I tried executing this code, but am getting an error message saying "Invalid syntax".
Please help me out, since am new to this.
#import socket module
from socket import *
connectonSocket.close()
except IOError:
connectionSocket.send('\nHTTP/1.1 404 Not Found\n\n')
#Close client socket
connectionSocket.close()
serverSocket.close()
Please see this informative TutorialsPoint page for a great explanation of try/except/else/finally Python code!
Your code should be:
#import socket module
from socket import *
try:
connectonSocket.open()
except IOError:
connectionSocket.send('\nHTTP/1.1 404 Not Found\n\n')
#Close client socket
finally:
connectionSocket.close()
serverSocket.close()
And if you are copying and pasting your code into cmd/terminal you cannot have blank lines (If you do you'll get an indentation error).
try/except/finally
TRY:
Means to 'try' to do something, ie. call a function, method, etc.
EXCEPT (you can have multiple excepts):
Means if your 'try' code did NOT work, do 'this' in response.
FINALLY:
Means do 'this' stuff whether or not you 'tried' and succeeded, or 'excepted'.
Related
Using python 3.6.8, I have the following code
with socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM) as s:
s.settimeout(20)
s.connect(host, port)
As I understand it, using with as shown instead of a try except block better handles the error condition that occurs if opening the socket (s.connect()) fails. How so? In the code as shown, if s.connect() times out, will it print a message? My main question is, can I detect that it timed out, e.g. to run some code if a timeout occurs? I want to be able to do that from within the with block without using try. I read this example
with opened_w_error("/etc/passwd", "a") as (f, err):
if err:
print "IOError:", err
else:
f.write("guido::0:0::/:/bin/sh\n")
But that doesn't detect the type of error. I read this as well
try:
with ContextManager():
BLOCK
except InitError: # raised from __init__
...
except AcquireResourceError: # raised from __enter__
...
except ValueError: # raised from BLOCK
...
except ReleaseResourceError: # raised from __exit__
But I'm hoping there is a way to detect if it's a timeout error from within the with block.
I'm noob with python and lora, I want to open a socket wait for a message, if there is no message then do something else, my code so far is:
from network import LoRa
import socket
import machine
import time
import binascii
import network
n = 0
try:
the_sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_LORA, socket.SOCK_RAW)
except socket.error:
exit('Error creating socket.')
the_sock.settimeout(5)
while True:
try:
n=n+1
print("Hola"+str(n))
time.sleep(1)
the_sock.setblocking(True)
ack = the_sock.recv(HEADER_SIZE)
except socket.timeout, e:
err = e.args[0]
print(err)
break`
The problem is that the timeout it's not working, I've checked some answers but the code looks good to me, can you help me please?
Kind Regards
You do not need "socket.error" in you except statement, you should just say except. Just a tip, for your "n=n+1" statement you can just do "n+=1." Just helps speed up things I guess. For your "break" statement at the end, there is a mark after it, which could cause an error. Anyway, I hoped I helped in some way! Note: I do not code LORA. I code INET and SOCK_DGRAM, SOCK_STREAM. Hope I helped!
I'm working on a basic socket client program in python and I'm not totally sure how to handle exceptions. This is what I did up to now:
TCP_IP = '..............'
TCP_PORT = 4950
MESSAGE = "o3"
BUFFER_SIZE = 2048
data = ""
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.settimeout(5.0)
try:
s.connect((TCP_IP, TCP_PORT))
except socket.error:
#write error code to file
s.close()
try:
s.sendall(MESSAGE)
except socket.error:
#write to file or whatever
s.close()
try:
data = s.recv(BUFFER_SIZE)
except socket.error:
#write to file or whatever
s.close()
finally:
s.close()
The code is working as I want, but I'm not sure if I should nest try/catch blocks or not? Should I put socket.socket into try/catch block too?
Second question, what will s.settimeout() do in my case? As far as I understood the documentation, it will throw an exception after 5 seconds, but for what? Just connect or will it do the same for sendall and recv?
