I found an option discussed here which works great if the host is connected to the network. However, socket.gethostbyname(hostname)
hangs for a long time if the host is not connected.
I saw a suggestion to run socket.gethostbyname(hostname)
in a thread and if this thread did not return a result within a specified period, assume it is not connected. This I thought was a good idea, but I am not proficient enough yet with threads (although I have used them successfully) to know how to do this.
I found this discussion How to find running time of a thread in Python which seems to imply that this is not trivial. Any ideas? Thanks.
Edit:
I must admit my own ignorance. I didn't realize (though I should have) that socket.gethostbyname(hostname)
was doing a DNS lookup. So, I put together this simple to test for a socket connection to the host of interest on port 22:
#! /usr/bin/python
import socket
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.settimeout(0.5)
try:
s.connect(('192.168.2.5',22))
except Exception, e:
print 'connection failed'
s.close()
Note: this will not check for an existing connection to a network and will hang if not connected.
This script will check for a connection to a network first, if a connection is found then it will check for a specific host on that network:
#! /usr/bin/python
import socket
import fcntl
import struct
def check_connection():
ifaces = ['eth0','wlan0']
connected = []
i = 0
for ifname in ifaces:
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_DGRAM)
try:
socket.inet_ntoa(fcntl.ioctl(
s.fileno(),
0x8915, # SIOCGIFADDR
struct.pack('256s', ifname[:15])
)[20:24])
connected.append(ifname)
print "%s is connected" % ifname
except:
print "%s is not connected" % ifname
i += 1
return connected
connected_ifaces = check_connection()
if len(connected_ifaces) == 0:
print 'not connected to any network'
else:
print 'connected to a network using the following interface(s):'
for x in connected_ifaces:
print '\t%s' % x
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.settimeout(0.5)
try:
s.connect(('192.168.2.5',22))
print 'connected to hostname'
except Exception, e:
print 'connection to hostname failed'
s.close()
connect
to an IP address much more easily than on a DNS lookup. If the answer is "fail" (and you don't care about distinguishing the cases), then you do have to do something complicated as you suggest.connect
than to try to do a whole HTTP request and response…