I'm using waitress
to serve my Django app. I need it to serve the app on two ports simultaneously, in the same thread. (Can't be on a separate process because I need to be able to run it in my debugger in development.)
How can I do that?
I'm using waitress
to serve my Django app. I need it to serve the app on two ports simultaneously, in the same thread. (Can't be on a separate process because I need to be able to run it in my debugger in development.)
How can I do that?
The latest version of waitress is now able to listen on multiple sockets, including IPv4 and IPv6.
Instead of passing in a host/port combination you now provide waitress
with a space delineated list, and it will create as many sockets as required.
from waitress import serve
serve(wsgiapp, listen='0.0.0.0:8080 [::]:9090 *:6543')
I've never used waitress
, but the latest documentation doesn't seem to mention using multiple ports. A quick clone and ack for 'port' and 'socket' through the code helped me find runner.py
with documented command-line options, and the option --port=PORT
doesn't seem to support multiple ports. That's not proof, but a good indication without digging too deep.
If I were to take a stab at adding this feature to waitress
, then it sounds like select
is what's needed.
Here's a StackOverflow example that uses select
to bind a basic server
to multiple ports.