| """Generic socket server classes. |
| |
| This module tries to capture the various aspects of defining a server: |
| |
| For socket-based servers: |
| |
| - address family: |
| - AF_INET{,6}: IP (Internet Protocol) sockets (default) |
| - AF_UNIX: Unix domain sockets |
| - others, e.g. AF_DECNET are conceivable (see <socket.h> |
| - socket type: |
| - SOCK_STREAM (reliable stream, e.g. TCP) |
| - SOCK_DGRAM (datagrams, e.g. UDP) |
| |
| For request-based servers (including socket-based): |
| |
| - client address verification before further looking at the request |
| (This is actually a hook for any processing that needs to look |
| at the request before anything else, e.g. logging) |
| - how to handle multiple requests: |
| - synchronous (one request is handled at a time) |
| - forking (each request is handled by a new process) |
| - threading (each request is handled by a new thread) |
| |
| The classes in this module favor the server type that is simplest to |
| write: a synchronous TCP/IP server. This is bad class design, but |
| save some typing. (There's also the issue that a deep class hierarchy |
| slows down method lookups.) |
| |
| There are five classes in an inheritance diagram, four of which represent |
| synchronous servers of four types: |
| |
| +------------+ |
| | BaseServer | |
| +------------+ |
| | |
| v |
| +-----------+ +------------------+ |
| | TCPServer |------->| UnixStreamServer | |
| +-----------+ +------------------+ |
| | |
| v |
| +-----------+ +--------------------+ |
| | UDPServer |------->| UnixDatagramServer | |
| +-----------+ +--------------------+ |
| |
| Note that UnixDatagramServer derives from UDPServer, not from |
| UnixStreamServer -- the only difference between an IP and a Unix |
| stream server is the address family, which is simply repeated in both |
| unix server classes. |
| |
| Forking and threading versions of each type of server can be created |
| using the ForkingMixIn and ThreadingMixIn mix-in classes. For |
| instance, a threading UDP server class is created as follows: |
| |
| class ThreadingUDPServer(ThreadingMixIn, UDPServer): pass |
| |
| The Mix-in class must come first, since it overrides a method defined |
| in UDPServer! Setting the various member variables also changes |
| the behavior of the underlying server mechanism. |
| |
| To implement a service, you must derive a class from |
| BaseRequestHandler and redefine its handle() method. You can then run |
| various versions of the service by combining one of the server classes |
| with your request handler class. |
| |
| The request handler class must be different for datagram or stream |
| services. This can be hidden by using the request handler |
| subclasses StreamRequestHandler or DatagramRequestHandler. |
| |
| Of course, you still have to use your head! |
| |
| For instance, it makes no sense to use a forking server if the service |
| contains state in memory that can be modified by requests (since the |
| modifications in the child process would never reach the initial state |
| kept in the parent process and passed to each child). In this case, |
| you can use a threading server, but you will probably have to use |
| locks to avoid two requests that come in nearly simultaneous to apply |
| conflicting changes to the server state. |
| |
| On the other hand, if you are building e.g. an HTTP server, where all |
| data is stored externally (e.g. in the file system), a synchronous |
| class will essentially render the service "deaf" while one request is |
| being handled -- which may be for a very long time if a client is slow |
| to read all the data it has requested. Here a threading or forking |
| server is appropriate. |
| |
| In some cases, it may be appropriate to process part of a request |
| synchronously, but to finish processing in a forked child depending on |
| the request data. This can be implemented by using a synchronous |
| server and doing an explicit fork in the request handler class |
| handle() method. |
| |
| Another approach to handling multiple simultaneous requests in an |
| environment that supports neither threads nor fork (or where these are |
| too expensive or inappropriate for the service) is to maintain an |
| explicit table of partially finished requests and to use select() to |
| decide which request to work on next (or whether to handle a new |
| incoming request). This is particularly important for stream services |
| where each client can potentially be connected for a long time (if |
| threads or subprocesses cannot be used). |
