I\'m running a Django application. Had it under Apache + mod_python before, and it was all OK. Switched to Lighttpd + FastCGI. Now I randomly get the following exception (ne
Smells like a possible threading problem. Django is not guaranteed thread-safe although the in-file docs seem to indicate that Django/FCGI can be run that way. Try running with prefork and then beat the crap out of the server. If the problem goes away ...
Maybe the PYTHONPATH and PATH environment variable is different for both setups (Apache+mod_python and lighttpd + FastCGI).
Change from method=prefork to method=threaded solved the problem for me.
In the end I switched back to Apache + mod_python (I was having other random errors with fcgi, besides this one) and everything is good and stable now.
The question still remains open. In case anybody has this problem in the future and solves it they can record the solution here for future reference. :)
Have you considered downgrading to Python 2.5.x (2.5.4 specifically)? I don't think Django would be considered mature on Python 2.6 since there are some backwards incompatible changes. However, I doubt this will fix your problem.
Also, Django 1.0.2 fixed some nefarious little bugs so make sure you're running that. This very well could fix your problem.
Possible solution: http://groups.google.com/group/django-users/browse_thread/thread/2c7421cdb9b99e48
Until recently I was curious to test this on Django 1.1.1. Will this exception be thrown again... surprise, there it was again. It took me some time to debug this, helpful hint was that it only shows when (pre)forking. So for those who getting randomly those exceptions, I can say... fix your code :) Ok.. seriously, there are always few ways of doing this, so let me firs explain where is a problem first. If you access database when any of your modules will import as, e.g. reading configuration from database then you will get this error. When your fastcgi-prefork application starts, first it imports all modules, and only after this forks children. If you have established db connection during import all children processes will have an exact copy of that object. This connection is being closed at the end of request phase (request_finished signal). So first child which will be called to process your request, will close this connection. But what will happen to the rest of the child processes? They will believe that they have open and presumably working connection to the db, so any db operation will cause an exception. Why this is not showing in threaded execution model? I suppose because threads are using same object and know when any other thread is closing connection. How to fix this? Best way is to fix your code... but this can be difficult sometimes. Other option, in my opinion quite clean, is to write somewhere in your application small piece of code:
from django.db import connection
from django.core import signals
def close_connection(**kwargs):
connection.close()
signals.request_started.connect(close_connection)
Not ideal thought, connecting twice to the DB is a workaround at best.
Possible solution: using connection pooling (pgpool, pgbouncer), so you have DB connections pooled and stable, and handed fast to your FCGI daemons.
The problem is that this triggers another bug, psycopg2 raising an InterfaceError because it's trying to disconnect twice (pgbouncer already handled this).
Now the culprit is Django signal request_finished triggering connection.close(), and failing loud even if it was already disconnected. I don't think this behavior is desired, as if the request already finished, we don't care about the DB connection anymore. A patch for correcting this should be simple.
The relevant traceback:
/usr/local/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/Django-1.1.1-py2.6.egg/django/core/handlers/wsgi.py in __call__(self=<django.core.handlers.wsgi.WSGIHandler object at 0x24fb210>, environ={'AUTH_TYPE': 'Basic', 'DOCUMENT_ROOT': '/storage/test', 'GATEWAY_INTERFACE': 'CGI/1.1', 'HTTPS': 'off', 'HTTP_ACCEPT': 'application/xml,application/xhtml+xml,text/html;q=0.9,text/plain;q=0.8,image/png,*/*;q=0.5', 'HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING': 'gzip, deflate', 'HTTP_AUTHORIZATION': 'Basic dGVzdGU6c3VjZXNzbw==', 'HTTP_CONNECTION': 'keep-alive', 'HTTP_COOKIE': '__utma=175602209.1371964931.1269354495.126938948...none); sessionid=a1990f0d8d32c78a285489586c510e8c', 'HTTP_HOST': 'www.rede-colibri.com', ...}, start_response=<function start_response at 0x24f87d0>)
246 response = self.apply_response_fixes(request, response)
247 finally:
248 signals.request_finished.send(sender=self.__class__)
249
250 try:
global signals = <module 'django.core.signals' from '/usr/local/l.../Django-1.1.1-py2.6.egg/django/core/signals.pyc'>, signals.request_finished = <django.dispatch.dispatcher.Signal object at 0x1975710>, signals.request_finished.send = <bound method Signal.send of <django.dispatch.dispatcher.Signal object at 0x1975710>>, sender undefined, self = <django.core.handlers.wsgi.WSGIHandler object at 0x24fb210>, self.__class__ = <class 'django.core.handlers.wsgi.WSGIHandler'>
/usr/local/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/Django-1.1.1-py2.6.egg/django/dispatch/dispatcher.py in send(self=<django.dispatch.dispatcher.Signal object at 0x1975710>, sender=<class 'django.core.handlers.wsgi.WSGIHandler'>, **named={})
164
165 for receiver in self._live_receivers(_make_id(sender)):
166 response = receiver(signal=self, sender=sender, **named)
167 responses.append((receiver, response))
168 return responses
response undefined, receiver = <function close_connection at 0x197b050>, signal undefined, self = <django.dispatch.dispatcher.Signal object at 0x1975710>, sender = <class 'django.core.handlers.wsgi.WSGIHandler'>, named = {}
/usr/local/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/Django-1.1.1-py2.6.egg/django/db/__init__.py in close_connection(**kwargs={'sender': <class 'django.core.handlers.wsgi.WSGIHandler'>, 'signal': <django.dispatch.dispatcher.Signal object at 0x1975710>})
63 # when a Django request is finished.
64 def close_connection(**kwargs):
65 connection.close()
66 signals.request_finished.connect(close_connection)
67
global connection = <django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2.base.DatabaseWrapper object at 0x17b14c8>, connection.close = <bound method DatabaseWrapper.close of <django.d...ycopg2.base.DatabaseWrapper object at 0x17b14c8>>
/usr/local/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/Django-1.1.1-py2.6.egg/django/db/backends/__init__.py in close(self=<django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2.base.DatabaseWrapper object at 0x17b14c8>)
74 def close(self):
75 if self.connection is not None:
76 self.connection.close()
77 self.connection = None
78
self = <django.db.backends.postgresql_psycopg2.base.DatabaseWrapper object at 0x17b14c8>, self.connection = <connection object at 0x1f80870; dsn: 'dbname=co...st=127.0.0.1 port=6432 user=postgres', closed: 2>, self.connection.close = <built-in method close of psycopg2._psycopg.connection object at 0x1f80870>
Exception handling here could add more leniency:
/usr/local/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/Django-1.1.1-py2.6.egg/django/db/__init__.py
63 # when a Django request is finished.
64 def close_connection(**kwargs):
65 connection.close()
66 signals.request_finished.connect(close_connection)
Or it could be handled better on psycopg2, so to not throw fatal errors if all we're trying to do is disconnect and it already is:
/usr/local/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/Django-1.1.1-py2.6.egg/django/db/backends/__init__.py
74 def close(self):
75 if self.connection is not None:
76 self.connection.close()
77 self.connection = None
Other than that, I'm short on ideas.