Reviewed: https://review.opendev.org/647310 Committed: https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack/nova/commit/?id=d0f540742efc1004b4d2c64814dcc6f7b9f0ccf6 Submitter: Zuul Branch: stable/stein
commit d0f540742efc1004b4d2c64814dcc6f7b9f0ccf6 Author: Matthew Booth <mbo...@redhat.com> Date: Wed Jan 30 15:10:25 2019 +0000 Eventlet monkey patching should be as early as possible We were seeing infinite recursion opening an ssl socket when running various combinations of python3, eventlet, and urllib3. It is not clear exactly what combination of versions are affected, but for background there is an example of this issue documented here: https://github.com/eventlet/eventlet/issues/371 The immediate cause in nova's case was that we were calling eventlet.monkey_patch() after importing urllib3. Specifically, change Ie7bf5d012e2ccbcd63c262ddaf739782afcdaf56 introduced the nova.utils.monkey_patch() method to make monkey patching common between WSGI and non-WSGI services. Unfortunately, before executing this method you must first import nova.utils, which imports a large number of modules itself. Anything imported (transitively) by nova.utils would therefore be imported before monkey patching, which included urllib3. This triggers the infinite recursion problem described above if you have an affected combination of library versions. While this specific issue may eventually be worked around or fixed in eventlet or urllib3, it remains true that eventlet best practises are to monkey patch as early as possible, which we were not doing. To avoid this and hopefully future similar issues, this change ensures that monkey patching happens as early as possible, and only a minimum number of modules are imported first. This change fixes monkey patching for both non-wsgi and wsgi callers: * Non-WSGI services (nova/cmd) This is fixed by using the new monkey_patch module, which has minimal dependencies. * WSGI services (nova/api/openstack) This is fixed both by using the new monkey_patch module, and by moving the patching point up one level so that it is done before importing anything in nova/api/openstack/__init__.py. This move causes issues for some external tools which load this path from nova and now monkey patch where they previously did not. However, it is unfortunately unavoidable to enable monkey patching for the wsgi entry point without major restructuring. This change includes a workaround for sphinx to avoid this issue. This change has been through several iterations. I started with what seemed like the simplest and most obvious change, and moved on as I discovered more interactions which broke. It is clear that eventlet monkey patching is extremely fragile, especially when done implicitly at module load time as we do. I would advocate a code restructure to improve this situation, but I think the time would be better spent removing the eventlet dependency entirely. Co-authored-by: Lee Yarwood <lyarw...@redhat.com> Closes-Bug: #1808975 Closes-Bug: #1808951 Change-Id: Id46e76666b553a10ec4654d4418a9884975b5b95 (cherry picked from commit 3c5e2b0e9fac985294a949852bb8c83d4ed77e04) ** Changed in: cloud-archive/stein Status: Triaged => Fix Committed -- You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1808951 Title: python3 + Fedora + SSL + wsgi nova deployment, nova api returns RecursionError: maximum recursion depth exceeded while calling a Python object To manage notifications about this bug go to: https://bugs.launchpad.net/cloud-archive/+bug/1808951/+subscriptions -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs