thread is not threading.currentThread(): + name = self.thread.getName() + self.thread.cancel() + if not get_daemon(self.thread): + self.bus.log("Joining %r" % name) + self.thread.join() + self.bus.log("Stopped thread %r." % name) + self.thread = None + + def graceful(self): + """Stop the callback's background task thread and restart it.""" + self.stop() + self.start() + + +class Autoreloader(Monitor): + """Monitor which re-executes the process when files change. + + This :ref:`plugin<plugins>` restarts the process (via :func:`os.execv`) + if any of the files it monitors change (or is deleted). By default, the + autoreloader monitors all imported modules; you can add to the + set by adding to ``autoreload.files``:: + + cherrypy.engine.autoreload.files.add(myFile) + + If there are imported files you do *not* wish to monitor, you can adjust the + ``match`` attribute, a regular expression. For example, to stop monitoring + cherrypy itself:: + + cherrypy.engine.autoreload.match = r'^(?!cherrypy).+' + + Like all :class:`Monitor<cherrypy.process.plugins.Monitor>` plugins, + the autoreload plugin takes a ``frequency`` argument. The default is + 1 second; that is, the autoreloader will examine files once each second. + """ + + files = None + """The set of files to poll for modifications.""" + + frequency = 1 + """The interval in seconds at which to poll for modified files.""" + + match = '.*' + """A regular expression by which to match filenames.""" + + def __init__(self, bus, frequency=1, match='.*'): + self.mtimes = {} + self.files = set() + self.match = match + Monitor.__init__(self, bus, self.run, frequency) + + def start(self): + """Start our own background task thread for self.run.""" + if self.thread is None: + self.mtimes = {} + Monitor.start(self) + start.priority = 70 + + def sysfiles(self): + """Return a Set of sys.modules filenames to monitor.""" + files = set() + for k, m in sys.modules.items(): + if re.match(self.match, k): + if hasattr(m, '__loader__') and hasattr(m.__loader__, 'archive'): + f = m.__loader__.archive + else: + f = getattr(m, '__file__', None) + if f is not None and not os.path.isabs(f): + # ensure absolute paths so a os.chdir() in the app doesn't break me + f = os.path.normpath(os.path.join(_module__file__base, f)) + files.add(f) + return files + + def run(self): + """Reload the process if registered files have been modified.""" + for filename in self.sysfiles() | self.files: + if filename: + if filename.endswith('.pyc'): + filename = filename[:-1] + + oldtime = self.mtimes.get(filename, 0) + if oldtime is None: + # Module with no .py file. Skip it. + continue + + try: + mtime = os.stat(filename).st_mtime + except OSError: + # Either a module with no .py file, or it's been deleted. + mtime = None + + if filename not in self.mtimes: + # If a module has no .py file, this will be None. + self.mtimes[filename] = mtime + else: + if mtime is None or mtime > oldtime: + # The file has been deleted or modified. + self.bus.log("Restarting because %s changed." % filename) + self.thread.cancel() + self.bus.log("Stopped thread %r." % self.thread.getName()) + self.bus.restart() + return + + +class ThreadManager(SimplePlugin): + """Manager for HTTP request threads. + + If you have control over thread creation and destruction, publish to + the 'acquire_thread' and 'release_thread' channels (for each thread). + This will register/unregister the current thread and publish to + 'start_thread' and 'stop_thread' listeners in the bus as needed. + + If threads are created and destroyed by code you do not control + (e.g., Apache), then, at the beginning of every HTTP request, + publish to 'acquire_thread' only. You should not publish to + 'release_thread' in this case, since you do not know whether + the thread will be re-used or not. The bus will call + 'stop_thread' listeners for you when it stops. + """ + + threads = None + """A map of {thread ident: index number} pairs.""" + + def __init__(self, bus): + self.threads = {} + SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus) + self.bus.listeners.setdefault('acquire_thread', set()) + self.bus.listeners.setdefault('start_thread', set()) + self.bus.listeners.setdefault('release_thread', set()) + self.bus.listeners.setdefault('stop_thread', set()) + + def acquire_thread(self): + """Run 'start_thread' listeners for the current thread. + + If the current thread has already been seen, any 'start_thread' + listeners will not be run again. + """ + thread_ident = get_thread_ident() + if thread_ident not in self.threads: + # We can't just use get_ident as the thread ID + # because some platforms reuse thread ID's. + i = len(self.threads) + 1 + self.threads[thread_ident] = i + self.bus.publish('start_thread', i) + + def release_thread(self): + """Release the current thread and run 'stop_thread' listeners.""" + thread_ident = get_thread_ident() + i = self.threads.pop(thread_ident, None) + if i is not None: + self.bus.publish('stop_thread', i) + + def stop(self): + """Release all threads and run all 'stop_thread' listeners.""" + for thread_ident, i in self.threads.items(): + self.bus.publish('stop_thread', i) + self.threads.clear() + graceful = stop + diff --git a/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/servers.py b/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/servers.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..272e843 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/servers.py @@ -0,0 +1,418 @@ +""" +Starting in CherryPy 3.1, cherrypy.server is implemented as an +:ref:`Engine Plugin<plugins>`. It's an instance of +:class:`cherrypy._cpserver.Server`, which is a subclass of +:class:`cherrypy.process.servers.ServerAdapter`. The ``ServerAdapter`` class +is designed to control other servers, as well. + +Multiple servers/ports +====================== + +If you need to start more than one HTTP server (to serve on multiple ports, or +protocols, etc.), you can manually register each one and then start them all +with engine.start:: + + s1 = ServerAdapter(cherrypy.engine, MyWSGIServer(host='0.0.0.0', port=80)) + s2 = ServerAdapter(cherrypy.engine, another.HTTPServer(host='127.0.0.1', SSL=True)) + s1.subscribe() + s2.subscribe() + cherrypy.engine.start() + +.. index:: SCGI + +FastCGI/SCGI +============ + +There are also Flup\ **F**\ CGIServer and Flup\ **S**\ CGIServer classes in +:mod:`cherrypy.process.servers`. To start an fcgi server, for example, +wrap an instance of it in a ServerAdapter:: + + addr = ('0.0.0.0', 4000) + f = servers.FlupFCGIServer(application=cherrypy.tree, bindAddress=addr) + s = servers.ServerAdapter(cherrypy.engine, httpserver=f, bind_addr=addr) + s.subscribe() + +The :doc:`cherryd</deployguide/cherryd>` startup script will do the above for +you via its `-f` flag. +Note that you need to download and install `flup <http://trac.saddi.com/flup>`_ +yourself, whether you use ``cherryd`` or not. + +.. _fastcgi: +.. index:: FastCGI + +FastCGI +------- + +A very simple setup lets your cherry run with FastCGI. +You just need the flup library, +plus a running Apache server (with ``mod_fastcgi``) or lighttpd server. + +CherryPy code +^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +hello.py:: + + #!/usr/bin/python + import cherrypy + + class HelloWorld: + \"""Sample request handler class.\""" + def index(self): + return "Hello world!" + index.exposed = True + + cherrypy.tree.mount(HelloWorld()) + # CherryPy autoreload must be disabled for the flup server to work + cherrypy.config.update({'engine.autoreload_on':False}) + +Then run :doc:`/deployguide/cherryd` with the '-f' arg:: + + cherryd -c <myconfig> -d -f -i hello.py + +Apache +^^^^^^ + +At the top level in httpd.conf:: + + FastCgiIpcDir /tmp + FastCgiServer /path/to/cherry.fcgi -idle-timeout 120 -processes 4 + +And inside the relevant VirtualHost section:: + + # FastCGI config + AddHandler fastcgi-script .fcgi + ScriptAliasMatch (.*$) /path/to/cherry.fcgi$1 + +Lighttpd +^^^^^^^^ + +For `Lighttpd <http://www.lighttpd.net/>`_ you can follow these +instructions. Within ``lighttpd.conf`` make sure ``mod_fastcgi`` is +active within ``server.modules``. Then, within your ``$HTTP["host"]`` +directive, configure your fastcgi script like the following:: + + $HTTP["url"] =~ "" { + fastcgi.server = ( + "/" => ( + "script.fcgi" => ( + "bin-path" => "/path/to/your/script.fcgi", + "socket" => "/tmp/script.sock", + "check-local" => "disable", + "disable-time" => 1, + "min-procs" => 1, + "max-procs" => 1, # adjust as needed + ), + ), + ) + } # end of $HTTP["url"] =~ "^/" + +Please see `Lighttpd FastCGI Docs +<http://redmine.lighttpd.net/wiki/lighttpd/Docs:ModFastCGI>`_ for an explanation +of the possible configuration options. +""" + +import sys +import time + + +class ServerAdapter(object): + """Adapter for an HTTP server. + + If you need to start more than one HTTP server (to serve on multiple + ports, or protocols, etc.), you can manually register each one and then + start them all with bus.start: + + s1 = ServerAdapter(bus, MyWSGIServer(host='0.0.0.0', port=80)) + s2 = ServerAdapter(bus, another.HTTPServer(host='127.0.0.1', SSL=True)) + s1.subscribe() + s2.subscribe() + bus.start() + """ + + def __init__(self, bus, httpserver=None, bind_addr=None): + self.bus = bus + self.httpserver = httpserver + self.bind_addr = bind_addr + self.interrupt = None + self.running = False + + def subscribe(self): + self.bus.subscribe('start', self.start) + self.bus.subscribe('stop', self.stop) + + def unsubscribe(self): + self.bus.unsubscribe('start', self.start) + self.bus.unsubscribe('stop', self.stop) + + def start(self): + """Start the HTTP server.""" + if self.bind_addr is None: + on_what = "unknown interface (dynamic?)" + elif isinstance(self.bind_addr, tuple): + host, port = self.bind_addr + on_what = "%s:%s" % (host, port) + else: + on_what = "socket file: %s" % self.bind_addr + + if self.running: + self.bus.log("Already serving on %s" % on_what) + return + + self.interrupt = None + if not self.httpserver: + raise ValueError("No HTTP server has been created.") + + # Start the httpserver in a new thread. + if isinstance(self.bind_addr, tuple): + wait_for_free_port(*self.bind_addr) + + import threading + t = threading.Thread(target=self._start_http_thread) + t.setName("HTTPServer " + t.getName()) + t.start() + + self.wait() + self.running = True + self.bus.log("Serving on %s" % on_what) + start.priority = 75 + + def _start_http_thread(self): + """HTTP servers MUST be running in new threads, so that the + main thread persists to receive KeyboardInterrupt's. If an + exception is raised in the httpserver's thread then it's + trapped here, and the bus (and therefore our httpserver) + are shut down. + """ + try: + self.httpserver.start() + except KeyboardInterrupt: + self.bus.log("<Ctrl-C> hit: shutting down HTTP server") + self.interrupt = sys.exc_info()[1] + self.bus.exit() + except SystemExit: + self.bus.log("SystemExit raised: shutting down HTTP server") + self.interrupt = sys.exc_info()[1] + self.bus.exit() + raise + except: + self.interrupt = sys.exc_info()[1] + self.bus.log("Error in HTTP server: shutting down", + traceback=True, level=40) + self.bus.exit() + raise + + def wait(self): + """Wait until the HTTP server is ready to receive requests.""" + while not getattr(self.httpserver, "ready", False): + if self.interrupt: + raise self.interrupt + time.sleep(.1) + + # Wait for port to be occupied + if isinstance(self.bind_addr, tuple): + host, port = self.bind_addr + wait_for_occupied_port(host, port) + + def stop(self): + """Stop the HTTP server.""" + if self.running: + # stop() MUST block until the server is *truly* stopped. + self.httpserver.stop() + # Wait for the socket to be truly freed. + if isinstance(self.bind_addr, tuple): + wait_for_free_port(*self.bind_addr) + self.running = False + self.bus.log("HTTP Server %s shut down" % self.httpserver) + else: + self.bus.log("HTTP Server %s already shut down" % self.httpserver) + stop.priority = 25 + + def restart(self): + """Restart the HTTP server.""" + self.stop() + self.start() + + +class FlupCGIServer(object): + """Adapter for a flup.server.cgi.WSGIServer.""" + + def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): + self.args = args + self.kwargs = kwargs + self.ready = False + + def start(self): + """Start the CGI server.""" + # We have to instantiate the server class here because its __init__ + # starts a threadpool. If we do it too early, daemonize won't work. + from flup.server.cgi import WSGIServer + + self.cgiserver = WSGIServer(*self.args, **self.kwargs) + self.ready = True + self.cgiserver.run() + + def stop(self): + """Stop the HTTP server.""" + self.ready = False + + +class FlupFCGIServer(object): + """Adapter for a flup.server.fcgi.WSGIServer.""" + + def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): + if kwargs.get('bindAddress', None) is None: + import socket + if not hasattr(socket, 'fromfd'): + raise ValueError( + 'Dynamic FCGI server not available on this platform. ' + 'You must use a static or external one by providing a ' + 'legal bindAddress.') + self.args = args + self.kwargs = kwargs + self.ready = False + + def start(self): + """Start the FCGI server.""" + # We have to instantiate the server class here because its __init__ + # starts a threadpool. If we do it too early, daemonize won't work. + from flup.server.fcgi import WSGIServer + self.fcgiserver = WSGIServer(*self.args, **self.kwargs) + # TODO: report this bug upstream to flup. + # If we don't set _oldSIGs on Windows, we get: + # File "C:\Python24\Lib\site-packages\flup\server\threadedserver.py", + # line 