I/O error(socket error): [Errno 111] Connection refused

a 夏天 提交于 2019-12-04 02:13:22

Use a packet sniffer like Wireshark to look at what happens. You need to see a SYN-flagged packet outgoing, a SYN+ACK-flagged incoming and then a ACK-flagged outgoing. After that, the port is considered open on the local side.

If you only see the first packet and the error message comes after several seconds of waiting, the other side is not answering at all (like in: unplugged cable, overloaded server, misguided packet was discarded) and your local network stack aborts the connection attempt. If you see RST packets, the host actually denies the connection. If you see "ICMP Port unreachable" or host unreachable packets, a firewall or the target host inform you of the port actually being closed.

Of course you cannot expect the service to be available at all times (consider all the points of failure in between you and the data), so you should try again later.

Getting an ECONNREFUSED errno means that your kernel was refused a connection at the other end, so if it's a bug, it's either in your kernel or in the other end. What you can do is to trap the error in a very specific way and try again in a little while, since this seems to work:

# This is Python > 2.5 code
import errno, time

for attempt in range(MAXIMUM_NUMBER_OF_ATTEMPTS):
    try:
        # your urllib call here
    except EnvironmentError as exc: # replace " as " with ", " for Python<2.6
        if exc.errno == errno.ECONNREFUSED:
            time.sleep(A_COUPLE_OF_SECONDS)
        else:
            raise # re-raise otherwise
    else: # we tried, and we had no failure, so
        break
else: # we never broke out of the for loop
    raise RuntimeError("maximum number of unsuccessful attempts reached")

Replace the two all-caps constants with your favourite numbers.

mekarpeles

I previously had this problem with my EC2 instance (I was serving couchdb to serve resources -- am considering Amazon's S3 for the future).

One thing to check (assuming Ec2) is that the couchdb port is added to your open ports within your security policy.

I specifically encountered

"[Errno 111] Connection refused"

over EC2 when the instance was stopped and started. The problem seems to be a pidfile race. The solution for me was killing couchdb (entirely and properly) via:

pkill -f couchdb

and then restarting with:

/etc/init.d/couchdb restart

I'm not exactly sure what's causing this. You can try looking in your socket.py (mine is a different version, so line numbers from the trace don't match, and I'm afraid some other details might not match as well).

Anyway, it seems like a good practice to put your url fetching code in a try: ... except: ... block, and handle this with a short pause and a retry. The URL you're trying to fetch may be down, or too loaded, and that's stuff you'll only be able to handle in with a retry anyway.

Its seems that server is not running properly so ensure that with terminal by

telnet ip port

example

telnet localhost 8069

It will return connected to localhost so it indicates that there is no problem with the connection Else it will return Connection refused it indicates that there is problem with the connection

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