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The user is entering a python script in a Java GUI python-editor and can run it from the editor. Is there a way to take the user's script and impose a time limit on the total script?

I'm familiar with how to this with functions / signal.alarm(but I'm on windows & unix Jython) but the only solution I have come up with is to put that script in a method in another script where I use the setTrace() function but that removes the "feature" that the value of global variables in it persist. ie.

try:
 i+=1
except NameError:
 i=0

The value of 'i' increments by 1 with every execution.

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2 Answers

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Use a threading.Timer to run a function in a separate thread after a specified delay (the max duration you want for your program), and in that function use thread.interrupt_main (note it's in module thread, not in module threading!) to raise a KeyboardInterrupt exception in the main thread.

A more solid approach (in case the script gets wedged into some non-interruptible non-Python code, so that it would ignore keyboard interrupts) is to spawn a "watchdog process" to kill the errant script very forcefully if needed (do that as well as the above approach, and a little while later than the delay you use above, to give the script a chance to run its destructors, atexit functions, etc, if at all feasible).

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thanks! I'm not an advanced python user but I'm going to try to get this working. – Leonidas Oct 23 at 16:24
ah I'm using Jython 2.1 so thread.interrupt_main() doesn't work! – Leonidas Oct 23 at 18:43
@Leonidas, I don't know for sure how a Java or Jython thread can best interrupt (cleanly, i.e., with all finalizers and try/finally's running, etc) the whole process. What about java.lang.System.exit(1)...? – Alex Martelli Oct 23 at 23:50
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This is just a guess, but maybe wrap it with Threading or Multiprocessing? Have a timer thread that kills it when it times out.

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