The process for timing out an operations is described in the documentation for signal.
The basic idea is to use signal handlers to set an alarm for some time interval and raise an exception once that timer expires.
Note that this will only work on UNIX.
Here's an implementation that creates a decorator (save the following code as timeout.py
).
from functools import wraps
import errno
import os
import signal
class TimeoutError(Exception):
pass
def timeout(seconds=10, error_message=os.strerror(errno.ETIME)):
def decorator(func):
def _handle_timeout(signum, frame):
raise TimeoutError(error_message)
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, _handle_timeout)
signal.alarm(seconds)
try:
result = func(*args, **kwargs)
finally:
signal.alarm(0)
return result
return wraps(func)(wrapper)
return decorator
This creates a decorator called @timeout
that can be applied to any long running functions.
So, in your application code, you can use the decorator like so:
from timeout import timeout
# Timeout a long running function with the default expiry of 10 seconds.
@timeout
def long_running_function1():
...
# Timeout after 5 seconds
@timeout(5)
def long_running_function2():
...
# Timeout after 30 seconds, with the error "Connection timed out"
@timeout(30, os.strerror(errno.ETIMEDOUT))
def long_running_function3():
...