# (c) 2005 Ian Bicking and contributors; written for Paste # (http://pythonpaste.org) Licensed under the MIT license: # http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php # # For discussion of daemonizing: # http://aspn.activestate.com/ASPN/Cookbook/Python/Recipe/278731 # # Code taken also from QP: http://www.mems-exchange.org/software/qp/ From # lib/site.py import atexit import ctypes import errno import logging import optparse import os import py_compile import re import subprocess import sys import textwrap import threading import time import traceback import webbrowser from paste.deploy import loadserver from paste.deploy import loadapp from paste.deploy.loadwsgi import loadcontext, SERVER from pyramid.compat import PY3 from pyramid.compat import WIN from pyramid.paster import setup_logging from pyramid.scripts.common import parse_vars MAXFD = 1024 try: import termios except ImportError: # pragma: no cover termios = None if WIN and not hasattr(os, 'kill'): # pragma: no cover # py 2.6 on windows def kill(pid, sig=None): """kill function for Win32""" # signal is ignored, semibogus raise message kernel32 = ctypes.windll.kernel32 handle = kernel32.OpenProcess(1, 0, pid) if (0 == kernel32.TerminateProcess(handle, 0)): raise OSError('No such process %s' % pid) else: kill = os.kill def main(argv=sys.argv, quiet=False): command = PServeCommand(argv, quiet=quiet) return command.run() class DaemonizeException(Exception): pass class PServeCommand(object): usage = '%prog config_uri [start|stop|restart|status] [var=value]' description = """\ This command serves a web application that uses a PasteDeploy configuration file for the server and application. If start/stop/restart is given, then --daemon is implied, and it will start (normal operation), stop (--stop-daemon), or do both. Note: Daemonization features are deprecated. You can also include variable assignments like 'http_port=8080' and then use %(http_port)s in your config files. """ default_verbosity = 1 parser = optparse.OptionParser( usage, description=textwrap.dedent(description) ) parser.add_option( '-n', '--app-name', dest='app_name', metavar='NAME', help="Load the named application (default main)") parser.add_option( '-s', '--server', dest='server', metavar='SERVER_TYPE', help="Use the named server.") parser.add_option( '--server-name', dest='server_name', metavar='SECTION_NAME', help=("Use the named server as defined in the configuration file " "(default: main)")) if hasattr(os, 'fork'): parser.add_option( '--daemon', dest="daemon", action="store_true", help="Run in daemon (background) mode [DEPRECATED]") parser.add_option( '--pid-file', dest='pid_file', metavar='FILENAME', help=("Save PID to file (default to pyramid.pid if running in " "daemon mode) [DEPRECATED]")) parser.add_option( '--log-file', dest='log_file', metavar='LOG_FILE', help="Save output to the given log file (redirects stdout)") parser.add_option( '--reload', dest='reload', action='store_true', help="Use auto-restart file monitor") parser.add_option( '--reload-interval', dest='reload_interval', default=1, help=("Seconds between checking files (low number can cause " "significant CPU usage)")) parser.add_option( '--monitor-restart', dest='monitor_restart', action='store_true', help="Auto-restart server if it dies [DEPRECATED]") parser.add_option( '-b', '--browser', dest='browser', action='store_true', help="Open a web browser to server url") parser.add_option( '--status', action='store_true', dest='show_status', help=("Show the status of the (presumably daemonized) server " "[DEPRECATED]")) parser.add_option( '-v', '--verbose', default=default_verbosity, dest='verbose', action='count', help="Set verbose level (default "+str(default_verbosity)+")") parser.add_option( '-q', '--quiet', action='store_const', const=0, dest='verbose', help="Suppress verbose output") if hasattr(os, 'setuid'): # I