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1

Hi!

It seems

import Queue

Queue.Queue().get(timeout=10)

is keyboard interruptible (ctrl-c) whereas

import Queue

Queue.Queue().get()

is not. I could always create a loop;

import Queue
q = Queue()

while True:
    try:
        q.get(timeout=1000)
    except Queue.Empty:
        pass

but this seems like a strange thing to do.

So, is there a way of getting an indefinitely waiting but keyboard interruptible Queue.get()?

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2 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

Queue objects have this behavior because they lock using Condition objects form the threading module. So your solution is really the only way to go.

However, if you really want a Queue method that does this, you can monkeypatch the Queue class. For example:

def interruptable_get(self):
    while True:
        try:
            return self.get(timeout=1000)
        except Queue.Empty:
            pass
Queue.interruptable_get = interruptable_get

This would let you say

q.interruptable_get()

instead of

interruptable_get(q)

although monkeypatching is generally discouraged by the Python community in cases such as these, since a regular function seems just as good.

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Ah, I see, a bad case of leaky abstractions*. Ahwell. * joelonsoftware.com/articles/LeakyAbstractions.html/… – Henrik Gustafsson Oct 17 '08 at 17:18
Why not subclass Queue, rather than monkey patching it? – fivebells Oct 17 '08 at 18:06
Monkeypatching is better when you're receiving Queue objects that were instantiated and returned by some third-party code that you can't change, or possibly by some co-worker's code that you also can't change. However, perhaps I should have used subclassing since that's probably not very common. – Eli Courtwright Oct 17 '08 at 19:25
vote up 3 vote down

This may not apply to your use case at all. But I've successfully used this pattern in several cases: (sketchy and likely buggy, but you get the point).

STOP = object()

def consumer(q):
    while True:
        x = q.get()
        if x is STOP:
            return
        consume(x)

def main()
    q = Queue()
    c=threading.Thread(target=consumer,args=[q])

    try:
        run_producer(q)
    except KeybordInterrupt:
        q.enqueue(STOP)
    c.join()
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