Prometheus python client error Address already in use - python

I'm running a web app with address 127.0.0.1:5000 and am using the python client library for Prometheus. I use start_http_server(8000) from the example in their docs to expose the metrics on that port. The application runs, but I get [Errno 48] Address already in use and the localhost:8000 doesn't connect to anything when I try hitting it.
If I can't start two servers from one web app, then what port should I pass into start_http_server() in order to expose the metrics?
There is nothing already running on either port before I start the app.

Some other process is utilizing the port (8000). To kill the process that is running on the port (8000), simply find the process_id [pid] of the process.
lsof -i :8000
This will show you the processes running on the port 8000 like this:
COMMAND PID USER FD TYPE DEVICE SIZE/OFF NODE NAME
python3 21271 hashed 3u IPv4 1430288 0t0 TCP *:8000 (LISTEN)
You can kill the process using the kill command like this:
sudo kill -9 21271
Recheck if the process is killed using the same command
lsof -i :8000
There should be nothing on the stdout.

When flask's debug mode is set to True, the code reloads after the flask server is up, and a bind to the prometheus server is been called a second time
Set flask app debug argument to False to solve it

This is mainly because you are restarting the server again on the port 8000.
To resolve this I created a function which will create the server after assuring the previous server or the port can be used.
You can look at https://github.com/prometheus/client_python/issues/155, here the same case is addressed

Port 8000 does not need to have a web server running on it for it to be already in use. Use your OS command line to find the process that is using up the port then kill it. If a service is also running that causes it to get spawned again, disable that process.
A simpler solution would be to use another port instead of 8000.
EDIT: Looks like it is a bug in Prometheus. Github Issue

you cannot run two http servers on the same thread.
I don't know why but the implementation of the prometheus_client doesn't runs the server on a separate thread.
my solution is
import logging.config
import os
import connexion
from multiprocessing.pool import ThreadPool
from prometheus_client import start_http_server
app = connexion.App(__name__, specification_dir='./')
app.add_api('swagger.yml')
# If we're running in stand alone mode, run the application
if __name__ == '__main__':
pool = ThreadPool(1)
pool.apply_async(start_http_server, (8000, )) # start prometheus in a different thread
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000, debug=True) . # start my server

Maybe your 8000 port is occupied. You can change it to another port, such as 8001

Related

VS Code Flask temporary hosting with an actual url? [duplicate]

