Im running into an issue where I'm running a experiment demo in in Python 3.7,with installed asyncio, but it catch a exception about "future exception", I don't know how to solve it, could anyone give me some help?
this is the error
2022-06-05 08:26:50,512:[adkg-tutorial.py:85]:[ERROR]: Exception in callback <function print_exception_callback at 0x7fa70c6421e0>
handle: <Handle print_exception_callback>
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "uvloop/cbhandles.pyx", line 63, in uvloop.loop.Handle._run
File "/usr/src/adkg/adkg/utils/misc.py", line 12, in print_exception_callback
ex = future.exception()
concurrent.futures._base.CancelledError
And this is the code
def print_exception_callback(future):
if future.done():
ex = future.exception()
if ex is not None:
logging.critical(f"\nException: \n{future} \n{type(ex)} \n{ex}")
raise ex
Thanks!
Let's say I've got a bunch of Processes, I want to run those and check if they are OK:
procs = [fetcher_process, checker_process, publisher_process, manager_process]
try:
for p in procs:
p.run()
except Exception as e:
print("Oopsie")
exit()
for p in procs:
p.join()
Such a code works flawlassly, unless you hit Ctrl+C. Then you get unhandled KeyboardInterrupt in p.run() even though it is definitely handled in the try/except.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/home/keddad/Documents/thevyshka-news-fetcher/main.py", line 39, in <module>
p.run()
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/multiprocessing/process.py", line 108, in run
self._target(*self._args, **self._kwargs)
File "/home/keddad/Documents/thevyshka-news-fetcher/fetchuler.py", line 19, in fetch_news
time.sleep(5)
KeyboardInterrupt
But, if I create custom SIGINT handler which throws the same KeyboardInterrupt, like this:
def raise_keyboards_ex():
raise KeyboardInterrupt()
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, raise_keyboards_ex)
Then the try/except starts working as expected. So, why one KeyboardInterrupt is being caught here while other don't?
So, as #jasonharper said, the reason why it wasn't catched was not some kind of magic - it is just because KeyboardInterrupt is not a subclass of Exception. The only reason it catched it now was that instead of rising KeyboardInterrupt I actually caused another exception:
try:
for p in procs:
p.run()
except Exception as e:
print("Oopsie")
print(e) # prints "raise_keyboards_ex() takes 0 positional arguments but 2 were given"
exit()
I'm using pexpect.spawn to write some script that can run in parallel.
But I found that the traceback and exception of a zmq.REQ worker won't be printed out in the terminal where I run the master.py (zmq.REP).
I know sys.stderr can be used to redirect the traceback and exception, but I have no idea how should I use this in the worker.py so that the exceptions happen in worker.py can be printed out.
Use logging.exception and log into a file.
Example:
import logging
logging.basicConfig(filename='example.log')
def fail():
return 10/0
try:
fail()
except Exception as err:
loggin.exception(err)
Output (example.log) :
ERROR:root:integer division or modulo by zero
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<ipython-input-4-d63f4b56d991>", line 2, in <module>
fail()
File "<ipython-input-3-edce7c179301>", line 2, in fail
return 10/0
ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
I'm working on a short, native (do NOT recommend an outside [non-native] module such as pexpect), cross-platform, insecure remote control application for python (Windows will use py2exe and an exe file). I am using start_new_thread for the blocking calls such as readline(). For some reason, however, I get this string of ugliness as my output:
Unhandled exception in thread started by <function read_stream at 0xb6918730>Unhandled exception in thread started by <function send_stream at 0xb69186f0>
Traceback (most recent call last):
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "main.py", line 17, in read_stream
s.send(pipe.stdout.readline())
AttributeError File "main.py", line 14, in send_stream
pipe.stdin.write(s.recv(4096))
AttributeError: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'stdin'
: 'NoneType' object has no attribute 'stdout'
Here is my program (main.py):
#!/usr/bin/env python
import socket
import subprocess as sp
from thread import start_new_thread
from platform import system
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.connect(('10.0.0.201', 49200))
shell = 'powershell.exe' if system() == 'Windows' else '/bin/bash' # is this right?
pipe = sp.Popen(shell, shell=True, stdin=sp.PIPE, stdout=sp.PIPE, stderr=sp.PIPE)
entered_command=False
def send_stream(): # send what you get from command center
while True:
pipe.stdin.write(s.recv(4096))
def read_stream(): # send back what is returned from shell command
while True:
s.send(pipe.stdout.readline())
start_new_thread(send_stream, ())
start_new_thread(read_stream, ())
Thanks for your help.