108, in run + # self._restoreSignalHandlers() + # File "C:\Python24\Lib\site-packages\flup\server\threadedserver.py", + # line 156, in _restoreSignalHandlers + # for signum,handler in self._oldSIGs: + # AttributeError: 'WSGIServer' object has no attribute '_oldSIGs' + self.fcgiserver._installSignalHandlers = lambda: None + self.fcgiserver._oldSIGs = [] + self.ready = True + self.fcgiserver.run() + + def stop(self): + """Stop the HTTP server.""" + # Forcibly stop the fcgi server main event loop. + self.fcgiserver._keepGoing = False + # Force all worker threads to die off. + self.fcgiserver._threadPool.maxSpare = self.fcgiserver._threadPool._idleCount + self.ready = False + + +class FlupSCGIServer(object): + """Adapter for a flup.server.scgi.WSGIServer.""" + + def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): + self.args = args + self.kwargs = kwargs + self.ready = False + + def start(self): + """Start the SCGI server.""" + # We have to instantiate the server class here because its __init__ + # starts a threadpool. If we do it too early, daemonize won't work. + from flup.server.scgi import WSGIServer + self.scgiserver = WSGIServer(*self.args, **self.kwargs) + # TODO: report this bug upstream to flup. + # If we don't set _oldSIGs on Windows, we get: + # File "C:\Python24\Lib\site-packages\flup\server\threadedserver.py", + # line 108, in run + # self._restoreSignalHandlers() + # File "C:\Python24\Lib\site-packages\flup\server\threadedserver.py", + # line 156, in _restoreSignalHandlers + # for signum,handler in self._oldSIGs: + # AttributeError: 'WSGIServer' object has no attribute '_oldSIGs' + self.scgiserver._installSignalHandlers = lambda: None + self.scgiserver._oldSIGs = [] + self.ready = True + self.scgiserver.run() + + def stop(self): + """Stop the HTTP server.""" + self.ready = False + # Forcibly stop the scgi server main event loop. + self.scgiserver._keepGoing = False + # Force all worker threads to die off. + self.scgiserver._threadPool.maxSpare = 0 + + +def client_host(server_host): + """Return the host on which a client can connect to the given listener.""" + if server_host == '0.0.0.0': + # 0.0.0.0 is INADDR_ANY, which should answer on localhost. + return '127.0.0.1' + if server_host in ('::', '::0', '::0.0.0.0'): + # :: is IN6ADDR_ANY, which should answer on localhost. + # ::0 and ::0.0.0.0 are non-canonical but common ways to write IN6ADDR_ANY. + return '::1' + return server_host + +def check_port(host, port, timeout=1.0): + """Raise an error if the given port is not free on the given host.""" + if not host: + raise ValueError("Host values of '' or None are not allowed.") + host = client_host(host) + port = int(port) + + import socket + + # AF_INET or AF_INET6 socket + # Get the correct address family for our host (allows IPv6 addresses) + try: + info = socket.getaddrinfo(host, port, socket.AF_UNSPEC, + socket.SOCK_STREAM) + except socket.gaierror: + if ':' in host: + info = [(socket.AF_INET6, socket.SOCK_STREAM, 0, "", (host, port, 0, 0))] + else: + info = [(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM, 0, "", (host, port))] + + for res in info: + af, socktype, proto, canonname, sa = res + s = None + try: + s = socket.socket(af, socktype, proto) + # See http://groups.google.com/group/cherrypy-users/ + # browse_frm/thread/bbfe5eb39c904fe0 + s.settimeout(timeout) + s.connect((host, port)) + s.close() + raise IOError("Port %s is in use on %s; perhaps the previous " + "httpserver did not shut down properly." % + (repr(port), repr(host))) + except socket.error: + if s: + s.close() + +def wait_for_free_port(host, port): + """Wait for the specified port to become free (drop requests).""" + if not host: + raise ValueError("Host values of '' or None are not allowed.") + + for trial in range(50): + try: + # we are expecting a free port, so reduce the timeout + check_port(host, port, timeout=0.1) + except IOError: + # Give the old server thread time to free the port. + time.sleep(0.1) + else: + return + + raise IOError("Port %r not free on %r" % (port, host)) + +def wait_for_occupied_port(host, port): + """Wait for the specified port to become active (receive requests).""" + if not host: + raise ValueError("Host values of '' or None are not allowed.") + + for trial in range(50): + try: + check_port(host, port) + except IOError: + return + else: + time.sleep(.1) + + raise IOError("Port %r not bound on %r" % (port, host)) diff --git a/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/win32.py b/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/win32.