don't think these are available on Windows parser.add_option( '--user', dest='set_user', metavar="USERNAME", help="Set the user (usually only possible when run as root)") parser.add_option( '--group', dest='set_group', metavar="GROUP", help="Set the group (usually only possible when run as root)") parser.add_option( '--stop-daemon', dest='stop_daemon', action='store_true', help=('Stop a daemonized server (given a PID file, or default ' 'pyramid.pid file) [DEPRECATED]')) _scheme_re = re.compile(r'^[a-z][a-z]+:', re.I) _reloader_environ_key = 'PYTHON_RELOADER_SHOULD_RUN' _monitor_environ_key = 'PASTE_MONITOR_SHOULD_RUN' possible_subcommands = ('start', 'stop', 'restart', 'status') def __init__(self, argv, quiet=False): self.options, self.args = self.parser.parse_args(argv[1:]) if quiet: self.options.verbose = 0 def out(self, msg): # pragma: no cover if self.options.verbose > 0: print(msg) def get_options(self): if (len(self.args) > 1 and self.args[1] in self.possible_subcommands): restvars = self.args[2:] else: restvars = self.args[1:] return parse_vars(restvars) def run(self): # pragma: no cover if self.options.stop_daemon: self._warn_daemon_deprecated() return self.stop_daemon() if not hasattr(self.options, 'set_user'): # Windows case: self.options.set_user = self.options.set_group = None # @@: Is this the right stage to set the user at? self.change_user_group( self.options.set_user, self.options.set_group) if not self.args: self.out('You must give a config file') return 2 app_spec = self.args[0] if (len(self.args) > 1 and self.args[1] in self.possible_subcommands): cmd = self.args[1] else: cmd = None if self.options.reload: if self.options.daemon or cmd in ('start', 'stop', 'restart'): self.out( 'Error: Cannot use reloading while running as a dameon.') return 2 if os.environ.get(self._reloader_environ_key): if self.options.verbose > 1: self.out('Running reloading file monitor') install_reloader(int(self.options.reload_interval), [app_spec]) # if self.requires_config_file: # watch_file(self.args[0]) else: return self.restart_with_reloader() if cmd not in (None, 'start', 'stop', 'restart', 'status'): self.out( 'Error: must give start|stop|restart (not %s)' % cmd) return 2 if cmd == 'status' or self.options.show_status: self._warn_daemon_deprecated() return self.show_status() if cmd == 'restart' or cmd == 'stop': self._warn_daemon_deprecated() result = self.stop_daemon() if result: if cmd == 'restart': self.out("Could not stop daemon; aborting") else: self.out("Could not stop daemon") return result if cmd == 'stop': return result self.options.daemon = True if cmd == 'start': self.options.daemon = True app_name = self.options.app_name vars = self.get_options() if not self._scheme_re.search(app_spec): app_spec = 'config:' + app_spec server_name = self.options.server_name if self.options.server: server_spec = 'egg:pyramid' assert server_name is None server_name = self.options.server else: server_spec = app_spec base = os.getcwd() # warn before setting a default if self.options.pid_file: self._warn_daemon_deprecated() if getattr(self.options, 'daemon', False): if not self.options.pid_file: self.options.pid_file = 'pyramid.pid' if not self.options.log_file: self.options.log_file = 'pyramid.log' # Ensure the log file is writeable if self.options.log_file: try: writeable_log_file = open(self.options.log_file, 'a') except IOError as ioe: msg = 'Error: Unable to write to log file: %s' % ioe raise ValueError(msg) writeable_log_file.close() # Ensure the pid file is writeable if self.options.pid_file: try: writeable_pid_file = open(self.options.pid_file, 'a') except IOError as ioe: msg = 'Error: Unable to write to pid file: %s' % ioe raise ValueError(msg) writeable_pid_file.close() # warn before forking if ( self.options.monitor_restart and not os.environ.get(self._monitor_environ_key) ): self.out('''\ --monitor-restart has