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?