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..83f99a5 --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/win32.py @@ -0,0 +1,174 @@ +"""Windows service. Requires pywin32.""" + +import os +import win32api +import win32con +import win32event +import win32service +import win32serviceutil + +from cherrypy.process import wspbus, plugins + + +class ConsoleCtrlHandler(plugins.SimplePlugin): + """A WSPBus plugin for handling Win32 console events (like Ctrl-C).""" + + def __init__(self, bus): + self.is_set = False + plugins.SimplePlugin.__init__(self, bus) + + def start(self): + if self.is_set: + self.bus.log('Handler for console events already set.', level=40) + return + + result = win32api.SetConsoleCtrlHandler(self.handle, 1) + if result == 0: + self.bus.log('Could not SetConsoleCtrlHandler (error %r)' % + win32api.GetLastError(), level=40) + else: + self.bus.log('Set handler for console events.', level=40) + self.is_set = True + + def stop(self): + if not self.is_set: + self.bus.log('Handler for console events already off.', level=40) + return + + try: + result = win32api.SetConsoleCtrlHandler(self.handle, 0) + except ValueError: + # "ValueError: The object has not been registered" + result = 1 + + if result == 0: + self.bus.log('Could not remove SetConsoleCtrlHandler (error %r)' % + win32api.GetLastError(), level=40) + else: + self.bus.log('Removed handler for console events.', level=40) + self.is_set = False + + def handle(self, event): + """Handle console control events (like Ctrl-C).""" + if event in (win32con.CTRL_C_EVENT, win32con.CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT, + win32con.CTRL_BREAK_EVENT, win32con.CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT, + win32con.CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT): + self.bus.log('Console event %s: shutting down bus' % event) + + # Remove self immediately so repeated Ctrl-C doesn't re-call it. + try: + self.stop() + except ValueError: + pass + + self.bus.exit() + # 'First to return True stops the calls' + return 1 + return 0 + + +class Win32Bus(wspbus.Bus): + """A Web Site Process Bus implementation for Win32. + + Instead of time.sleep, this bus blocks using native win32event objects. + """ + + def __init__(self): + self.events = {} + wspbus.Bus.__init__(self) + + def _get_state_event(self, state): + """Return a win32event for the given state (creating it if needed).""" + try: + return self.events[state] + except KeyError: + event = win32event.CreateEvent(None, 0, 0, + "WSPBus %s Event (pid=%r)" % + (state.name, os.getpid())) + self.events[state] = event + return event + + def _get_state(self): + return self._state + def _set_state(self, value): + self._state = value + event = self._get_state_event(value) + win32event.PulseEvent(event) + state = property(_get_state, _set_state) + + def wait(self, state, interval=0.1, channel=None): + """Wait for the given state(s), KeyboardInterrupt or SystemExit. + + Since this class uses native win32event objects, the interval + argument is ignored. + """ + if isinstance(state, (tuple, list)): + # Don't wait for an event that beat us to the punch ;) + if self.state not in state: + events = tuple([self._get_state_event(s) for s in state]) + win32event.WaitForMultipleObjects(events, 0, win32event.INFINITE) + else: + # Don't wait for an event that beat us to the punch ;) + if self.state != state: + event = self._get_state_event(state) + win32event.WaitForSingleObject(event, win32event.INFINITE) + + +class _ControlCodes(dict): + """Control codes used to "signal" a service via ControlService. + + User-defined control codes are in the range 128-255. We generally use + the standard Python value for the Linux signal and add 128. Example: + + >>> signal.SIGUSR1 + 10 + control_codes['graceful'] = 128 + 10 + """ + + def key_for(self, obj): + """For the given value, return its corresponding key.""" + for key, val in self.items(): + if val is obj: + return key + raise ValueError("The given object could not be found: %r" % obj) + +control_codes = _ControlCodes({'graceful': 138}) + + +def signal_child(service, command): + if command == 'stop': + win32serviceutil.StopService(service) + elif command == 'restart': + win32serviceutil.RestartService(service) + else: + win32serviceutil.ControlService(service, control_codes[command]) + + +class PyWebService(win32serviceutil.ServiceFramework): + """Python Web Service.""" + + _svc_name_ = "Python Web Service" + _svc_display_name_ = "Python Web Service" + _svc_deps_ = None # sequence of service