4

I have a flask app running some computations and I make requests to from a Jupyter notebook. The client side code follows the basic format:

outputs = []
for batch in request_batches:
    response = requests.post(flask_address, json=json.dumps(batch), timeout=3600)
    outputs.append(response)

The idea is to iterate through a series of request batches (batching makes sense for the application) and collect the responses.

Normally what happens is for each batch I see the request logged on the Flask app side, along with confirmation of the Post once the computation is complete.

00.000.000.000 - - [29/Apr/2020 02:21:46] "POST //docking HTTP/1.1" 200 -

After one batch finishes, the loop continues and the next request is sent.

The issue I'm having is sometimes the computation on the Flask size takes a little longer than normal, and this causes the request loop in the notebook to hang (Note that longer than normal is by a few minutes, well under the set timeout period). On the Flask size, the computation finishes successfully and there's a Post confirmation.

On the notebook size, the loop hangs and no further requests are made. This isn't a timeout issue - there are no timeout errors. The notebook cell just hangs until I manually interrupt it.

When I interrupt, I see the following stack trace:

~/opt/anaconda3/envs/env/lib/python3.7/socket.py in readinto(self, b)
    587         while True:
    588             try:
--> 589                 return self._sock.recv_into(b)
    590             except timeout:
    591                 self._timeout_occurred = True

After I interrupt, I can confirm that the response that causes the loop to hang was not added to the outputs. So somehow the Flask app is Posting a response, but the response isn't being received by the client notebook. Again 95% of the time this runs fine, but the 5% where the request takes longer to process results in the request loop freezing.

Does anyone know how to go about debugging this?

1 Answer 1

1
+50

It's most likely due to a socket disconnect. See the issue here: https://github.com/psf/requests/issues/3353

You can set the TCP keepalive timers to combat this.

# Set TCP keep alive options to avoid HTTP requests hanging issue
# Reference: https://stackoverflow.com/a/14855726/2360527
import platform
import socket
import urllib3.connection

platform_name = platform.system()
orig_connect = urllib3.connection.HTTPConnection.connect
def patch_connect(self):
    orig_connect(self)
    if platform_name == "Linux" or platform_name == "Windows":
        self.sock.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_KEEPALIVE, 1),
        self.sock.setsockopt(socket.IPPROTO_TCP, socket.TCP_KEEPIDLE, 1),
        self.sock.setsockopt(socket.IPPROTO_TCP, socket.TCP_KEEPINTVL, 3),
        self.sock.setsockopt(socket.IPPROTO_TCP, socket.TCP_KEEPCNT, 5),
    elif platform_name == "Darwin":
        TCP_KEEPALIVE = 0x10
        self.sock.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_KEEPALIVE, 1)
        self.sock.setsockopt(socket.IPPROTO_TCP, TCP_KEEPALIVE, 3)
urllib3.connection.HTTPConnection.connect = patch_connect

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.