| |
| Future work: |
| - Standard classes for Sun RPC (which uses either UDP or TCP) |
| - Standard mix-in classes to implement various authentication |
| and encryption schemes |
| - Standard framework for select-based multiplexing |
| |
| XXX Open problems: |
| - What to do with out-of-band data? |
| |
| BaseServer: |
| - split generic "request" functionality out into BaseServer class. |
| Copyright (C) 2000 Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton <lkcl@samba.org> |
| |
| example: read entries from a SQL database (requires overriding |
| get_request() to return a table entry from the database). |
| entry is processed by a RequestHandlerClass. |
| |
| """ |
| |
| # Author of the BaseServer patch: Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton |
| |
| # XXX Warning! |
| # There is a test suite for this module, but it cannot be run by the |
| # standard regression test. |
| # To run it manually, run Lib/test/test_socketserver.py. |
| |
| __version__ = "0.4" |
| |
| |
| import socket |
| import select |
| import sys |
| import os |
| import errno |
| try: |
| import threading |
| except ImportError: |
| import dummy_threading as threading |
| |
| __all__ = ["TCPServer","UDPServer","ForkingUDPServer","ForkingTCPServer", |
| "ThreadingUDPServer","ThreadingTCPServer","BaseRequestHandler", |
| "StreamRequestHandler","DatagramRequestHandler", |
| "ThreadingMixIn", "ForkingMixIn"] |
| if hasattr(socket, "AF_UNIX"): |
| __all__.extend(["UnixStreamServer","UnixDatagramServer", |
| "ThreadingUnixStreamServer", |
| "ThreadingUnixDatagramServer"]) |
| |
| def _eintr_retry(func, *args): |
| """restart a system call interrupted by EINTR""" |
| while True: |
| try: |
| return func(*args) |
| except (OSError, select.error) as e: |
| if e.args[0] != errno.EINTR: |
| raise |
| |
| class BaseServer: |
| |
| """Base class for server classes. |
| |
| Methods for the caller: |
| |
| - __init__(server_address, RequestHandlerClass) |
| - serve_forever(poll_interval=0.5) |
| - shutdown() |
| - handle_request() # if you do not use serve_forever() |
| - fileno() -> int # for select() |
| |
| Methods that may be overridden: |
| |
| - server_bind() |
| - server_activate() |
| - get_request() -> request, client_address |
| - handle_timeout() |
| - verify_request(request, client_address) |
| - server_close() |
| - process_request(request, client_address) |
| - shutdown_request(request) |
| - close_request(request) |
| - handle_error() |
| |
| Methods for derived classes: |
| |
| - finish_request(request, client_address) |
| |
| Class variables that may be overridden by derived classes or |
| instances: |
| |
| - timeout |
| - address_family |
| - socket_type |
| - allow_reuse_address |
| |
| Instance variables: |
| |
| - RequestHandlerClass |
| - socket |
| |
| """ |
| |
| timeout = None |
| |
| def __init__(self, server_address, RequestHandlerClass): |
| """Constructor. May be extended, do not override.""" |
| self.server_address = server_address |
| self.RequestHandlerClass = RequestHandlerClass |
| self.__is_shut_down = threading.Event() |
| self.__shutdown_request = False |
| |
| def server_activate(self): |
| """Called by constructor to activate the server. |
| |
| May be overridden. |
| |
| """ |
| pass |
| |
| def serve_forever(self, poll_interval=0.5): |
| """Handle one request at a time until shutdown. |
| |
| Polls for shutdown every poll_interval seconds. Ignores |
| self.timeout. If you need to do periodic tasks, do them in |
| another thread. |
| """ |
| self.__is_shut_down.clear() |
| try: |
| while not self.__shutdown_request: |
| # XXX: Consider using another file descriptor or |
| # connecting to the socket to wake this up instead of |
| # polling. Polling reduces our responsiveness to a |
| # shutdown request and wastes cpu at all other times. |
| r, w, e = _eintr_retry(select.select, [self], [], [], |
| poll_interval) |
| if self in r: |
| self._handle_request_noblock() |
| finally: |
| self.__shutdown_request = False |
| self.__is_shut_down.set() |
| |
| def shutdown(self): |
| """Stops the serve_forever loop. |
| |
| Blocks until the loop has finished. This must be called while |
| serve_forever() is running in another thread, or it will |
| deadlock. |
| """ |
| self.__shutdown_request = True |
| self.__is_shut_down.wait() |
| |
| # The distinction between handling, getting, processing and |
| # finishing a request is fairly arbitrary. Remember: |
| # |
| # - handle_request() is the top-level call. It calls |
| # select, get_request(), verify_request() and process_request() |