I'm not sure if this is Flask specific, but when I run an app in dev mode (http://localhost:5000), I cannot access it from other machines on the network (with http://[dev-host-ip]:5000). With Rails in dev mode, for example, it works fine. I couldn't find any docs regarding the Flask dev server configuration. Any idea what should be configured to enable this?
While this is possible, you should not use the Flask dev server in production. The Flask dev server is not designed to be particularly secure, stable, or efficient. See the docs on deploying for correct solutions.
The --host option to flask run, or the host parameter to app.run(), controls what address the development server listens to. By default it runs on localhost, change it to flask run --host=0.0.0.0 (or app.run(host="0.0.0.0")) to run on all your machine's IP addresses.
0.0.0.0 is a special value that you can't use in the browser directly, you'll need to navigate to the actual IP address of the machine on the network. You may also need to adjust your firewall to allow external access to the port.
The Flask quickstart docs explain this in the "Externally Visible Server" section:
If you run the server you will notice that the server is only
accessible from your own computer, not from any other in the network.
This is the default because in debugging mode a user of the
application can execute arbitrary Python code on your computer.
If you have the debugger disabled or trust the users on your network,
you can make the server publicly available simply by adding
--host=0.0.0.0 to the command line:
$ flask run --host=0.0.0.0
This tells your operating system to listen on all public IPs.
If you use the flask executable to start your server, use flask run --host=0.0.0.0 to change the default from 127.0.0.1 and open it up to non-local connections.
If you run the server you will notice that the server is only
accessible from your own computer, not from any other in the network.
This is the default because in debugging mode a user of the
application can execute arbitrary Python code on your computer.
If you have the debugger disabled or trust the users on your network,
you can make the server publicly available simply by adding
--host=0.0.0.0 to the command line:
$ flask run --host=0.0.0.0
This tells your operating system to listen on all public IPs.
Reference: https://flask.palletsprojects.com/quickstart/
Try this if the 0.0.0.0 method doesn't work
Boring Stuff
I personally battled a lot to get my app accessible to other devices(laptops and mobile phones) through a local-server. I tried the 0.0.0.0 method, but no luck. Then I tried changing the port, but it just didn't work. So, after trying a bunch of different combinations, I arrived to this one, and it solved my problem of deploying my app on a local server.
Steps
Get the local IPv4 address of your computer.
This can be done by typing ipconfig on Windows and ifconfig on Linux
and Mac.
Please note: The above step is to be performed on the machine you are serving the app on, and on not the machine on which you are accessing it. Also note, that the IPv4 address might change if you disconnect and reconnect to the network.
Now, simply run the flask app with the acquired IPv4 address.
flask run -h 192.168.X.X
E.g. In my case (see the image), I ran it as:
flask run -h 192.168.1.100
On my mobile device
Optional Stuff
If you are performing this procedure on Windows and using Power Shell as the CLI, and you still aren't able to access the website, try a CTRL + C command in the shell that's running the app. Power Shell gets frozen up sometimes and it needs a pinch to revive. Doing this might even terminate the server, but it sometimes does the trick.
That's it. Give a thumbs up if you found this helpful.😉
Some more optional stuff
I have created a short Powershell script that will get you your IP address whenever you need one:
$env:getIp = ipconfig
if ($env:getIp -match '(IPv4[\sa-zA-Z.]+:\s[0-9.]+)') {
if ($matches[1] -match '([^a-z\s][\d]+[.\d]+)'){
$ipv4 = $matches[1]
}
}
echo $ipv4
Save it to a file with .ps1 extension (for PowerShell), and run it on before starting your app. You can save it in your project folder and run it as:
.\getIP.ps1; flask run -h $ipv4
Note: I saved the above shellcode in getIP.ps1.
Cool.👌
Add host='0.0.0.0' to app.run`.
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000)
If you get OSError: [WinError 10013] An attempt was made to access a socket in a way forbidden by its access permissions on Windows, you either don't have permission to use the port, or something else is using it which you can find with netstat -na|findstr 5000.
Check whether the particular port is open on the server to serve the client or not?
in Ubuntu or Linux distro
sudo ufw enable
sudo ufw allow 5000/tcp //allow the server to handle the request on port 5000
Configure the application to handle remote requests
app.run(host='0.0.0.0' , port=5000)
python3 app.py & #run application in background
If your cool app has it's configuration loaded from an external file, like in the following example, then don't forget to update the corresponding config file with HOST="0.0.0.0"
