Just for the record, i just started programing on python, and this is the first time i try to do a daemon.

I have a problem handling DB connections in a daemon i've been working on, the first thing i do, is connect to my postgres db with:

try:
  psycopg2.apilevel = '2.0'
  psycopg2.threadsafety = 3
  cnx = psycopg2.connect( "host='192.168.10.36' dbname='db' user='vas' password='vas'")
  except Exception, e:
  print "Unable to connect to DB. Error [%s]" % ( e,)
  exit( )

after that I select all rows in the DB that are with status = 0:

try:
  cursor = cnx.cursor( cursor_factory = psycopg2.extras.DictCursor)
  cursor.execute( "SELECT * FROM table WHERE status = 0")
  rows = cursor.fetchall( )
  cursor.close( )
except Exception, e:
  print "Error on sql query [%s]" % ( e,)

then if there are rows selected the program forks into:

while 1:
  try:
    psycopg2.apilevel = '2.0'
    psycopg2.threadsafety = 3
    cnx = psycopg2.connect( "host='192.168.10.36' dbname='sms' user='vas' password='vas'")
  except Exception, e:
    print "Unable to connect to DB. Error [%s]" % ( e,)
    exit( )

  if rows:
    daemonize( )
    for i in rows:
      try:
        global q, l
        q = Queue.Queue( max_threads)
        for i in rows:
          cursor = cnx.cursor( cursor_factory = psycopg2.extras.DictCursor)
          t = threading.Thread( target=sender, args=(i, cursor))
          t.setDaemon( True)
          t.start( )

          for i in rows:
            q.put( i)
            q.join( )
      except Exception, e:
        print "Se ha producido el siguente error [%s]" % ( e,)
        exit( )
  else:
    print "No rows where selected\n"
    time.sleep( 5)

My daemonize function looks like this:

def daemonize( ):
  try:
    pid = os.fork()
    if pid > 0:
      sys.exit(0)
  except OSError, e:
    print >>sys.stderr, "fork #1 failed: %d (%s)" % (e.errno, e.strerror)
    sys.exit(1)

  os.chdir("/")
  os.umask(0)

  try:
    pid = os.fork()
    if pid > 0:
      sys.exit(0)
  except OSError, e:
    print >>sys.stderr, "fork #2 failed: %d (%s)" % (e.errno, e.strerror)
    sys.exit(1)

threads target to sender function:

def sender( row, db):
  while 1:
  item = q.get( )
  if send_to( row['to'], row['text']):
    db.execute( "UPDATE table SET status = 1 WHERE id = %d" % sms['id'])
  else:
    print "UPDATE table SET status = 2 WHERE id = %d" % sms['id']
    db.execute( "UPDATE table SET status = 2 WHERE id = %d" % sms['id'])
  db.close( )
  q.task_done( )

send_to function just opens a url and return true or false on success

Since yesterday i keep getting these error and cant find my way thru:

UPDATE outbox SET status = 2 WHERE id = 36
Exception in thread Thread-1:
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "/usr/lib/python2.6/threading.py", line 525, in __bootstrap_inner
    self.run()
  File "/usr/lib/python2.6/threading.py", line 477, in run
    self.__target(*self.__args, **self.__kwargs)
  File "sender.py", line 30, in sender
    db.execute( "UPDATE table SET status = 2 WHERE id = %d" % sms['id'])
  File "/usr/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/psycopg2/extras.py", line 88, in execute
    return _cursor.execute(self, query, vars, async)
OperationalError: server closed the connection unexpectedly
    This probably means the server terminated abnormally
    before or while processing the request.
link|improve this question

20% accept rate
Too much code. Can you cut this code down to the smallest thing that shows your error message? Does a non-daemon version of this work? Are your database credentials valid? Did someone move the database server and not tell you? If it used to work and doesn't work now, what did you change? – S.Lott Oct 13 '09 at 18:57
feedback

1 Answer

Database handles don't survive across fork(). You'll need to open a new database handle in each subprocess, ie after you call daemonize() call psycopg2.connect.

I've not used postgres but I know this to be definitely true for MySQL.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.