| # - get_request() is different for stream or datagram sockets |
| # - process_request() is the place that may fork a new process |
| # or create a new thread to finish the request |
| # - finish_request() instantiates the request handler class; |
| # this constructor will handle the request all by itself |
| |
| def handle_request(self): |
| """Handle one request, possibly blocking. |
| |
| Respects self.timeout. |
| """ |
| # Support people who used socket.settimeout() to escape |
| # handle_request before self.timeout was available. |
| timeout = self.socket.gettimeout() |
| if timeout is None: |
| timeout = self.timeout |
| elif self.timeout is not None: |
| timeout = min(timeout, self.timeout) |
| fd_sets = _eintr_retry(select.select, [self], [], [], timeout) |
| if not fd_sets[0]: |
| self.handle_timeout() |
| return |
| self._handle_request_noblock() |
| |
| def _handle_request_noblock(self): |
| """Handle one request, without blocking. |
| |
| I assume that select.select has returned that the socket is |
| readable before this function was called, so there should be |
| no risk of blocking in get_request(). |
| """ |
| try: |
| request, client_address = self.get_request() |
| except socket.error: |
| return |
| if self.verify_request(request, client_address): |
| try: |
| self.process_request(request, client_address) |
| except: |
| self.handle_error(request, client_address) |
| self.shutdown_request(request) |
| |
| def handle_timeout(self): |
| """Called if no new request arrives within self.timeout. |
| |
| Overridden by ForkingMixIn. |
| """ |
| pass |
| |
| def verify_request(self, request, client_address): |
| """Verify the request. May be overridden. |
| |
| Return True if we should proceed with this request. |
| |
| """ |
| return True |
| |
| def process_request(self, request, client_address): |
| """Call finish_request. |
| |
| Overridden by ForkingMixIn and ThreadingMixIn. |
| |
| """ |
| self.finish_request(request, client_address) |
| self.shutdown_request(request) |
| |
| def server_close(self): |
| """Called to clean-up the server. |
| |
| May be overridden. |
| |
| """ |
| pass |
| |
| def finish_request(self, request, client_address): |
| """Finish one request by instantiating RequestHandlerClass.""" |
| self.RequestHandlerClass(request, client_address, self) |
| |
| def shutdown_request(self, request): |
| """Called to shutdown and close an individual request.""" |
| self.close_request(request) |
| |
| def close_request(self, request): |
| """Called to clean up an individual request.""" |
| pass |
| |
| def handle_error(self, request, client_address): |
| """Handle an error gracefully. May be overridden. |
| |
| The default is to print a traceback and continue. |
| |
| """ |
| print('-'*40) |
| print('Exception happened during processing of request from', end=' ') |
| print(client_address) |
| import traceback |
| traceback.print_exc() # XXX But this goes to stderr! |
| print('-'*40) |
| |
| |
| class TCPServer(BaseServer): |
| |
| """Base class for various socket-based server classes. |
| |
| Defaults to synchronous IP stream (i.e., TCP). |
| |
| Methods for the caller: |
| |
| - __init__(server_address, RequestHandlerClass, bind_and_activate=True) |
| - serve_forever(poll_interval=0.5) |
| - shutdown() |
| - handle_request() # if you don't use serve_forever() |
| - fileno() -> int # for select() |
| |
| Methods that may be overridden: |
| |
| - server_bind() |
| - server_activate() |
| - get_request() -> request, client_address |
| - handle_timeout() |
| - verify_request(request, client_address) |
| - process_request(request, client_address) |
| - shutdown_request(request) |
| - close_request(request) |
| - handle_error() |
| |
| Methods for derived classes: |
| |
| - finish_request(request, client_address) |
| |
| Class variables that may be overridden by derived classes or |
| instances: |
| |
| - timeout |
| - address_family |
| - socket_type |
| - request_queue_size (only for stream sockets) |
| - allow_reuse_address |
| |
| Instance variables: |
| |
| - server_address |
| - RequestHandlerClass |
| - socket |
| |
| """ |
| |
| address_family = socket.AF_INET |
| |
| socket_type = socket.SOCK_STREAM |
| |
| request_queue_size = 5 |
| |
| allow_reuse_address = False |
| |
| def __init__(self, server_address, RequestHandlerClass, bind_and_activate=True): |
| """Constructor. May be extended, do not override.""" |
| BaseServer.__init__(self, server_address, RequestHandlerClass) |
| self.socket = socket.socket(self.address_family, |