cool.app.run(
host=cool.app.config.get("HOST", "localhost"),
port=cool.app.config.get("PORT", 9000)
)
If you're having troubles accessing your Flask server, deployed using PyCharm, take the following into account:
PyCharm doesn't run your main .py file directly, so any code in if __name__ == '__main__': won't be executed, and any changes (like app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000)) won't take effect.
Instead, you should configure the Flask server using Run Configurations, in particular, placing --host 0.0.0.0 --port 5000 into Additional options field.
More about configuring Flask server in PyCharm
You can also set the host (to expose it on a network facing IP address) and port via environment variables.
$ export FLASK_APP=app.py
$ export FLASK_ENV=development
$ export FLASK_RUN_PORT=8000
$ export FLASK_RUN_HOST=0.0.0.0
$ flask run
* Serving Flask app "app.py" (lazy loading)
* Environment: development
* Debug mode: on
* Running on https://0.0.0.0:8000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
* Restarting with stat
* Debugger is active!
* Debugger PIN: 329-665-000
See How to get all available Command Options to set environment variables?
Go to your project path on CMD(command Prompt) and execute the following command:-
set FLASK_APP=ABC.py
SET FLASK_ENV=development
flask run -h [yourIP] -p 8080
you will get following o/p on CMD:-
Serving Flask app "expirement.py" (lazy loading)
Environment: development
Debug mode: on
Restarting with stat
Debugger is active!
Debugger PIN: 199-519-700
Running on http://[yourIP]:8080/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
Now you can access your flask app on another machine using http://[yourIP]:8080/ url
For me i followed the above answer and modified it a bit:
Just grab your ipv4 address using ipconfig on command prompt
Go to the file in which flask code is present
In main function write app.run(host= 'your ipv4 address')
Eg:
Create file .flaskenv in the project root directory.
The parameters in this file are typically:
FLASK_APP=app.py
FLASK_ENV=development
FLASK_RUN_HOST=[dev-host-ip]
FLASK_RUN_PORT=5000
If you have a virtual environment, activate it and do a pip install python-dotenv .
This package is going to use the .flaskenv file, and declarations inside it will be automatically imported across terminal sessions.
Then you can do flask run
This answer is not solely related with flask, but should be applicable for all cannot connect service from another host issue.
use netstat -ano | grep <port> to see if the address is 0.0.0.0 or ::. If it is 127.0.0.1 then it is only for the local requests.
use tcpdump to see if any packet is missing. If it shows obvious imbalance, check routing rules by iptables.
Today I run my flask app as usual, but I noticed it cannot connect from other server. Then I run netstat -ano | grep <port>, and the local address is :: or 0.0.0.0 (I tried both, and I know 127.0.0.1 only allows connection from the local host). Then I used telnet host port, the result is like connect to .... This is very odd. Then I thought I would better check it with tcpdump -i any port <port> -w w.pcap. And I noticed it is all like this:
Then by checking iptables --list OUTPUT section, I could see several rules:
these rules forbid output tcp vital packets in handshaking. By deleting them, the problem is gone.
I had the same problem, I use PyCharm as an editor and when I created the project, PyCharm created a Flask Server. What I did was create a server with Python in the following way;
basically what I did was create a new server but flask if not python
I hope it helps you
This finally worked for me.
import os
Then place this at the end of your python app.py or main file.
if __name__ == "__main__":
port = int(os.environ.get("PORT", 5000))
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=port)
go to project path
set FLASK_APP=ABC.py
SET FLASK_ENV=development
flask run -h [yourIP] -p 8080
you will following o/p on CMD:-
* Serving Flask app "expirement.py" (lazy loading)
* Environment: development
* Debug mode: on
* Restarting with stat
* Debugger is active!
* Debugger PIN: 199-519-700
* Running on http://[yourIP]:8080/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
If none of the above solutions are working, try manually adding "http://" to the beginning of the url.
Chrome can distinguish "[ip-address]:5000" from a search query. But sometimes that works for a while, and then stops connecting, seemingly without me changing anything. My hypothesis is that the browser might sometimes automatically prepend https:// (which it shouldn't, but this fixed it in my case).
In case you need to test your app from an external network.
Simply serve it to the whole Internet with ngrok.com
which will deploy it like a dev server but in no time and locally, saved me a lot of time, and no, I'm not related to that company :)
Just make sure to change the port in your flask app:
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=80)