been deprecated in Pyramid 1.6. It will be removed in a future release per Pyramid's deprecation policy. Please consider using a real process manager for your processes like Systemd, Circus, or Supervisor. ''') if ( getattr(self.options, 'daemon', False) and not os.environ.get(self._monitor_environ_key) ): self._warn_daemon_deprecated() try: self.daemonize() except DaemonizeException as ex: if self.options.verbose > 0: self.out(str(ex)) return 2 if ( not os.environ.get(self._monitor_environ_key) and self.options.pid_file ): self.record_pid(self.options.pid_file) if ( self.options.monitor_restart and not os.environ.get(self._monitor_environ_key) ): return self.restart_with_monitor() if self.options.log_file: stdout_log = LazyWriter(self.options.log_file, 'a') sys.stdout = stdout_log sys.stderr = stdout_log logging.basicConfig(stream=stdout_log) log_fn = app_spec if log_fn.startswith('config:'): log_fn = app_spec[len('config:'):] elif log_fn.startswith('egg:'): log_fn = None if log_fn: log_fn = os.path.join(base, log_fn) setup_logging(log_fn) server = self.loadserver(server_spec, name=server_name, relative_to=base, global_conf=vars) app = self.loadapp(app_spec, name=app_name, relative_to=base, global_conf=vars) if self.options.verbose > 0: if hasattr(os, 'getpid'): msg = 'Starting server in PID %i.' % os.getpid() else: msg = 'Starting server.' self.out(msg) def serve(): try: server(app) except (SystemExit, KeyboardInterrupt) as e: if self.options.verbose > 1: raise if str(e): msg = ' ' + str(e) else: msg = '' self.out('Exiting%s (-v to see traceback)' % msg) if self.options.browser: def open_browser(): context = loadcontext(SERVER, app_spec, name=app_name, relative_to=base, global_conf=vars) url = 'http://127.0.0.1:{port}/'.format(**context.config()) time.sleep(1) webbrowser.open(url) t = threading.Thread(target=open_browser) t.setDaemon(True) t.start() serve() def loadapp(self, app_spec, name, relative_to, **kw): # pragma: no cover return loadapp(app_spec, name=name, relative_to=relative_to, **kw) def loadserver(self, server_spec, name, relative_to, **kw):# pragma:no cover return loadserver( server_spec, name=name, relative_to=relative_to, **kw) def quote_first_command_arg(self, arg): # pragma: no cover """ There's a bug in Windows when running an executable that's located inside a path with a space in it. This method handles that case, or on non-Windows systems or an executable with no spaces, it just leaves well enough alone. """ if (sys.platform != 'win32' or ' ' not in arg): # Problem does not apply: return arg try: import win32api except ImportError: raise ValueError( "The executable %r contains a space, and in order to " "handle this issue you must have the win32api module " "installed" % arg) arg = win32api.GetShortPathName(arg) return arg def daemonize(self): # pragma: no cover pid = live_pidfile(self.options.pid_file) if pid: raise DaemonizeException( "Daemon is already running (PID: %s from PID file %s)" % (pid, self.options.pid_file)) if self.options.verbose > 0: self.out('Entering daemon mode') pid = os.fork() if pid: # The forked process also has a handle on resources, so we # *don't* want proper termination of the process, we just # want to exit quick (which os._exit() does) os._exit(0) # Make this the session leader os.setsid() # Fork again for good measure! pid = os.fork() if pid: os._exit(0) # @@: Should we set the umask and cwd now? import resource # Resource usage information. maxfd = resource.getrlimit(resource.RLIMIT_NOFILE)[1] if (maxfd == resource.RLIM_INFINITY): maxfd = MAXFD # Iterate through and close all file descriptors. for fd in range(0, maxfd): try: os.close(fd) except OSError: # ERROR, fd wasn't open to begin with (ignored) pass if (hasattr(os, "devnull")): REDIRECT_TO = os.devnull else: REDIRECT_TO = "/dev/null" os.open(REDIRECT_TO, os.O_RDWR) # standard input (0) # Duplicate standard