I have a simple python webserver and it keeps failing after 2 days/3 days. After investigation it is because it reaches its number of files opened limit. The opened files descriptors are sockets. (ls -l /proc/pid/fd/xxx
: /proc/pid/fd/xxx -> socket:[yyyyy]
)
I could increase ulimit but I would rather figure out what is going on.
Some context
- I have 50 machines that report every hour to the server that they are up and running, by a simple POST id=machine_id,cpu_usage=xxx
- the server simply stores this in a database (mongodb)
- there is a html page to monitor things, with some jquery/get json to make a chart of the cpu usage for a given machine over
- there is a handler for giving [(date, cpu_usage)] on GET?date_start,date_end,machine_id
I am the only one using this page, and as I said there are just 50 requests an hour randomly distributed to the server
the problem could stem from :
- jquery's
getjson
opened a socket and never closes it (could be but I don't think so as I restarted the server and didnt go on the monitoring page) - the python code and the way I define the handlers in 'main'
- mongodb
- somewhere else I can't think of
code for main :
import listener_handler
from flask import Flask
if __name__ == '__main__':
app = Flask(__name__)
listener_handl = None
@app.route('/listener', methods=['POST'])
def listener():
global listener_handl
if listener_handl is None:
listener_handl = listener_handler.ListenerHandler()
return listener_handl.Post()
... (other handlers for the getjson and the static monitoring page)
app.run()
code for a handler :
from flask import request
class ListenerHandler:
def Post(self):
Save(request.form.get('machine_id'), request.form.get('cpu_usage'))
return 'ok'
code for mongo db :
import pymongo
mongo_client = pymongo.MongoClient()
mongo_db = mongo_client.stations_monitoring
def Save(machine_id, cpu_usage):
mongo_db.db['monitoring'].save({'machine': machine_id, 'cpu': cpu_usage})
I tried to keep the code lightweight, I have good experience with python but almost none with python webserver so I don't really know what's going on under the hood when I define the handlers, if a new socket is created each time, if it is closed at the end, ...
I first had a flask server (code here) then moved to tornado (replaced app.run
by a few tornado imports and some IOLoop.instance().start()
) but this lead to the same problem