Hey I'm wondering how to handle specific error codes. For example, [Errno 111] Connection refused
I want to catch this specific error in the socket module and print something.
Hey I'm wondering how to handle specific error codes. For example, [Errno 111] Connection refused
I want to catch this specific error in the socket module and print something.
If you want to get the error code, this seems to do the trick;
import errno
try:
socket_connection()
except socket.error as error:
if error.errno == errno.ECONNREFUSED:
print(os.strerror(error.errno))
else:
raise
You can look up errno
error codes.
ECONNREFUSED
appears to be 61 not 111, so hard-coding the value 111 would be a bad idea for portability.
else: raise
, otherwise all other error codes will be silently ignored!
Sep 3, 2016 at 22:56
else
that pairs with the if
. So the else would be at the first indent level, within the except
block.
Aug 29, 2018 at 3:49
os.strerror(error.errno)
will convert the error code to a message string. i.e.: os.strerror(104)
returns 'Connection reset by peer'
On Unix platforms, at least, you can do the following.
import socket, errno
try:
# Do something...
except socket.error as e:
if e.errno == errno.ECONNREFUSED:
# Handle the exception...
else:
raise
Before Python 2.6, use e.args[ 0 ]
instead of e.errno
.
e.errno
instead of e.args[0]
is usually preferred (for exceptions that use errnos).
Mar 1, 2011 at 22:44
socket.error
didn't have an errno
member. It turns out that before Python 2.6, socket.error
wasn't a subclass of IOError
and so didn't have an errno
member. But of course, before Python 2.6 the except t as e
syntax wasn't valid either... I'll update my code.
This seems hard to do reliably/portably but perhaps something like:
import socket
try:
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.connect(('localhost', 4167))
except socket.error, e:
if 'Connection refused' in e:
print '*** Connection refused ***'
which yields:
$ python socketexception.py
*** Connection refused ***
Pretty yucky though.
errno
like in the above answers.
Jun 13, 2014 at 23:28
I'm developing on Windows and found myself in the same predicament. But the error message always contains the error number. Using that information I just convert the exception to a string str(Exception)
, convert the error code I wanna check for to a string str(socket.errno.ERRORX)
and check if the error code is in the exception.
Example for a connection reset exception:
except Exception as errorMessage:
if str(socket.errno.ECONNRESET) in str(errorMessage):
print("Connection reset")
#etc...
This avoids locale specific solutions but is still not platform independent unfortunately.