input to standard output and standard error. os.dup2(0, 1) # standard output (1) os.dup2(0, 2) # standard error (2) def _remove_pid_file(self, written_pid, filename, verbosity): current_pid = os.getpid() if written_pid != current_pid: # A forked process must be exiting, not the process that # wrote the PID file return if not os.path.exists(filename): return with open(filename) as f: content = f.read().strip() try: pid_in_file = int(content) except ValueError: pass else: if pid_in_file != current_pid: msg = "PID file %s contains %s, not expected PID %s" self.out(msg % (filename, pid_in_file, current_pid)) return if verbosity > 0: self.out("Removing PID file %s" % filename) try: os.unlink(filename) return except OSError as e: # Record, but don't give traceback self.out("Cannot remove PID file: (%s)" % e) # well, at least lets not leave the invalid PID around... try: with open(filename, 'w') as f: f.write('') except OSError as e: self.out('Stale PID left in file: %s (%s)' % (filename, e)) else: self.out('Stale PID removed') def record_pid(self, pid_file): pid = os.getpid() if self.options.verbose > 1: self.out('Writing PID %s to %s' % (pid, pid_file)) with open(pid_file, 'w') as f: f.write(str(pid)) atexit.register(self._remove_pid_file, pid, pid_file, self.options.verbose) def stop_daemon(self): # pragma: no cover pid_file = self.options.pid_file or 'pyramid.pid' if not os.path.exists(pid_file): self.out('No PID file exists in %s' % pid_file) return 1 pid = read_pidfile(pid_file) if not pid: self.out("Not a valid PID file in %s" % pid_file) return 1 pid = live_pidfile(pid_file) if not pid: self.out("PID in %s is not valid (deleting)" % pid_file) try: os.unlink(pid_file) except (OSError, IOError) as e: self.out("Could not delete: %s" % e) return 2 return 1 for j in range(10): if not live_pidfile(pid_file): break import signal kill(pid, signal.SIGTERM) time.sleep(1) else: self.out("failed to kill web process %s" % pid) return 3 if os.path.exists(pid_file): os.unlink(pid_file) return 0 def show_status(self): # pragma: no cover pid_file = self.options.pid_file or 'pyramid.pid' if not os.path.exists(pid_file): self.out('No PID file %s' % pid_file) return 1 pid = read_pidfile(pid_file) if not pid: self.out('No PID in file %s' % pid_file) return 1 pid = live_pidfile(pid_file) if not pid: self.out('PID %s in %s is not running' % (pid, pid_file)) return 1 self.out('Server running in PID %s' % pid) return 0 def restart_with_reloader(self): # pragma: no cover self.restart_with_monitor(reloader=True) def restart_with_monitor(self, reloader=False): # pragma: no cover if self.options.verbose > 0: if reloader: self.out('Starting subprocess with file monitor') else: self.out('Starting subprocess with monitor parent') while 1: args = [self.quote_first_command_arg(sys.executable)] + sys.argv new_environ = os.environ.copy() if reloader: new_environ[self._reloader_environ_key] = 'true' else: new_environ[self._monitor_environ_key] = 'true' proc = None try: try: _turn_sigterm_into_systemexit() proc = subprocess.Popen(args, env=new_environ) exit_code = proc.wait() proc = None except KeyboardInterrupt: self.out('^C caught in monitor process') if self.options.verbose > 1: raise return 1 finally: if proc is not None: import signal try: kill(proc.pid, signal.SIGTERM) except (OSError, IOError): pass if reloader: # Reloader always exits with code 3; but if we are # a monitor, any exit code will restart if exit_code != 3: return exit_code if self.options.verbose > 0: self.out('%s %s %s' % ('-' * 20, 'Restarting', '-' * 20)) def change_user_group(self, user, group): # pragma: no cover if not user and not group: return import pwd, grp uid = gid = None if group: try: gid = int(group) group = grp.getgrgid(gid).gr_name except ValueError: import grp try: entry = grp.getgrnam(group) except KeyError: raise ValueError( "Bad group: %r; no such group