I've got the following code:
for f in fileListProtocol.files:
if f['filetype'] == '-':
filename = os.path.join(directory['filename'], f['filename'])
print 'Downloading %s...' % (filename)
newFile = open(filename, 'w+')
d = ftpClient.retrieveFile(filename, FileConsumer(newFile))
d.addCallback(closeFile, newFile)
Unfortunately, after downloading several hundred of the 1000+ files in the directory in question I get an IOError about too many open files. Why is this when I should be closing each file after they've been downloaded? If there's a more idiomatic way to approach the whole task of downloading lots of files too, I'd love to hear it. Thanks.
Update: Jean-Paul's DeferredSemaphore
example plus Matt's FTPFile
did the trick. For some reason using a Cooperator
instead of DeferredSemaphore
would download a few files and then fail because the FTP connection would have died.
FTPClient
serializes the commands, you shouldn't need either of JP's parallelization techniques. The problem was that yourFileConsumer
s ate file handles when instantiated AND they weren't closing the files when the download finished, I expect yourd.addCallback(closeFile, newFile)
wasn't working as intended. The class I provided only opens the file when needed and closes it when finished as it is supporting the protocol interface in the way thatretrieveFile
is expecting it to.