Flask Deployment on Local Server [duplicate]

I'm not sure if this is Flask specific, but when I run an app in dev mode (http://localhost:5000), I cannot access it from other machines on the network (with http://[dev-host-ip]:5000). With Rails in dev mode, for example, it works fine. I couldn't find any docs regarding the Flask dev server configuration. Any idea what should be configured to enable this?
While this is possible, you should not use the Flask dev server in production. The Flask dev server is not designed to be particularly secure, stable, or efficient. See the docs on deploying for correct solutions.
The --host option to flask run, or the host parameter to app.run(), controls what address the development server listens to. By default it runs on localhost, change it to flask run --host=0.0.0.0 (or app.run(host="0.0.0.0")) to run on all your machine's IP addresses.
0.0.0.0 is a special value that you can't use in the browser directly, you'll need to navigate to the actual IP address of the machine on the network. You may also need to adjust your firewall to allow external access to the port.
The Flask quickstart docs explain this in the "Externally Visible Server" section:
If you run the server you will notice that the server is only
accessible from your own computer, not from any other in the network.
This is the default because in debugging mode a user of the
application can execute arbitrary Python code on your computer.
If you have the debugger disabled or trust the users on your network,
you can make the server publicly available simply by adding
--host=0.0.0.0 to the command line:
$ flask run --host=0.0.0.0
This tells your operating system to listen on all public IPs.
If you use the flask executable to start your server, use flask run --host=0.0.0.0 to change the default from 127.0.0.1 and open it up to non-local connections.
If you run the server you will notice that the server is only
accessible from your own computer, not from any other in the network.
This is the default because in debugging mode a user of the
application can execute arbitrary Python code on your computer.
If you have the debugger disabled or trust the users on your network,
you can make the server publicly available simply by adding
--host=0.0.0.0 to the command line:
$ flask run --host=0.0.0.0
This tells your operating system to listen on all public IPs.
Reference: https://flask.palletsprojects.com/quickstart/
Try this if the 0.0.0.0 method doesn't work
Boring Stuff
I personally battled a lot to get my app accessible to other devices(laptops and mobile phones) through a local-server. I tried the 0.0.0.0 method, but no luck. Then I tried changing the port, but it just didn't work. So, after trying a bunch of different combinations, I arrived to this one, and it solved my problem of deploying my app on a local server.
Steps
Get the local IPv4 address of your computer.
This can be done by typing ipconfig on Windows and ifconfig on Linux
and Mac.
Please note: The above step is to be performed on the machine you are serving the app on, and on not the machine on which you are accessing it. Also note, that the IPv4 address might change if you disconnect and reconnect to the network.
Now, simply run the flask app with the acquired IPv4 address.
flask run -h 192.168.X.X
E.g. In my case (see the image), I ran it as:
flask run -h 192.168.1.100
On my mobile device
Optional Stuff
If you are performing this procedure on Windows and using Power Shell as the CLI, and you still aren't able to access the website, try a CTRL + C command in the shell that's running the app. Power Shell gets frozen up sometimes and it needs a pinch to revive. Doing this might even terminate the server, but it sometimes does the trick.
That's it. Give a thumbs up if you found this helpful.😉
Some more optional stuff
I have created a short Powershell script that will get you your IP address whenever you need one:
$env:getIp = ipconfig
if ($env:getIp -match '(IPv4[\sa-zA-Z.]+:\s[0-9.]+)') {
if ($matches[1] -match '([^a-z\s][\d]+[.\d]+)'){
$ipv4 = $matches[1]
}
}
echo $ipv4
Save it to a file with .ps1 extension (for PowerShell), and run it on before starting your app. You can save it in your project folder and run it as:
.\getIP.ps1; flask run -h $ipv4
Note: I saved the above shellcode in getIP.ps1.
Cool.👌
Add host='0.0.0.0' to app.run`.
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000)
If you get OSError: [WinError 10013] An attempt was made to access a socket in a way forbidden by its access permissions on Windows, you either don't have permission to use the port, or something else is using it which you can find with netstat -na|findstr 5000.
Check whether the particular port is open on the server to serve the client or not?
in Ubuntu or Linux distro
sudo ufw enable
sudo ufw allow 5000/tcp //allow the server to handle the request on port 5000
Configure the application to handle remote requests
app.run(host='0.0.0.0' , port=5000)
python3 app.py & #run application in background
