deb-python-eventlet/eventlet/convenience.py
Sergey Shepelev f9a3074a3b convenience: listen() sets SO_REUSEPORT when available; Thanks to Zhengwei Gao
From linux kernel >= 3.9, it supports the SO_REUSEPORT option that will
allow multiple server socket to listen the same port

https://github.com/eventlet/eventlet/pull/352
2016-10-28 01:09:40 +03:00

158 lines
5.7 KiB
Python

import sys
from eventlet import greenio
from eventlet import greenpool
from eventlet import greenthread
from eventlet.green import socket
from eventlet.support import greenlets as greenlet
def connect(addr, family=socket.AF_INET, bind=None):
"""Convenience function for opening client sockets.
:param addr: Address of the server to connect to. For TCP sockets, this is a (host, port) tuple.
:param family: Socket family, optional. See :mod:`socket` documentation for available families.
:param bind: Local address to bind to, optional.
:return: The connected green socket object.
"""
sock = socket.socket(family, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
if bind is not None:
sock.bind(bind)
sock.connect(addr)
return sock
def listen(addr, family=socket.AF_INET, backlog=50):
"""Convenience function for opening server sockets. This
socket can be used in :func:`~eventlet.serve` or a custom ``accept()`` loop.
Sets SO_REUSEADDR on the socket to save on annoyance.
:param addr: Address to listen on. For TCP sockets, this is a (host, port) tuple.
:param family: Socket family, optional. See :mod:`socket` documentation for available families.
:param backlog:
The maximum number of queued connections. Should be at least 1; the maximum
value is system-dependent.
:return: The listening green socket object.
"""
sock = socket.socket(family, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
if sys.platform[:3] != "win":
sock.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR, 1)
if hasattr(socket, 'SO_REUSEPORT'):
# NOTE(zhengwei): linux kernel >= 3.9
sock.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEPORT, 1)
sock.bind(addr)
sock.listen(backlog)
return sock
class StopServe(Exception):
"""Exception class used for quitting :func:`~eventlet.serve` gracefully."""
pass
def _stop_checker(t, server_gt, conn):
try:
try:
t.wait()
finally:
conn.close()
except greenlet.GreenletExit:
pass
except Exception:
greenthread.kill(server_gt, *sys.exc_info())
def serve(sock, handle, concurrency=1000):
"""Runs a server on the supplied socket. Calls the function *handle* in a
separate greenthread for every incoming client connection. *handle* takes
two arguments: the client socket object, and the client address::
def myhandle(client_sock, client_addr):
print("client connected", client_addr)
eventlet.serve(eventlet.listen(('127.0.0.1', 9999)), myhandle)
Returning from *handle* closes the client socket.
:func:`serve` blocks the calling greenthread; it won't return until
the server completes. If you desire an immediate return,
spawn a new greenthread for :func:`serve`.
Any uncaught exceptions raised in *handle* are raised as exceptions
from :func:`serve`, terminating the server, so be sure to be aware of the
exceptions your application can raise. The return value of *handle* is
ignored.
Raise a :class:`~eventlet.StopServe` exception to gracefully terminate the
server -- that's the only way to get the server() function to return rather
than raise.
The value in *concurrency* controls the maximum number of
greenthreads that will be open at any time handling requests. When
the server hits the concurrency limit, it stops accepting new
connections until the existing ones complete.
"""
pool = greenpool.GreenPool(concurrency)
server_gt = greenthread.getcurrent()
while True:
try:
conn, addr = sock.accept()
gt = pool.spawn(handle, conn, addr)
gt.link(_stop_checker, server_gt, conn)
conn, addr, gt = None, None, None
except StopServe:
return
def wrap_ssl(sock, *a, **kw):
"""Convenience function for converting a regular socket into an
SSL socket. Has the same interface as :func:`ssl.wrap_socket`,
but can also use PyOpenSSL. Though, note that it ignores the
`cert_reqs`, `ssl_version`, `ca_certs`, `do_handshake_on_connect`,
and `suppress_ragged_eofs` arguments when using PyOpenSSL.
The preferred idiom is to call wrap_ssl directly on the creation
method, e.g., ``wrap_ssl(connect(addr))`` or
``wrap_ssl(listen(addr), server_side=True)``. This way there is
no "naked" socket sitting around to accidentally corrupt the SSL
session.
:return Green SSL object.
"""
return wrap_ssl_impl(sock, *a, **kw)
try:
from eventlet.green import ssl
wrap_ssl_impl = ssl.wrap_socket
except ImportError:
# trying PyOpenSSL
try:
from eventlet.green.OpenSSL import SSL
except ImportError:
def wrap_ssl_impl(*a, **kw):
raise ImportError(
"To use SSL with Eventlet, you must install PyOpenSSL or use Python 2.6 or later.")
else:
def wrap_ssl_impl(sock, keyfile=None, certfile=None, server_side=False,
cert_reqs=None, ssl_version=None, ca_certs=None,
do_handshake_on_connect=True,
suppress_ragged_eofs=True, ciphers=None):
# theoretically the ssl_version could be respected in this line
context = SSL.Context(SSL.SSLv23_METHOD)
if certfile is not None:
context.use_certificate_file(certfile)
if keyfile is not None:
context.use_privatekey_file(keyfile)
context.set_verify(SSL.VERIFY_NONE, lambda *x: True)
connection = SSL.Connection(context, sock)
if server_side:
connection.set_accept_state()
else:
connection.set_connect_state()
return connection