Since you're doing exactly the same actions in all the exception blocks and catching the same socket.error exception, you could put s.connect, s.sendall and s.recv in the same try: block. Like so:
try:
s.connect((TCP_IP, TCP_PORT))
s.sendall(MESSAGE)
data = s.recv(BUFFER_SIZE)
except socket.error:
#write error code to file
finally:
s.close()
Note that since s.close is also in the finally section in your example, it will always get called, even after an exception has occurred. So you'd end up with another exception occurring when you try to close an already closed socket. By not putting it in the except block and only in finally, you can avoid that situation.
If you do intend to handle each error in a different way, then you can leave them separate as you already have. But make sure to break/return at the end of the exception block so that you don't try the next. It's done that way in the socket examples, by using a continue in the loop.
Nesting them would help if you wanted to do something different in the exception block. But if not you'd be repeating the except block every time. And if you wanted to do something different, when you exit the nested-trys, you wouldn't be certain of which level it has completed or raised an exception - would need to use flag values etc. to merely track that. So for your example of the same error handling code, at the very least, do something like this in your except block:
except socket.error as e:
socket_error_handler(e, s)
def socket_error_handler(exception, socket):
#write error code to file
etc.
Should I put socket.socket into try/catch block too?
They do that in the examples, linked above.
Apart from logging, you shouldn't really be doing the same exception handling at each stage. Probably need to handle those separately.
Part 2:
s.settimeout(5.0) sets the timeout for each socket operation, not just the first connect. Also implies that it's in blocking mode.
I want to create socket errors (By doing things, obviously) but I've no idea how I should test if my script handles errors properly (If it dectes them.)
Currently, my code is this:
except socket.error as err:
print "Connection lost, waiting..."
time.sleep(5)
In theory, it should handle all the socket errors, print and then sleep (It's a part of a while loop.).
Any idea of how can I test it to see how it handles errors?
Use the raise statement:
try:
raise socket.error
except socket.error as err:
print "Connection lost, waiting..."
time.sleep(5)
Yet another example:
try:
raise AttributeError
except AttributeError:
print 'Sorry'
#Sorry
Also take a look at here and here
I have a FTP connection from which I am downloading many files and processing them in between. I'd like to be able to check that my FTP connection hasn't timed out in between. So the code looks something like:
conn = FTP(host='blah')
conn.connect()
for item in list_of_items:
myfile = open('filename', 'w')
conn.retrbinary('stuff", myfile)
### do some parsing ###
How can I check my FTP connection in case it timed out during the ### do some parsing ### line?
Send a NOOP command. This does nothing but check that the connection is still going and if you do it periodically it can keep the connection alive.
For example:
conn.voidcmd("NOOP")
If there is a problem with the connection then the FTP object will throw an exception. You can see from the documentation that exceptions are thrown if there is an error:
socket.error and IOError: These are raised by the socket connection and are most likely the ones you are interested in.
exception ftplib.error_reply: Exception raised when an unexpected reply is received from the server.
exception ftplib.error_temp: Exception raised when an error code signifying a temporary error (response codes in the range 400–499) is received.
exception ftplib.error_perm: Exception raised when an error code signifying a permanent error (response codes in the range 500–599) is received.
exception ftplib.error_proto: Exception raised when a reply is received from the server that does not fit the response specifications of the File Transfer Protocol, i.e. begin with a digit in the range 1–5.
Therefore you can use a try-catch block to detect the error and handle it accordingly.
For example this sample of code will catch an IOError, tell you about it and then retry the operation:
retry = True
while (retry):
try:
conn = FTP('blah')
conn.connect()
for item in list_of_items:
myfile = open('filename', 'w')
conn.retrbinary('stuff', myfile)
### do some parsing ###
retry = False
except IOError as e:
print "I/O error({0}): {1}".format(e.errno, e.strerror)
print "Retrying..."
retry = True