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I'm testing Ruby XMLRPC support right now. It all works fine, except XMLRPC::Server#shutdown.

If I run the following Ruby 1.9.3 test code, it fails to shut down the server on both Windows 7 and OSX 10.7:

# server.rb

require "xmlrpc/server"
require 'thread'
Thread.new { sleep 10; $server.shutdown() }
$server = XMLRPC::Server.new( 1234 )
$server.add_handler( "test" ) { true }
$server.serve()

# client.rb

require "xmlrpc/client"
server = XMLRPC::Client.new( "localhost", "/", 1234 )
loop { server.call( "test" ); sleep 0.1 }

After ten seconds, the server writes "INFO going to shutdown ..." to stdout, but won't actually shut down and continues to handle incoming requests. What am I doing wrong?

2 Answers 2

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Have you noticed that without incoming requests it shutdowns properly? Also, after you end the client, it will shut down as it should, returning :Stop symbol. It waits for the client to stop pumping data before shutting down.

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  • No, value of $server is initialized. The "INFO going to shutdown ..." server response hints that. It just never actually shuts down. Anyway, i have tried to switch this two strings - no difference.
    – grigoryvp
    Feb 17, 2012 at 22:16
  • can you print $server.__id__ both in the thread and before .serve()?
    – farnoy
    Feb 17, 2012 at 22:49
  • @famoy 70259918873820 in both cases (same).
    – grigoryvp
    Feb 18, 2012 at 6:43
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I have examined XMLRPC::Server source code. It seems a bug/feature that prevents shutdown if client uses connection with keep-alive HTTP flag.

The workaround is to use call_async instead of call.

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