It turns out that the problem is that the program was trying to exit after the two start_new_thread calls because it had reached the end, and caused errors while trying to do so. So I replaced:
start_new_thread(send_stream, ())
start_new_thread(read_stream, ())
With:
start_new_thread(send_stream, ())
read_stream()
In the module warnings (https://docs.python.org/3.5/library/warnings.html) there is the ability to raise a warning that appears to come from somewhere earlier in the stack:
warnings.warn('This is a test', stacklevel=2)
Is there an equivalent for raising errors? I know I can raise an error with an alternative traceback, but I can't create that traceback within the module since it needs to come from earlier. I imagine something like:
tb = magic_create_traceback_right_here()
raise ValueError('This is a test').with_traceback(tb.tb_next)
The reason is that I am developing a module that has a function module.check_raise that I want to raise an error that appears to originate from where the function is called. If I raise an error within the module.check_raise function, it appears to originate from within module.check_raise, which is undesired.
Also, I've tried tricks like raising a dummy exception, catching it, and passing the traceback along, but somehow the tb_next becomes None. I'm out of ideas.
Edit:
I would like the output of this minimal example (called tb2.py):
import check_raise
check_raise.raise_if_string_is_true('True')
to be only this:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "tb2.py", line 10, in <module>
check_raise.raise_if_string_is_true(string)
RuntimeError: An exception was raised.
I can't believe I am posting this
By doing this you are going against the zen.
Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules.
But if you insist here is your magical code.
check_raise.py
import sys
import traceback
def raise_if_string_is_true(string):
if string == 'true':
#the frame that called this one
f = sys._getframe().f_back
#the most USELESS error message ever
e = RuntimeError("An exception was raised.")
#the first line of an error message
print('Traceback (most recent call last):',file=sys.stderr)
#the stack information, from f and above
traceback.print_stack(f)
#the last line of the error
print(*traceback.format_exception_only(type(e),e),
file=sys.stderr, sep="",end="")
#exit the program
#if something catches this you will cause so much confusion
raise SystemExit(1)
# SystemExit is the only exception that doesn't trigger an error message by default.
This is pure python, does not interfere with sys.excepthook and even in a try block it is not caught with except Exception: although it is caught with except:
test.py
import check_raise
check_raise.raise_if_string_is_true("true")
print("this should never be printed")
will give you the (horribly uninformative and extremely forged) traceback message you desire.
Tadhgs-MacBook-Pro:Documents Tadhg$ python3 test.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "test.py", line 3, in <module>
check_raise.raise_if_string_is_true("true")
RuntimeError: An exception was raised.
Tadhgs-MacBook-Pro:Documents Tadhg$
If I understand correctly, you would like the output of this minimal example:
def check_raise(function):
try:
return function()
except Exception:
raise RuntimeError('An exception was raised.')
def function():
1/0
check_raise(function)
to be only this:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "tb2.py", line 10, in <module>
check_raise(function)
RuntimeError: An exception was raised.
In fact, it's a lot more output; there is exception chaining, which could be dealt with by handling the RuntimeError immediately, removing its __context__, and re-raising it, and there is another line of traceback for the RuntimeError itself:
File "tb2.py", line 5, in check_raise
raise RuntimeError('An exception was raised.')
As far as I can tell, it is not possible for pure Python code to substitute the traceback of an exception after it was raised; the interpreter has control of adding to it but it only exposes the current traceback whenever the exception is handled. There is no API (not even when using tracing functions) for passing your own traceback to the interpreter, and traceback objects are immutable (this is what's tackled by that Jinja hack involving C-level stuff).
So further assuming that you're interested in the shortened traceback not for further programmatic use but only for user-friendly output, your best bet will be an excepthook that controls how the traceback is printed to the console. For determining where to stop printing, a special local variable could be used (this is a bit more robust than limiting the traceback to its length minus 1 or such). This example requires Python 3.5 (for traceback.walk_tb):
import sys
import traceback
def check_raise(function):
__exclude_from_traceback_from_here__ = True
try:
return function()
except Exception:
raise RuntimeError('An exception was raised.')
def print_traceback(exc_type, exc_value, tb):
for i, (frame, lineno) in enumerate(traceback.walk_tb(tb)):
if '__exclude_from_traceback_from_here__' in frame.f_code.co_varnames:
limit = i
break
else:
limit = None
traceback.print_exception(
exc_type, exc_value, tb, limit=limit, chain=False)
sys.excepthook = print_traceback
def function():
1/0
check_raise(function)
This is the output now:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "tb2.py", line 26, in <module>
check_raise(function)
RuntimeError: An exception was raised.
EDIT: The previous version did not provide quotes or explanations.
I suggest referring to PEP 3134 which states in the Motivation:
Sometimes it can be useful for an exception handler to intentionally
re-raise an exception, either to provide extra information or to
translate an exception to another type. The __cause__ attribute
provides an explicit way to record the direct cause of an exception.