names on which this depends + _exe_name_ = "pywebsvc" + _exe_args_ = None # Default to no arguments + + # Only exists on Windows 2000 or later, ignored on windows NT + _svc_description_ = "Python Web Service" + + def SvcDoRun(self): + from cherrypy import process + process.bus.start() + process.bus.block() + + def SvcStop(self): + from cherrypy import process + self.ReportServiceStatus(win32service.SERVICE_STOP_PENDING) + process.bus.exit() + + def SvcOther(self, control): + process.bus.publish(control_codes.key_for(control)) + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + win32serviceutil.HandleCommandLine(PyWebService) diff --git a/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/wspbus.py b/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/wspbus.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000..46cd75a --- /dev/null +++ b/vendor/CherryPy-3.2.0/py2/cherrypy/process/wspbus.py @@ -0,0 +1,393 @@ +"""An implementation of the Web Site Process Bus. + +This module is completely standalone, depending only on the stdlib. + +Web Site Process Bus +-------------------- + +A Bus object is used to contain and manage site-wide behavior: +daemonization, HTTP server start/stop, process reload, signal handling, +drop privileges, PID file management, logging for all of these, +and many more. + +In addition, a Bus object provides a place for each web framework +to register code that runs in response to site-wide events (like +process start and stop), or which controls or otherwise interacts with +the site-wide components mentioned above. For example, a framework which +uses file-based templates would add known template filenames to an +autoreload component. + +Ideally, a Bus object will be flexible enough to be useful in a variety +of invocation scenarios: + + 1. The deployer starts a site from the command line via a + framework-neutral deployment script; applications from multiple frameworks + are mixed in a single site. Command-line arguments and configuration + files are used to define site-wide components such as the HTTP server, + WSGI component graph, autoreload behavior, signal handling, etc. + 2. The deployer starts a site via some other process, such as Apache; + applications from multiple frameworks are mixed in a single site. + Autoreload and signal handling (from Python at least) are disabled. + 3. The deployer starts a site via a framework-specific mechanism; + for example, when running tests, exploring tutorials, or deploying + single applications from a single framework. The framework controls + which site-wide components are enabled as it sees fit. + +The Bus object in this package uses topic-based publish-subscribe +messaging to accomplish all this. A few topic channels are built in +('start', 'stop', 'exit', 'graceful', 'log', and 'main'). Frameworks and +site containers are free to define their own. If a message is sent to a +channel that has not been defined or has no listeners, there is no effect. + +In general, there should only ever be a single Bus object per process. +Frameworks and site containers share a single Bus object by publishing +messages and subscribing listeners. + +The Bus object works as a finite state machine which models the current +state of the process. Bus methods move it from one state to another; +those methods then publish to subscribed listeners on the channel for +the new state.:: + + O + | + V + STOPPING --> STOPPED --> EXITING -> X + A A | + | \___ | + | \ | + | V V + STARTED <-- STARTING + +""" + +import atexit +import os +import sys +import threading +import time +import traceback as _traceback +import warnings + +from cherrypy._cpcompat import set + +# Here I save the value of os.getcwd(), which, if I am imported early enough, +# will be the directory from which the startup script was run. This is needed +# by _do_execv(), to change back to the original directory before execv()ing a +# new process. This is a defense against the application having changed the +# current working directory (which could make sys.executable "not found" if +# sys.executable is a relative-path, and/or cause other problems). +_startup_cwd = os.getcwd() + +class ChannelFailures(Exception): + """Exception raised when errors occur in a listener during Bus.publish().""" + delimiter = '\n' + + def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): + # Don't use 'super' here; Exceptions are old-style in Py2.4 + # See http://www.cherrypy.org/ticket/959 + Exception.