exists" % group) gid = entry.gr_gid try: uid = int(user) user = pwd.getpwuid(uid).pw_name except ValueError: try: entry = pwd.getpwnam(user) except KeyError: raise ValueError( "Bad username: %r; no such user exists" % user) if not gid: gid = entry.pw_gid uid = entry.pw_uid if self.options.verbose > 0: self.out('Changing user to %s:%s (%s:%s)' % ( user, group or '(unknown)', uid, gid)) if gid: os.setgid(gid) if uid: os.setuid(uid) def _warn_daemon_deprecated(self): self.out('''\ The daemon options have been deprecated in Pyramid 1.6. They will be removed in a future release per Pyramid's deprecation policy. Please consider using a real process manager for your processes like Systemd, Circus, or Supervisor. The following commands are deprecated: [start,stop,restart,status] --daemon, --stop-server, --status, --pid-file ''') class LazyWriter(object): """ File-like object that opens a file lazily when it is first written to. """ def __init__(self, filename, mode='w'): self.filename = filename self.fileobj = None self.lock = threading.Lock() self.mode = mode def open(self): if self.fileobj is None: with self.lock: self.fileobj = open(self.filename, self.mode) return self.fileobj def close(self): fileobj = self.fileobj if fileobj is not None: fileobj.close() def __del__(self): self.close() def write(self, text): fileobj = self.open() fileobj.write(text) fileobj.flush() def writelines(self, text): fileobj = self.open() fileobj.writelines(text) fileobj.flush() def flush(self): self.open().flush() def live_pidfile(pidfile): # pragma: no cover """(pidfile:str) -> int | None Returns an int found in the named file, if there is one, and if there is a running process with that process id. Return None if no such process exists. """ pid = read_pidfile(pidfile) if pid: try: kill(int(pid), 0) return pid except OSError as e: if e.errno == errno.EPERM: return pid return None def read_pidfile(filename): if os.path.exists(filename): try: with open(filename) as f: content = f.read() return int(content.strip()) except (ValueError, IOError): return None else: return None def ensure_port_cleanup( bound_addresses, maxtries=30, sleeptime=2): # pragma: no cover """ This makes sure any open ports are closed. Does this by connecting to them until they give connection refused. Servers should call like:: ensure_port_cleanup([80, 443]) """ atexit.register(_cleanup_ports, bound_addresses, maxtries=maxtries, sleeptime=sleeptime) def _cleanup_ports( bound_addresses, maxtries=30, sleeptime=2): # pragma: no cover # Wait for the server to bind to the port. import socket import errno for bound_address in bound_addresses: for attempt in range(maxtries): sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM) try: sock.connect(bound_address) except socket.error as e: if e.args[0] != errno.ECONNREFUSED: raise break else: time.sleep(sleeptime) else: raise SystemExit('Timeout waiting for port.') sock.close() def _turn_sigterm_into_systemexit(): # pragma: no cover """ Attempts to turn a SIGTERM exception into a SystemExit exception. """ try: import signal except ImportError: return def handle_term(signo, frame): raise SystemExit signal.signal(signal.SIGTERM, handle_term) def ensure_echo_on(): # pragma: no cover if termios: fd = sys.stdin if fd.isatty(): attr_list = termios.tcgetattr(fd) if not attr_list[3] & termios.ECHO: attr_list[3] |= termios.ECHO termios.tcsetattr(fd, termios.TCSANOW, attr_list) def install_reloader(poll_interval=1, extra_files=None): # pragma: no cover """ Install the reloading monitor. On some platforms server threads may not terminate when the main thread does, causing ports to remain open/locked. """ ensure_echo_on() mon = Monitor(poll_interval=poll_interval) if extra_files is None: extra_files = [] mon.extra_files.extend(extra_files) t = threading.Thread(target=mon.periodic_reload) t.setDaemon(True) t.start() class classinstancemethod(object): """ Acts like a class method when called from a class, like an instance method when called by an instance. The method should take two arguments, 'self' and 'cls'; one of these will be None depending on how the method was called. """ def __init__(self, func): self.func = func self.