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authorValentin Bartenev <vbart@nginx.com>2019-11-14 17:48:48 +0300
committerValentin Bartenev <vbart@nginx.com>2019-11-14 17:48:48 +0300
commitc2976fb3378b015b7c70247e0d462c1b52214458 (patch)
tree810fc138eabf4f63d1ca0d8f5f9cd08ada544b1f /test/test_java_websockets.py
parent4e41d900064bcccc02ec7efd0109c190d6637028 (diff)
downloadunit-c2976fb3378b015b7c70247e0d462c1b52214458.tar.gz
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Python: avoiding buffering of exception backtraces.
A quote from the Python 3 documentation: | When interactive, stdout and stderr streams are line-buffered. | Otherwise, they are block-buffered like regular text files. As a result, if an exception occurred and PyErr_Print() was called, its output could be buffered but not printed to the log for a while (ultimately, until the interpreter finalization). If the application process crashed shortly, the backtrace was completely lost. Buffering can be disabled by redefining the sys.stderr stream object. However, interference with standard environment objects was deemed undesirable. Instead, sys.stderr.flush() is called every time after printing exceptions. A potential advantage here is that lines from backtraces won't be mixed with other lines in the log.
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