On Sat, 2010-01-16 at 18:35 -0800, yousay wrote: > On Jan 13, 1:38 am, Adam Tauno Williams <awill...@opengroupware.us> > wrote: > > Looking at <http://code.activestate.com/recipes/425210/> and > > <http://code.activestate.com/recipes/499376/> as examples I've attempted > > to create a BaseHTTPServer class that times-out accept() ever X seconds > > to check some other work. This seems to work well, but only once the > > HTTPServer object has received its first request. Up until the first > > request get_request() is not invoked and not timeout occurs. > > class HTTPServer(BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer): > > def server_bind(self): > > BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer.server_bind(self) > > self.socket.settimeout(1) > > self._shutdown = False > > def get_request(self): > > while not self._shutdown: > > try: > > print ' HTTP worker {0} waiting.'.format(self.pid) > > self.log.debug('Waiting for connection...') > > s, a = self.socket.accept() > > s.settimeout(None) > > return (s, a) > > except socket.timeout: > > /// do other work /// > > return None, None > > The "HTTP worker" message is not seen until the server has taken a > > request, then it seems to dutifully do the timeout. > your class Name is the same to the superClass,may be have influence
Nope, changed the name of the class (cleaned out all the *.pyc files), and the initial wait still does not time out. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list