__doc__ = func.__doc__ def __get__(self, obj, type=None): return _methodwrapper(self.func, obj=obj, type=type) class _methodwrapper(object): def __init__(self, func, obj, type): self.func = func self.obj = obj self.type = type def __call__(self, *args, **kw): assert not 'self' in kw and not 'cls' in kw, ( "You cannot use 'self' or 'cls' arguments to a " "classinstancemethod") return self.func(*((self.obj, self.type) + args), **kw) class Monitor(object): # pragma: no cover """ A file monitor and server restarter. Use this like: ..code-block:: Python install_reloader() Then make sure your server is installed with a shell script like:: err=3 while test "$err" -eq 3 ; do python server.py err="$?" done or is run from this .bat file (if you use Windows):: @echo off :repeat python server.py if %errorlevel% == 3 goto repeat or run a monitoring process in Python (``pserve --reload`` does this). Use the ``watch_file(filename)`` function to cause a reload/restart for other non-Python files (e.g., configuration files). If you have a dynamic set of files that grows over time you can use something like:: def watch_config_files(): return CONFIG_FILE_CACHE.keys() add_file_callback(watch_config_files) Then every time the reloader polls files it will call ``watch_config_files`` and check all the filenames it returns. """ instances = [] global_extra_files = [] global_file_callbacks = [] def __init__(self, poll_interval): self.module_mtimes = {} self.keep_running = True self.poll_interval = poll_interval self.extra_files = list(self.global_extra_files) self.instances.append(self) self.syntax_error_files = set() self.pending_reload = False self.file_callbacks = list(self.global_file_callbacks) def _exit(self): # use os._exit() here and not sys.exit() since within a # thread sys.exit() just closes the given thread and # won't kill the process; note os._exit does not call # any atexit callbacks, nor does it do finally blocks, # flush open files, etc. In otherwords, it is rude. os._exit(3) def periodic_reload(self): while True: if not self.check_reload(): self._exit() break time.sleep(self.poll_interval) def check_reload(self): filenames = list(self.extra_files) for file_callback in self.file_callbacks: try: filenames.extend(file_callback()) except: print( "Error calling reloader callback %r:" % file_callback) traceback.print_exc() for module in list(sys.modules.values()): try: filename = module.__file__ except (AttributeError, ImportError): continue if filename is not None: filenames.append(filename) for filename in filenames: try: stat = os.stat(filename) if stat: mtime = stat.st_mtime else: mtime = 0 except (OSError, IOError): continue if filename.endswith('.pyc') and os.path.exists(filename[:-1]): mtime = max(os.stat(filename[:-1]).st_mtime, mtime) pyc = True else: pyc = False old_mtime = self.module_mtimes.get(filename) self.module_mtimes[filename] = mtime if old_mtime is not None and old_mtime < mtime: self.pending_reload = True if pyc: filename = filename[:-1] is_valid = True if filename.endswith('.py'): is_valid = self.check_syntax(filename) if is_valid: print("%s changed ..." % filename) if self.pending_reload and not self.syntax_error_files: self.pending_reload = False return False return True def check_syntax(self, filename): # check if a file has syntax errors. # If so, track it until it's fixed. try: py_compile.compile(filename, doraise=True) except py_compile.PyCompileError: print("%s has a SyntaxError; NOT reloading." % filename) self.syntax_error_files.add(filename) return False else: if filename in self.syntax_error_files: self.syntax_error_files.remove(filename) return