I want to catch KeyboardInterrupt
globally, and deal with it nicely. I don't want to encase my entire script in a huge try/except statement. Is there any way 开发者_高级运维to do this?
You could change sys.excepthook
if you really don't want to use a try/except
.
import sys
def my_except_hook(exctype, value, traceback):
if exctype == KeyboardInterrupt:
print "Handler code goes here"
else:
sys.__excepthook__(exctype, value, traceback)
sys.excepthook = my_except_hook
If this is a script for execution on the command line, you can encapsulate your run-time logic in main()
, call it in an if __name__ == '__main__'
and wrap that.
if __name__ == '__main__':
try:
main()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
print 'Killed by user'
sys.exit(0)
You can also use signal like this:
import signal, time
def handler(signum, frame):
print 'I just clicked on CTRL-C '
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, handler)
print "waiting for 10 s"
time.sleep(10)
Output:
waiting for 10 s
^CI just clicked on CTRL-C
N.B: Don't mix the use of signal with threads.
Does your script have a function you call to start it?
main()
then just do:
try:
main()
except:
...
If you don't have a main
but just a huge script that runs line-by-line, then you should put it in a main
.
There's no other way to do this, apart from encasing your entire script in a main()
function and surrounding that with a try..except
block - which is pretty much the same:
def main():
# Your script goes here
pass
if __name__ == "__main__":
try:
main()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
# cleanup code here
pass
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