| self.socket_type) |
| if bind_and_activate: |
| self.server_bind() |
| self.server_activate() |
| |
| def server_bind(self): |
| """Called by constructor to bind the socket. |
| |
| May be overridden. |
| |
| """ |
| if self.allow_reuse_address: |
| self.socket.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR, 1) |
| self.socket.bind(self.server_address) |
| self.server_address = self.socket.getsockname() |
| |
| def server_activate(self): |
| """Called by constructor to activate the server. |
| |
| May be overridden. |
| |
| """ |
| self.socket.listen(self.request_queue_size) |
| |
| def server_close(self): |
| """Called to clean-up the server. |
| |
| May be overridden. |
| |
| """ |
| self.socket.close() |
| |
| def fileno(self): |
| """Return socket file number. |
| |
| Interface required by select(). |
| |
| """ |
| return self.socket.fileno() |
| |
| def get_request(self): |
| """Get the request and client address from the socket. |
| |
| May be overridden. |
| |
| """ |
| return self.socket.accept() |
| |
| def shutdown_request(self, request): |
| """Called to shutdown and close an individual request.""" |
| try: |
| #explicitly shutdown. socket.close() merely releases |
| #the socket and waits for GC to perform the actual close. |
| request.shutdown(socket.SHUT_WR) |
| except socket.error: |
| pass #some platforms may raise ENOTCONN here |
| self.close_request(request) |
| |
| def close_request(self, request): |
| """Called to clean up an individual request.""" |
| request.close() |
| |
| |
| class UDPServer(TCPServer): |
| |
| """UDP server class.""" |
| |
| allow_reuse_address = False |
| |
| socket_type = socket.SOCK_DGRAM |
| |
| max_packet_size = 8192 |
| |
| def get_request(self): |
| data, client_addr = self.socket.recvfrom(self.max_packet_size) |
| return (data, self.socket), client_addr |
| |
| def server_activate(self): |
| # No need to call listen() for UDP. |
| pass |
| |
| def shutdown_request(self, request): |
| # No need to shutdown anything. |
| self.close_request(request) |
| |
| def close_request(self, request): |
| # No need to close anything. |
| pass |
| |
| class ForkingMixIn: |
| |
| """Mix-in class to handle each request in a new process.""" |
| |
| timeout = 300 |
| active_children = None |
| max_children = 40 |
| |
| def collect_children(self): |
| """Internal routine to wait for children that have exited.""" |
| if self.active_children is None: return |
| while len(self.active_children) >= self.max_children: |
| # XXX: This will wait for any child process, not just ones |
| # spawned by this library. This could confuse other |
| # libraries that expect to be able to wait for their own |
| # children. |
| try: |
| pid, status = os.waitpid(0, 0) |
| except os.error: |
| pid = None |
| if pid not in self.active_children: continue |
| self.active_children.remove(pid) |
| |
| # XXX: This loop runs more system calls than it ought |
| # to. There should be a way to put the active_children into a |
| # process group and then use os.waitpid(-pgid) to wait for any |
| # of that set, but I couldn't find a way to allocate pgids |
| # that couldn't collide. |
| for child in self.active_children: |
| try: |
| pid, status = os.waitpid(child, os.WNOHANG) |
| except os.error: |
| pid = None |
| if not pid: continue |
| try: |
| self.active_children.remove(pid) |
| except ValueError as e: |
| raise ValueError('%s. x=%d and list=%r' % (e.message, pid, |
| self.active_children)) |
| |
| def handle_timeout(self): |
| """Wait for zombies after self.timeout seconds of inactivity. |
| |
| May be extended, do not override. |
| """ |
| self.collect_children() |
| |
| def process_request(self, request, client_address): |
| """Fork a new subprocess to process the request.""" |
| self.collect_children() |
| pid = os.fork() |
| if pid: |
| # Parent process |
| if self.active_children is None: |
| self.active_children = [] |
| self.active_children.append(pid) |
| self.close_request(request) |
| else: |
| # Child process. |
| # This must never return, hence os._exit()! |
| try: |
| self.finish_request(request, client_address) |
| self.shutdown_request(request) |
| os._exit(0) |
| except: |
| try: |
| self.handle_error(request, client_address) |
| self.shutdown_request(request) |
| finally: |
| os._exit(1) |
| |
| |
| class ThreadingMixIn: |
| """Mix-in class to handle each request in a new thread.""" |
| |
| # Decides how threads will act upon termination of the |
| # main process |
| daemon_threads = False |
| |
| def process_request_thread(self, request, client_address): |