If your cool app has it's configuration loaded from an external file, like in the following example, then don't forget to update the corresponding config file with HOST="0.0.0.0"
cool.app.run(
host=cool.app.config.get("HOST", "localhost"),
port=cool.app.config.get("PORT", 9000)
)
If you're having troubles accessing your Flask server, deployed using PyCharm, take the following into account:
PyCharm doesn't run your main .py file directly, so any code in if __name__ == '__main__': won't be executed, and any changes (like app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000)) won't take effect.
Instead, you should configure the Flask server using Run Configurations, in particular, placing --host 0.0.0.0 --port 5000 into Additional options field.
More about configuring Flask server in PyCharm
You can also set the host (to expose it on a network facing IP address) and port via environment variables.
$ export FLASK_APP=app.py
$ export FLASK_ENV=development
$ export FLASK_RUN_PORT=8000
$ export FLASK_RUN_HOST=0.0.0.0
$ flask run
* Serving Flask app "app.py" (lazy loading)
* Environment: development
* Debug mode: on
* Running on https://0.0.0.0:8000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
* Restarting with stat
* Debugger is active!
* Debugger PIN: 329-665-000
See How to get all available Command Options to set environment variables?
Go to your project path on CMD(command Prompt) and execute the following command:-
set FLASK_APP=ABC.py
SET FLASK_ENV=development
flask run -h [yourIP] -p 8080
you will get following o/p on CMD:-
Serving Flask app "expirement.py" (lazy loading)
Environment: development
Debug mode: on
Restarting with stat
Debugger is active!
Debugger PIN: 199-519-700
Running on http://[yourIP]:8080/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
Now you can access your flask app on another machine using http://[yourIP]:8080/ url
For me i followed the above answer and modified it a bit:
Just grab your ipv4 address using ipconfig on command prompt
Go to the file in which flask code is present
In main function write app.run(host= 'your ipv4 address')
Eg:
Create file .flaskenv in the project root directory.
The parameters in this file are typically:
FLASK_APP=app.py
FLASK_ENV=development
FLASK_RUN_HOST=[dev-host-ip]
FLASK_RUN_PORT=5000
If you have a virtual environment, activate it and do a pip install python-dotenv .
This package is going to use the .flaskenv file, and declarations inside it will be automatically imported across terminal sessions.
Then you can do flask run
This answer is not solely related with flask, but should be applicable for all cannot connect service from another host issue.
use netstat -ano | grep <port> to see if the address is 0.0.0.0 or ::. If it is 127.0.0.1 then it is only for the local requests.
use tcpdump to see if any packet is missing. If it shows obvious imbalance, check routing rules by iptables.
Today I run my flask app as usual, but I noticed it cannot connect from other server. Then I run netstat -ano | grep <port>, and the local address is :: or 0.0.0.0 (I tried both, and I know 127.0.0.1 only allows connection from the local host). Then I used telnet host port, the result is like connect to .... This is very odd. Then I thought I would better check it with tcpdump -i any port <port> -w w.pcap. And I noticed it is all like this:
Then by checking iptables --list OUTPUT section, I could see several rules:
these rules forbid output tcp vital packets in handshaking. By deleting them, the problem is gone.
I had the same problem, I use PyCharm as an editor and when I created the project, PyCharm created a Flask Server. What I did was create a server with Python in the following way;
basically what I did was create a new server but flask if not python
I hope it helps you
This finally worked for me.
import os
Then place this at the end of your python app.py or main file.
if __name__ == "__main__":
port = int(os.environ.get("PORT", 5000))
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=port)
go to project path
set FLASK_APP=ABC.py
SET FLASK_ENV=development
flask run -h [yourIP] -p 8080
you will following o/p on CMD:-
* Serving Flask app "expirement.py" (lazy loading)
* Environment: development
* Debug mode: on
* Restarting with stat
* Debugger is active!
* Debugger PIN: 199-519-700
* Running on http://[yourIP]:8080/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
If none of the above solutions are working, try manually adding "http://" to the beginning of the url.
Chrome can distinguish "[ip-address]:5000" from a search query. But sometimes that works for a while, and then stops connecting, seemingly without me changing anything. My hypothesis is that the browser might sometimes automatically prepend https:// (which it shouldn't, but this fixed it in my case).
In case you need to test your app from an external network.
Simply serve it to the whole Internet with ngrok.com
which will deploy it like a dev server but in no time and locally, saved me a lot of time, and no, I'm not related to that company :)
Just make sure to change the port in your flask app:
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=80)