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) + self._exceptions = list() + + def handle_exception(self): + """Append the current exception to self.""" + self._exceptions.append(sys.exc_info()) + + def get_instances(self): + """Return a list of seen exception instances.""" + return [instance for cls, instance, traceback in self._exceptions] + + def __str__(self): + exception_strings = map(repr, self.get_instances()) + return self.delimiter.join(exception_strings) + + __repr__ = __str__ + + def __nonzero__(self): + return bool(self._exceptions) + +# Use a flag to indicate the state of the bus. +class _StateEnum(object): + class State(object): + name = None + def __repr__(self): + return "states.%s" % self.name + + def __setattr__(self, key, value): + if isinstance(value, self.State): + value.name = key + object.__setattr__(self, key, value) +states = _StateEnum() +states.STOPPED = states.State() +states.STARTING = states.State() +states.STARTED = states.State() +states.STOPPING = states.State() +states.EXITING = states.State() + + +class Bus(object): + """Process state-machine and messenger for HTTP site deployment. + + All listeners for a given channel are guaranteed to be called even + if others at the same channel fail. Each failure is logged, but + execution proceeds on to the next listener. The only way to stop all + processing from inside a listener is to raise SystemExit and stop the + whole server. + """ + + states = states + state = states.STOPPED + execv = False + + def __init__(self): + self.execv = False + self.state = states.STOPPED + self.listeners = dict( + [(channel, set()) for channel + in ('start', 'stop', 'exit', 'graceful', 'log', 'main')]) + self._priorities = {} + + def subscribe(self, channel, callback, priority=None): + """Add the given callback at the given channel (if not present).""" + if channel not in self.listeners: + self.listeners[channel] = set() + self.listeners[channel].add(callback) + + if priority is None: + priority = getattr(callback, 'priority', 50) + self._priorities[(channel, callback)] = priority + + def unsubscribe(self, channel, callback): + """Discard the given callback (if present).""" + listeners = self.listeners.get(channel) + if listeners and callback in listeners: + listeners.discard(callback) + del self._priorities[(channel, callback)] + + def publish(self, channel, *args, **kwargs): + """Return output of all subscribers for the given channel.""" + if channel not in self.listeners: + return [] + + exc = ChannelFailures() + output = [] + + items = [(self._priorities[(channel, listener)], listener) + for listener in self.listeners[channel]] + items.sort() + for priority, listener in items: + try: + output.append(listener(*args, **kwargs)) + except KeyboardInterrupt: + raise + except SystemExit, e: + # If we have previous errors ensure the exit code is non-zero + if exc and e.code == 0: + e.code = 1 + raise + except: + exc.handle_exception() + if channel == 'log': + # Assume any further messages to 'log' will fail. + pass + else: + self.log("Error in %r listener %r" % (channel, listener), + level=40, traceback=True) + if exc: + raise exc + return output + + def _clean_exit(self): + """An atexit handler which asserts the Bus is not running.""" + if self.state != states.EXITING: + warnings.warn( + "The main thread is exiting, but the Bus is in the %r state; " + "shutting it down automatically now. You must either call " + "bus.block() after start(), or call bus.exit() before the " + "main thread exits." % self.state, RuntimeWarning) + self.exit() + + def start(self): + """Start all services.""" + atexit.register(self._clean_exit) + + self.state = states.STARTING + self.log('Bus STARTING') + try: + self.publish('start') + self.state = states.STARTED + self.log('Bus STARTED') + except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit): + raise + except: + self.log("Shutting down due to error in start listener:", + level=40, traceback=True) + e_info = sys.exc_info() + try: + self.exit() + except: + # Any stop/exit errors will be logged inside publish(). + pass + raise e_info[0], e_info[1], e_info[2] + + def exit(self): + """Stop all services and prepare to exit the process.""" + exitstate = self.state + try: + self.stop() + + self.state = states.EXITING + self.log('Bus EXITING') + self.publish('exit') + # This isn't strictly necessary, but it's better than seeing + # "Waiting for child threads to terminate..." and then nothing. + self.log('Bus EXITED') + except: + # This method is often called asynchronously (whether thread, + # signal handler, console handler, or