| """Same as in BaseServer but as a thread. |
| |
| In addition, exception handling is done here. |
| |
| """ |
| try: |
| self.finish_request(request, client_address) |
| self.shutdown_request(request) |
| except: |
| self.handle_error(request, client_address) |
| self.shutdown_request(request) |
| |
| def process_request(self, request, client_address): |
| """Start a new thread to process the request.""" |
| t = threading.Thread(target = self.process_request_thread, |
| args = (request, client_address)) |
| t.daemon = self.daemon_threads |
| t.start() |
| |
| |
| class ForkingUDPServer(ForkingMixIn, UDPServer): pass |
| class ForkingTCPServer(ForkingMixIn, TCPServer): pass |
| |
| class ThreadingUDPServer(ThreadingMixIn, UDPServer): pass |
| class ThreadingTCPServer(ThreadingMixIn, TCPServer): pass |
| |
| if hasattr(socket, 'AF_UNIX'): |
| |
| class UnixStreamServer(TCPServer): |
| address_family = socket.AF_UNIX |
| |
| class UnixDatagramServer(UDPServer): |
| address_family = socket.AF_UNIX |
| |
| class ThreadingUnixStreamServer(ThreadingMixIn, UnixStreamServer): pass |
| |
| class ThreadingUnixDatagramServer(ThreadingMixIn, UnixDatagramServer): pass |
| |
| class BaseRequestHandler: |
| |
| """Base class for request handler classes. |
| |
| This class is instantiated for each request to be handled. The |
| constructor sets the instance variables request, client_address |
| and server, and then calls the handle() method. To implement a |
| specific service, all you need to do is to derive a class which |
| defines a handle() method. |
| |
| The handle() method can find the request as self.request, the |
| client address as self.client_address, and the server (in case it |
| needs access to per-server information) as self.server. Since a |
| separate instance is created for each request, the handle() method |
| can define arbitrary other instance variariables. |
| |
| """ |
| |
| def __init__(self, request, client_address, server): |
| self.request = request |
| self.client_address = client_address |
| self.server = server |
| self.setup() |
| try: |
| self.handle() |
| finally: |
| self.finish() |
| |
| def setup(self): |
| pass |
| |
| def handle(self): |
| pass |
| |
| def finish(self): |
| pass |
| |
| |
| # The following two classes make it possible to use the same service |
| # class for stream or datagram servers. |
| # Each class sets up these instance variables: |
| # - rfile: a file object from which receives the request is read |
| # - wfile: a file object to which the reply is written |
| # When the handle() method returns, wfile is flushed properly |
| |
| |
| class StreamRequestHandler(BaseRequestHandler): |
| |
| """Define self.rfile and self.wfile for stream sockets.""" |
| |
| # Default buffer sizes for rfile, wfile. |
| # We default rfile to buffered because otherwise it could be |
| # really slow for large data (a getc() call per byte); we make |
| # wfile unbuffered because (a) often after a write() we want to |
| # read and we need to flush the line; (b) big writes to unbuffered |
| # files are typically optimized by stdio even when big reads |
| # aren't. |
| rbufsize = -1 |
| wbufsize = 0 |
| |
| # A timeout to apply to the request socket, if not None. |
| timeout = None |
| |
| # Disable nagle algorithm for this socket, if True. |
| # Use only when wbufsize != 0, to avoid small packets. |
| disable_nagle_algorithm = False |
| |
| def setup(self): |
| self.connection = self.request |
| if self.timeout is not None: |
| self.connection.settimeout(self.timeout) |
| if self.disable_nagle_algorithm: |
| self.connection.setsockopt(socket.IPPROTO_TCP, |
| socket.TCP_NODELAY, True) |
| self.rfile = self.connection.makefile('rb', self.rbufsize) |
| self.wfile = self.connection.makefile('wb', self.wbufsize) |
| |
| def finish(self): |
| if not self.wfile.closed: |
| try: |
| self.wfile.flush() |
| except socket.error: |
| # An final socket error may have occurred here, such as |
| # the local error ECONNABORTED. |
| pass |
| self.wfile.close() |
| self.rfile.close() |
| |
| |
| class DatagramRequestHandler(BaseRequestHandler): |
| |
| # XXX Regrettably, I cannot get this working on Linux; |
| # s.recvfrom() doesn't return a meaningful client address. |
| |
| """Define self.rfile and self.wfile for datagram sockets.""" |
| |
| def setup(self): |
| from io import BytesIO |
| self.packet, self.socket = self.request |
| self.rfile = BytesIO(self.packet) |
| self.wfile = BytesIO() |
| |
| def finish(self): |
| self.socket.sendto(self.wfile.getvalue(), self.client_address) |