Trying to make a simple python web server and its not starting

Ive been trying to make a web server and I have the code down that should be able to get it running but when I go in to the Command Prompt and type python app.py it doesn't run when it should this is the code that I have
from flask import Flask
app = Flask(__name__)
#app.route("/")
def main():
return "Welcome to my Flask page"
if __name__ == "__main__":
app.run(debug = True, host = "0.0.0.0", port=80)```
The server won't run on port 80, it will run on the default port (5000). If you run the server and navigate to HTTP://0.0.0.0:5000/, you should see your / response. See Why can't I change the host and port that my Flask app runs on?.
To change the port Flask runs on, you can specify it in the command line:
flask run -h localhost -p 3000
Here, I run the server on localhost:3000. If you try to run the server on port 80, you will get a permission denied error since any port under 1024 needs root privileges (as m1ghtfr3e said in their answer).
Also, this is a great tutorial I recommend to anyone learning flask https://blog.miguelgrinberg.com/post/the-flask-mega-tutorial-part-i-hello-world
I think the problem is port 80.
Which OS are you using?
Ports under 1024 need root privileges, there is also a possibility that it is not working because some other service (like Apache) is running on this port.
So either fixing privileges or services or changing the port should make it run.

Connect to Flask application via public IP [duplicate]

I'm not sure if this is Flask specific, but when I run an app in dev mode (http://localhost:5000), I cannot access it from other machines on the network (with http://[dev-host-ip]:5000). With Rails in dev mode, for example, it works fine. I couldn't find any docs regarding the Flask dev server configuration. Any idea what should be configured to enable this?
While this is possible, you should not use the Flask dev server in production. The Flask dev server is not designed to be particularly secure, stable, or efficient. See the docs on deploying for correct solutions.
The --host option to flask run, or the host parameter to app.run(), controls what address the development server listens to. By default it runs on localhost, change it to flask run --host=0.0.0.0 (or app.run(host="0.0.0.0")) to run on all your machine's IP addresses.
0.0.0.0 is a special value that you can't use in the browser directly, you'll need to navigate to the actual IP address of the machine on the network. You may also need to adjust your firewall to allow external access to the port.
The Flask quickstart docs explain this in the "Externally Visible Server" section:
If you run the server you will notice that the server is only
accessible from your own computer, not from any other in the network.
This is the default because in debugging mode a user of the
application can execute arbitrary Python code on your computer.
If you have the debugger disabled or trust the users on your network,
you can make the server publicly available simply by adding
--host=0.0.0.0 to the command line:
$ flask run --host=0.0.0.0
This tells your operating system to listen on all public IPs.
If you use the flask executable to start your server, use flask run --host=0.0.0.0 to change the default from 127.0.0.1 and open it up to non-local connections.
If you run the server you will notice that the server is only
accessible from your own computer, not from any other in the network.
This is the default because in debugging mode a user of the
application can execute arbitrary Python code on your computer.
If you have the debugger disabled or trust the users on your network,
you can make the server publicly available simply by adding
--host=0.0.0.0 to the command line:
$ flask run --host=0.0.0.0
This tells your operating system to listen on all public IPs.
Reference: https://flask.palletsprojects.com/quickstart/
Try this if the 0.0.0.0 method doesn't work
Boring Stuff
I personally battled a lot to get my app accessible to other devices(laptops and mobile phones) through a local-server. I tried the 0.0.0.0 method, but no luck. Then I tried changing the port, but it just didn't work. So, after trying a bunch of different combinations, I arrived to this one, and it solved my problem of deploying my app on a local server.
Steps
Get the local IPv4 address of your computer.
This can be done by typing ipconfig on Windows and ifconfig on Linux
and Mac.
Please note: The above step is to be performed on the machine you are serving the app on, and on not the machine on which you are accessing it. Also note, that the IPv4 address might change if you disconnect and reconnect to the network.
Now, simply run the flask app with the acquired IPv4 address.
flask run -h 192.168.X.X
E.g. In my case (see the image), I ran it as:
flask run -h 192.168.1.100
On my mobile device
Optional Stuff
If you are performing this procedure on Windows and using Power Shell as the CLI, and you still aren't able to access the website, try a CTRL + C command in the shell that's running the app. Power Shell gets frozen up sometimes and it needs a pinch to revive. Doing this might even terminate the server, but it sometimes does the trick.
That's it. Give a thumbs up if you found this helpful.😉
Some more optional stuff
I have created a short Powershell script that will get you your IP address whenever you need one:
$env:getIp = ipconfig
if ($env:getIp -match '(IPv4[\sa-zA-Z.]+:\s[0-9.]+)') {
if ($matches[1] -match '([^a-z\s][\d]+[.\d]+)'){
$ipv4 = $matches[1]
}
}
echo $ipv4
Save it to a file with .ps1 extension (for PowerShell), and run it on before starting your app. You can save it in your project folder and run it as:
.\getIP.ps1; flask run -h $ipv4
Note: I saved the above shellcode in getIP.ps1.
Cool.👌
