I'm fairly inexperienced with python, so I find myself at a loss as to how to approach this bug. I've inherited a python app that mainly just copies files and folders from one place to another. All the files and folders are on the local machine and the user has full admin rights, so there are no networking or security issues here.
What I've found is that a number of files fail to get copied from one directory to another unless I slow down the code somehow. If I just run the program it fails, but if I step through with a debugger or add print
statements to the copy loop, it succeeds. The difference there seems to be either the timing of the loop or moving things around in memory.
I've seen this sort of bug in compiled languages before, and it usually indicates either a race condition or memory corruption. However, there is only one thread and no interaction with other processes, so a race condition seems impossible. Memory corruption remains a possibility, but I'm not sure how to investigate that possibility with python.
Here is the loop in question. As you can see, it's rather simple:
def concat_dirs(dir, subdir):
return dir + "/" + subdir
for name in fullnames:
install_name = concat_dirs(install_path, name)
dirname = os.path.dirname(install_name)
if not os.path.exists(dirname):
os.makedirs(dirname)
shutil.copyfile(concat_dirs(java_path, name), install_name)
That loop usually fails to copy the files unless I either step through it with a debugger or add this statement after the shutil.copyfile
line.
print "copied ", concat_dirs(java_path, name), " to ", install_name
If I add that statement or step through in debug, the loop works perfectly and consistently. I'm tempted to say "good enough" with the print
statement but I know that's just masking an underlying problem.
I'm not asking you to debug my code because I know you can't; I'm asking for a debug strategy. How do I approach finding this bug?
concat_dirs
an extra time modifies something that makes a difference), then one possible strategy is that you can speed up your logging considerably by just appending a string or two to some list of log messages somewhere. Print them out later once the bad behavior has occurred (if it does).dfcenv.java_path
the same asjava_path
?dfcenv.java_path
should have been simplyjava_path
. That was a typo on my part when I simplified the code for posting.