My Pylons app uses local MySQL server via SQLAlchemy and python-MySQLdb. When the server is restarted, open pooled connections are apparently closed, but the application doesn't know about this and apparently when it tries to use such connection it receives "MySQL server has gone away":
File '/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/sqlalchemy/engine/default.py', line 277 in do_execute
cursor.execute(statement, parameters)
File '/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/MySQLdb/cursors.py', line 166 in execute
self.errorhandler(self, exc, value)
File '/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.6/MySQLdb/connections.py', line 35 in defaulterrorhandler
raise errorclass, errorvalue
OperationalError: (OperationalError) (2006, 'MySQL server has gone away')
This exception is not caught anywhere so it bubbles up to the user. If I should handle this exception somewhere in my code, please show开发者_Python百科 the place for such code in a Pylons WSGI app. Or maybe there is a solution in SA itself?
2021 Note: The original answer is from 2010. Now the better approach, as pointed out in the comments, seems to be using pool_recycle param.
Original answer from 2010 follows.
See EDIT at the bottom for tested solution
I didn't try it, but maybe using PoolListener is a way to go?
You could do something like this:
class MyListener(sqlalchemy.interfaces.PoolListener):
def __init__(self):
self.retried = False
def checkout(self, dbapi_con, con_record, con_proxy):
try:
dbapi_con.info() # is there any better way to simply check if connection to mysql is alive?
except sqlalchemy.exc.OperationalError:
if self.retried:
self.retried = False
raise # we do nothing
self.retried = True
raise sqlalchemy.exc.DisconnectionError
# next, code according to documentation linked above follows
e = create_engine("url://", listeners=[MyListener()])
This way every time connection is about to be checked out from the pool we test if it's actually connected to the server. If not, we give sqlalchemy one chance to reconnect. After that, if problem is still there, we let it go.
PS: I didn't test if this works.
Edit: As for the Pylons, modifications to the engine initialization showed above would need to be done in your_app.model.init_model (Pylons 0.9.7) or your_app.config.environment.load_environment (Pylons 1.0) function - these are this is the places place where engine instance gets created.
EDIT
Ok. I was able to reproduce described situation. The code above needs some changes in order to work. Below is how it should be done. Also it doesn't matter whether it's 0.9.7 or 1.0.
You need to edit your_app/config/environment.py. Put these exports at top of the file:
import sqlalchemy
import sqlalchemy.interfaces
import _mysql_exceptions
And the end of load_environment function should look like that:
class MyListener(sqlalchemy.interfaces.PoolListener):
def __init__(self):
self.retried = False
def checkout(self, dbapi_con, con_record, con_proxy):
try:
dbapi_con.cursor().execute('select now()')
except _mysql_exceptions.OperationalError:
if self.retried:
self.retried = False
raise
self.retried = True
raise sqlalchemy.exc.DisconnectionError
config['sqlalchemy.listeners'] = [MyListener()]
engine = engine_from_config(config, 'sqlalchemy.')
init_model(engine)
This time I was able to test it (on Pylons 1.0 + SQLAlchemy 0.6.1) and it works. :)
You can use SQLAlchemy proxy for exception handling on each sql query:
from sqlalchemy.interfaces import ConnectionProxy
class MyProxy(ConnectionProxy):
def cursor_execute(self, execute, cursor, statement, parameters, context, executemany):
try:
return execute(cursor, statement, parameters, context)
except sqlalchemy.exc.OperationalError:
# Handle this exception
pass
To connect this proxy you must do that in config/enviroment.py
engine = engine_from_config(config, 'sqlalchemy.', proxy=MyProxy())
Or write middleware for exception handling on each http query:
class MyMiddleware(object):
def __init__(self, app):
self.app = app
def __call__(self, environ, start_response):
try:
return self.app(environ, start_response)
except sqlalchemy.exc.OperationalError:
start_response(
'500 Internal Server Error',
[('content-type', 'text/html')])
return ['error page\n']
To connect this middleware in stack order as you need or simply in config/middleware.py:
# CUSTOM MIDDLEWARE HERE (filtered by error handling middlewares)
app = MyMiddleware(app)
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