Add host='0.0.0.0' to app.run`.
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000)
If you get OSError: [WinError 10013] An attempt was made to access a socket in a way forbidden by its access permissions on Windows, you either don't have permission to use the port, or something else is using it which you can find with netstat -na|findstr 5000.
Check whether the particular port is open on the server to serve the client or not?
in Ubuntu or Linux distro
sudo ufw enable
sudo ufw allow 5000/tcp //allow the server to handle the request on port 5000
Configure the application to handle remote requests
app.run(host='0.0.0.0' , port=5000)
python3 app.py & #run application in background
If your cool app has it's configuration loaded from an external file, like in the following example, then don't forget to update the corresponding config file with HOST="0.0.0.0"
cool.app.run(
host=cool.app.config.get("HOST", "localhost"),
port=cool.app.config.get("PORT", 9000)
)
If you're having troubles accessing your Flask server, deployed using PyCharm, take the following into account:
PyCharm doesn't run your main .py file directly, so any code in if __name__ == '__main__': won't be executed, and any changes (like app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=5000)) won't take effect.
Instead, you should configure the Flask server using Run Configurations, in particular, placing --host 0.0.0.0 --port 5000 into Additional options field.
More about configuring Flask server in PyCharm
You can also set the host (to expose it on a network facing IP address) and port via environment variables.
$ export FLASK_APP=app.py
$ export FLASK_ENV=development
$ export FLASK_RUN_PORT=8000
$ export FLASK_RUN_HOST=0.0.0.0
$ flask run
* Serving Flask app "app.py" (lazy loading)
* Environment: development
* Debug mode: on
* Running on https://0.0.0.0:8000/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
* Restarting with stat
* Debugger is active!
* Debugger PIN: 329-665-000
See How to get all available Command Options to set environment variables?
Go to your project path on CMD(command Prompt) and execute the following command:-
set FLASK_APP=ABC.py
SET FLASK_ENV=development
flask run -h [yourIP] -p 8080
you will get following o/p on CMD:-
Serving Flask app "expirement.py" (lazy loading)
Environment: development
Debug mode: on
Restarting with stat
Debugger is active!
Debugger PIN: 199-519-700
Running on http://[yourIP]:8080/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
Now you can access your flask app on another machine using http://[yourIP]:8080/ url
For me i followed the above answer and modified it a bit:
Just grab your ipv4 address using ipconfig on command prompt
Go to the file in which flask code is present
In main function write app.run(host= 'your ipv4 address')
Eg:
Create file .flaskenv in the project root directory.
The parameters in this file are typically:
FLASK_APP=app.py
FLASK_ENV=development
FLASK_RUN_HOST=[dev-host-ip]
FLASK_RUN_PORT=5000
If you have a virtual environment, activate it and do a pip install python-dotenv .
This package is going to use the .flaskenv file, and declarations inside it will be automatically imported across terminal sessions.
Then you can do flask run
This answer is not solely related with flask, but should be applicable for all cannot connect service from another host issue.
use netstat -ano | grep <port> to see if the address is 0.0.0.0 or ::. If it is 127.0.0.1 then it is only for the local requests.
use tcpdump to see if any packet is missing. If it shows obvious imbalance, check routing rules by iptables.
Today I run my flask app as usual, but I noticed it cannot connect from other server. Then I run netstat -ano | grep <port>, and the local address is :: or 0.0.0.0 (I tried both, and I know 127.0.0.1 only allows connection from the local host). Then I used telnet host port, the result is like connect to .... This is very odd. Then I thought I would better check it with tcpdump -i any port <port> -w w.pcap. And I noticed it is all like this:
Then by checking iptables --list OUTPUT section, I could see several rules:
these rules forbid output tcp vital packets in handshaking. By deleting them, the problem is gone.
I had the same problem, I use PyCharm as an editor and when I created the project, PyCharm created a Flask Server. What I did was create a server with Python in the following way;
basically what I did was create a new server but flask if not python
I hope it helps you
This finally worked for me.
import os
Then place this at the end of your python app.py or main file.
if __name__ == "__main__":
port = int(os.environ.get("PORT", 5000))
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=port)
go to project path
set FLASK_APP=ABC.py
SET FLASK_ENV=development
flask run -h [yourIP] -p 8080
you will following o/p on CMD:-
* Serving Flask app "expirement.py" (lazy loading)
* Environment: development
* Debug mode: on
* Restarting with stat
* Debugger is active!
* Debugger PIN: 199-519-700
* Running on http://[yourIP]:8080/ (Press CTRL+C to quit)
If none of the above solutions are working, try manually adding "http://" to the beginning of the url.
Chrome can distinguish "[ip-address]:5000" from a search query. But sometimes that works for a while, and then stops connecting, seemingly without me changing anything. My hypothesis is that the browser might sometimes automatically prepend https:// (which it shouldn't, but this fixed it in my case).
In case you need to test your app from an external network.
Simply serve it to the whole Internet with ngrok.com
which will deploy it like a dev server but in no time and locally, saved me a lot of time, and no, I'm not related to that company :)
Just make sure to change the port in your flask app:
app.run(host='0.0.0.0', port=80)

