Python-daemon doesn't kill its kids
Your options are a bit limited. If doing self.daemon = True
in the constructor for the Worker
class does not solve your problem and trying to catch signals in the Parent (ie, SIGTERM, SIGINT
) doesn't work, you may have to try the opposite solution - instead of having the parent kill the children, you can have the children commit suicide when the parent dies.
The first step is to give the constructor to Worker
the PID
of the parent process (you can do this with os.getpid()
). Then, instead of just doing self.queue.get()
in the worker loop, do something like this:
waiting = True
while waiting:
# see if Parent is at home
if os.getppid() != self.parentPID:
# woe is me! My Parent has died!
sys.exit() # or whatever you want to do to quit the Worker process
try:
# I picked the timeout randomly; use what works
data = self.queue.get(block=False, timeout=0.1)
waiting = False
except queue.Queue.Empty:
continue # try again
# now do stuff with data
The solution above checks to see if the parent PID is different than what it originally was (that is, if the child process was adopted by init
or lauchd
because the parent died) - see reference. However, if that doesn't work for some reason you can replace it with the following function (adapted from here):
def parentIsAlive(self):
try:
# try to call Parent
os.kill(self.parentPID, 0)
except OSError:
# *beeep* oh no! The phone's disconnected!
return False
else:
# *ring* Hi mom!
return True
Now, when the Parent dies (for whatever reason), the child Workers will spontaneously drop like flies - just as you wanted, you daemon! :-D
You should store the parent pid when the child is first created (let's say in self.myppid
) and when self.myppid
is diferent from getppid()
means that the parent died.
To avoid checking if the parent has changed over and over again, you can use PR_SET_PDEATHSIG
that is described in the signals documentation.
5.8 The Linux "parent death" signal
For each process there is a variable pdeath_signal, that is initialized to 0 after fork() or clone(). It gives the signal that the process should get when its parent dies.
In this case, you want your process to die, you can just set it to a SIGHUP
, like this:
prctl(PR_SET_PDEATHSIG, SIGHUP);
Atexit won't do the trick -- it only gets run on successful non-signal termination -- see the note near the top of the docs. You need to set up signal handling via one of two means.
The easier-sounding option: set the daemon flag on your worker processes, per http://docs.python.org/library/multiprocessing.html#process-and-exceptions
Somewhat harder-sounding option: PEP-3143 seems to imply there is a built-in way to hook program cleanup needs in python-daemon.