Python socket.accept nonblocking?

37,848

Solution 1

You probably want something like select.select() (see documentation). You supply select() with three lists of sockets: sockets you want to monitor for readability, writability, and error states. The server socket will be readable when a new client is waiting.

The select() function will block until one of the socket states has changed. You can specify an optional fourth parameter, timeout, if you don't want to block forever.

Here is a dumb echo server example:

import select
import socket

server_socket = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
server_socket.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR, 1)
server_socket.bind(('', 8888))
server_socket.listen(5)
print "Listening on port 8888"

read_list = [server_socket]
while True:
    readable, writable, errored = select.select(read_list, [], [])
    for s in readable:
        if s is server_socket:
            client_socket, address = server_socket.accept()
            read_list.append(client_socket)
            print "Connection from", address
        else:
            data = s.recv(1024)
            if data:
                s.send(data)
            else:
                s.close()
                read_list.remove(s)

Python also has epoll, poll, and kqueue implementations for platforms that support them. They are more efficient versions of select.

Solution 2

You can invoke the setblocking(0) method on the Socket to make it non-blocking. Look into the asyncore module or a framework like Twisted.

Share:
37,848
pajm
Author by

pajm

Updated on July 16, 2022

Comments

  • pajm
    pajm almost 2 years

    Is there a way I can use python's socket.accept() in a non-blocking way that simply runs it and lets me just check if it got any new connections? I really don't want to use threading. Thanks.