True def watch_file(self, cls, filename): """Watch the named file for changes""" filename = os.path.abspath(filename) if self is None: for instance in cls.instances: instance.watch_file(filename) cls.global_extra_files.append(filename) else: self.extra_files.append(filename) watch_file = classinstancemethod(watch_file) def add_file_callback(self, cls, callback): """Add a callback -- a function that takes no parameters -- that will return a list of filenames to watch for changes.""" if self is None: for instance in cls.instances: instance.add_file_callback(callback) cls.global_file_callbacks.append(callback) else: self.file_callbacks.append(callback) add_file_callback = classinstancemethod(add_file_callback) watch_file = Monitor.watch_file add_file_callback = Monitor.add_file_callback # For paste.deploy server instantiation (egg:pyramid#wsgiref) def wsgiref_server_runner(wsgi_app, global_conf, **kw): # pragma: no cover from wsgiref.simple_server import make_server host = kw.get('host', '0.0.0.0') port = int(kw.get('port', 8080)) server = make_server(host, port, wsgi_app) print('Starting HTTP server on http://%s:%s' % (host, port)) server.serve_forever() # For paste.deploy server instantiation (egg:pyramid#cherrypy) def cherrypy_server_runner( app, global_conf=None, host='127.0.0.1', port=None, ssl_pem=None, protocol_version=None, numthreads=None, server_name=None, max=None, request_queue_size=None, timeout=None ): # pragma: no cover """ Entry point for CherryPy's WSGI server Serves the specified WSGI app via CherryPyWSGIServer. ``app`` The WSGI 'application callable'; multiple WSGI applications may be passed as (script_name, callable) pairs. ``host`` This is the ipaddress to bind to (or a hostname if your nameserver is properly configured). This defaults to 127.0.0.1, which is not a public interface. ``port`` The port to run on, defaults to 8080 for HTTP, or 4443 for HTTPS. This can be a string or an integer value. ``ssl_pem`` This an optional SSL certificate file (via OpenSSL) You can generate a self-signed test PEM certificate file as follows: $ openssl genrsa 1024 > host.key $ chmod 400 host.key $ openssl req -new -x509 -nodes -sha1 -days 365 \\ -key host.key > host.cert $ cat host.cert host.key > host.pem $ chmod 400 host.pem ``protocol_version`` The protocol used by the server, by default ``HTTP/1.1``. ``numthreads`` The number of worker threads to create. ``server_name`` The string to set for WSGI's SERVER_NAME environ entry. ``max`` The maximum number of queued requests. (defaults to -1 = no limit). ``request_queue_size`` The 'backlog' argument to socket.listen(); specifies the maximum number of queued connections. ``timeout`` The timeout in seconds for accepted connections. """ is_ssl = False if ssl_pem: port = port or 4443 is_ssl = True if not port: if ':' in host: host, port = host.split(':', 1) else: port = 8080 bind_addr = (host, int(port)) kwargs = {} for var_name in ('numthreads', 'max', 'request_queue_size', 'timeout'): var = locals()[var_name] if var is not None: kwargs[var_name] = int(var) from cherrypy import wsgiserver server = wsgiserver.CherryPyWSGIServer(bind_addr, app, server_name=server_name, **kwargs) if ssl_pem is not None: if not PY3: server.ssl_certificate = server.ssl_private_key = ssl_pem else: # creates wsgiserver.ssl_builtin as side-effect wsgiserver.get_ssl_adapter_class() server.ssl_adapter = wsgiserver.ssl_builtin.BuiltinSSLAdapter( ssl_pem, ssl_pem) if protocol_version: server.protocol = protocol_version try: protocol = is_ssl and 'https' or 'http' if host == '0.0.0.0': print('serving on 0.0.0.0:%s view at %s://127.0.0.1:%s' % (port, protocol, port)) else: print('serving on %s://%s:%s' % (protocol, host, port)) server.start() except (KeyboardInterrupt, SystemExit): server.stop() return server if __name__ == '__main__': # pragma: no cover sys.exit(main() or 0)