When an Exception is raised with a __cause__ attribute the traceback message takes the form of:
Traceback (most recent call last):
<CAUSE TRACEBACK>
The above exception was the direct cause of the following exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
<MAIN TRACEBACK>
To my understanding this is exactly what you are trying to accomplish; clearly indicate that the reason for the error is not your module but somewhere else. If you are instead trying to omit information to the traceback like your edit suggests then the rest of this answer won't do you any good.
Just a note on syntax:
The __cause__ attribute on exception objects is always initialized
to None. It is set by a new form of the 'raise' statement:
raise EXCEPTION from CAUSE
which is equivalent to:
exc = EXCEPTION
exc.__cause__ = CAUSE
raise exc
so the bare minimum example would be something like this:
def function():
int("fail")
def check_raise(function):
try:
function()
except Exception as original_error:
err = RuntimeError("An exception was raised.")
raise err from original_error
check_raise(function)
which gives an error message like this:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/PATH/test.py", line 7, in check_raise
function()
File "/PATH/test.py", line 3, in function
int("fail")
ValueError: invalid literal for int() with base 10: 'fail'
The above exception was the direct cause of the following exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/PATH/test.py", line 12, in <module>
check_raise(function)
File "/PATH/test.py", line 10, in check_raise
raise err from original_error
RuntimeError: An exception was raised.
However the first line of the cause is the statement in the try block of check_raise:
File "/PATH/test.py", line 7, in check_raise
function()
so before raising err it may (or may not) be desirable to remove the outer most traceback frame from original_error:
except Exception as original_error:
err = RuntimeError("An exception was raised.")
original_error.__traceback__ = original_error.__traceback__.tb_next
raise err from original_error
This way the only line in the traceback that appears to come from check_raise is the very last raise statement which cannot be omitted with pure python code although depending on how informative the message is you can make it very clear that your module was not the cause of the problem:
err = RuntimeError("""{0.__qualname__} encountered an error during call to {1.__module__}.{1.__name__}
the traceback for the error is shown above.""".format(function,check_raise))
The advantage to raising exception like this is that the original Traceback message is not lost when the new error is raised, which means that a very complex series of exceptions can be raised and python will still display all the relevant information correctly:
def check_raise(function):
try:
function()
except Exception as original_error:
err = RuntimeError("""{0.__qualname__} encountered an error during call to {1.__module__}.{1.__name__}
the traceback for the error is shown above.""".format(function,check_raise))
original_error.__traceback__ = original_error.__traceback__.tb_next
raise err from original_error
def test_chain():
check_raise(test)
def test():
raise ValueError
check_raise(test_chain)
gives me the following error message:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/Users/Tadhg/Documents/test.py", line 16, in test
raise ValueError
ValueError
The above exception was the direct cause of the following exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/Users/Tadhg/Documents/test.py", line 13, in test_chain
check_raise(test)
File "/Users/Tadhg/Documents/test.py", line 10, in check_raise
raise err from original_error
RuntimeError: test encountered an error during call to __main__.check_raise
the traceback for the error is shown above.
The above exception was the direct cause of the following exception:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/Users/Tadhg/Documents/test.py", line 18, in <module>
check_raise(test_chain)
File "/Users/Tadhg/Documents/test.py", line 10, in check_raise
raise err from original_error
RuntimeError: test_chain encountered an error during call to __main__.check_raise
the traceback for the error is shown above.
Yes it is long but it is significantly more informative then:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/Users/Tadhg/Documents/test.py", line 18, in <module>
check_raise(test_chain)
RuntimeError: An exception was raised.
not to mention that the original error is still usable even if the program doesn't end:
import traceback
def check_raise(function):
...
def fail():
raise ValueError
try:
check_raise(fail)
except RuntimeError as e:
cause = e.__cause__
print("check_raise failed because of this error:")
traceback.print_exception(type(cause), cause, cause.__traceback__)
print("and the program continues...")
I understand 'Don't do this'. On the other hand, there may be some special use cases i believe. I'm generating own errors (just deleting some defined frames...) this way
def get_traceback_with_removed_frames_by_line_string(lines):
"""In traceback call stack, it is possible to remove particular level defined by some line content.
Args:
lines (list): Line in call stack that we want to hide.
Returns:
string: String traceback ready to be printed.
"""
exc = trcbck.TracebackException(*sys.exc_info())
for i in exc.stack[:]:
if i.line in lines:
exc.stack.remove(i)
return "".join(exc.format())
I return just string.
If there is concrete function that is raising, you can add it to ignored frames.
Though have in mind, that if you hide something, somebody may not understand why is something happening...
My use case was to hide only first level - decorator from my library that was decorating all user functions in framework, so error from user side was on level 1.