How do I start python XMLRPC server in the background?

I wrote a python XMLRPC server for my web application. The problem is whenever I start the server from shell and exit, xmlrpc server stops as well. I tried executing server script from another file thinking that it will continue to run in the background but that didn't work. Here's the code used to start a server.
host = 'localhost'
port = 8000
server = SimpleXMLRPCServer.SimpleXMLRPCServer((host, port))
server.register_function(getList)
server.serve_forever()
In the shell I just do >>python MyXmlrpcServer.py to start a server.
What do I do to be able to start a server and keep it running?
#warwaruk makes a useful suggestion; Twisted XML-RPC is simple and robust. However, if you simply want to run and manage a python process in the 'background' take a look at Supervisord. It is a simple process management system.
$ pip install supervisor
$ echo_supervisord_conf > /etc/supervisord.conf
Edit that config file to add a definition of your process thus...
[program:mycoolproc]
directory=/path/to/my/script/dir
command=python MyXmlrpcServer.py
Start supervisord and start your process
$ supervisord
$ supervisorctl start mycoolproc
Better use twisted to create an XML-RPC server. Thus you will not need writing your own server, it is very flexible, and you will be able to run in background using twistd:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import time, datetime, os, sys
from twisted.web import xmlrpc, server
from twisted.internet import reactor
class Worker(xmlrpc.XMLRPC):
def xmlrpc_test(self):
print 'test called!'
port = 1235
r = Worker(allowNone=True)
if __name__ == '__main__':
print 'Listening on port', port
reactor.listenTCP(port, server.Site(r))
reactor.run()
else: # run the worker as a twistd service application: twistd -y xmlrpc_server.py --no_save
from twisted.application import service, internet
application = service.Application('xmlrpc_server')
reactor.listenTCP(port, server.Site(r))
reactor.run()
#internet.TCPServer(port, server.Site(r)).setServiceParent(application)

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