atexit handler), so we + # can't just let exceptions propagate out unhandled. + # Assume it's been logged and just die. + os._exit(70) # EX_SOFTWARE + + if exitstate == states.STARTING: + # exit() was called before start() finished, possibly due to + # Ctrl-C because a start listener got stuck. In this case, + # we could get stuck in a loop where Ctrl-C never exits the + # process, so we just call os.exit here. + os._exit(70) # EX_SOFTWARE + + def restart(self): + """Restart the process (may close connections). + + This method does not restart the process from the calling thread; + instead, it stops the bus and asks the main thread to call execv. + """ + self.execv = True + self.exit() + + def graceful(self): + """Advise all services to reload.""" + self.log('Bus graceful') + self.publish('graceful') + + def block(self, interval=0.1): + """Wait for the EXITING state, KeyboardInterrupt or SystemExit. + + This function is intended to be called only by the main thread. + After waiting for the EXITING state, it also waits for all threads + to terminate, and then calls os.execv if self.execv is True. This + design allows another thread to call bus.restart, yet have the main + thread perform the actual execv call (required on some platforms). + """ + try: + self.wait(states.EXITING, interval=interval, channel='main') + except (KeyboardInterrupt, IOError): + # The time.sleep call might raise + # "IOError: [Errno 4] Interrupted function call" on KBInt. + self.log('Keyboard Interrupt: shutting down bus') + self.exit() + except SystemExit: + self.log('SystemExit raised: shutting down bus') + self.exit() + raise + + # Waiting for ALL child threads to finish is necessary on OS X. + # See http://www.cherrypy.org/ticket/581. + # It's also good to let them all shut down before allowing + # the main thread to call atexit handlers. + # See http://www.cherrypy.org/ticket/751. + self.log("Waiting for child threads to terminate...") + for t in threading.enumerate(): + if t != threading.currentThread() and t.isAlive(): + # Note that any dummy (external) threads are always daemonic. + if hasattr(threading.Thread, "daemon"): + # Python 2.6+ + d = t.daemon + else: + d = t.isDaemon() + if not d: + self.log("Waiting for thread %s." % t.getName()) + t.join() + + if self.execv: + self._do_execv() + + def wait(self, state, interval=0.1, channel=None): + """Poll for the given state(s) at intervals; publish to channel.""" + if isinstance(state, (tuple, list)): + states = state + else: + states = [state] + + def _wait(): + while self.state not in states: + time.sleep(interval) + self.publish(channel) + + # From http://psyco.sourceforge.net/psycoguide/bugs.html: + # "The compiled machine code does not include the regular polling + # done by Python, meaning that a KeyboardInterrupt will not be + # detected before execution comes back to the regular Python + # interpreter. Your program cannot be interrupted if caught + # into an infinite Psyco-compiled loop." + try: + sys.modules['psyco'].cannotcompile(_wait) + except (KeyError, AttributeError): + pass + + _wait() + + def _do_execv(self): + """Re-execute the current process. + + This must be called from the main thread, because certain platforms + (OS X) don't allow execv to be called in a child thread very well. + """ + args = sys.argv[:] + self.log('Re-spawning %s' % ' '.join(args)) + + if sys.platform[:4] == 'java': + from _systemrestart import SystemRestart + raise SystemRestart + else: + args.insert(0, sys.executable) + if sys.platform == 'win32': + args = ['"%s"' % arg for arg in args] + + os.chdir(_startup_cwd) + os.execv(sys.executable, args) + + def stop(self): + """Stop all services.""" + self.state = states.STOPPING + self.log('Bus STOPPING') + self.publish('stop') + self.state = states.STOPPED + self.log('Bus STOPPED') + + def start_with_callback(self, func, args=None, kwargs=None): + """Start 'func' in a new thread T, then start self (and return T).""" + if args is None: + args = () + if kwargs is None: + kwargs = {} + args = (func,) + args + + def _callback(func, *a, **kw): + self.wait(states.STARTED) + func(*a, **kw) + t = threading.Thread(target=_callback, args=args, kwargs=kwargs) + t.setName('Bus Callback ' + t.getName()) + t.start() + + self.start() + + return t + + def log(self, msg="", level=20, traceback=False): + """Log the given message. Append the last traceback if requested.""" + if traceback: + exc = sys.exc_info() + msg += "\n" + "".join(_traceback.format_exception(*exc)) + self.publish('log', msg, level) + +bus = Bus() |