I've been pulling my hair out trying to figure this one out, hoping someone else has already encountered this and knows how to solve it :)
I'm trying to build a very simple Flask endpoint that just needs to call a long running, blocking php
script (think while true {...}
). I've tried a few different methods to async launch the script, but the problem is my browser never actually receives the response back, even though the code for generating the response after running the script is executed.
I've tried using both multiprocessing
and threading
, neither seem to work:
# multiprocessing attempt
@app.route('/endpoint')
def endpoint():
def worker():
subprocess.Popen('nohup php script.php &', shell=True, preexec_fn=os.setpgrp)
p = multiprocessing.Process(target=worker)
print '111111'
p.start()
print '222222'
return json.dumps({
'success': True
})
# threading attempt
@app.route('/endpoint')
def endpoint():
def thread_func():
subprocess.Popen('nohup php script.php &', shell=True, preexec_fn=os.setpgrp)
t = threading.Thread(target=thread_func)
print '111111'
t.start()
print '222222'
return json.dumps({
'success': True
})
In both scenarios I see the 111111
and 222222
, yet my browser still hangs on the response from the endpoint. I've tried p.daemon = True
for the process, as well as p.terminate()
but no luck. I had hoped launching a script with nohup in a different shell and separate processs/thread would just work, but somehow Flask or uWSGI is impacted by it.
Update
Since this does work locally on my Mac when I start my Flask app directly with python app.py
and hit it directly without going through my Nginx proxy and uWSGI, I'm starting to believe it may not be the code itself that is having issues. And because my Nginx just forwards the request to uWSGI, I believe it may possibly be something there that's causing it.
Here is my ini configuration for the domain for uWSGI, which I'm running in emperor mode:
[uwsgi]
protocol = uwsgi
max-requests = 5000
chmod-socket = 660
master = True
vacuum = True
enable-threads = True
auto-procname = True
procname-prefix = michael-
chdir = /srv/www/mysite.com
module = app
callable = app
socket = /tmp/mysite.com.sock
threading
attempt to only starts the process whence called twice, otherwise the HTTP server always answers in a minimal amount of time... Have you triedcurl
?while (true) {}
?