Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

When running a test using the Tornado AsyncHTTPTestCase I'm getting a stack trace that isn't related to the test. The test is passing so this is probably happening on the test clean up?

I'm using Python 2.7.2, Tornado 2.2.

The test code is:

class AllServersHandlerTest(AsyncHTTPTestCase):

    def get_app(self):
        return Application([('/rest/test/', AllServersHandler)])

    def test_server_status_with_advertiser(self):
        on_new_host(None, '127.0.0.1')
        response = self.fetch('/rest/test/', method='GET')
        result = json.loads(response.body, 'utf8').get('data')
        self.assertEquals(['127.0.0.1'], result)

The test passes ok, but I get the following stack trace from the Tornado server.

OSError: [Errno 9] Bad file descriptor
INFO:root:200 POST /rest/serverStatuses (127.0.0.1) 0.00ms
DEBUG:root:error closing fd 688
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "C:\Python27\Lib\site-packages\tornado-2.2-py2.7.egg\tornado\ioloop.py", line 173, in close
    os.close(fd)
OSError: [Errno 9] Bad file descriptor

Any ideas how to cleanly shutdown the test case?

share|improve this question

1 Answer

up vote 0 down vote accepted

I dug around in the tornado code and found that this code is setting the all_fds to True which then causes the stack trace in io_loop.close():

def tearDown(self):
    if (not IOLoop.initialized() or
        self.io_loop is not IOLoop.instance()):
        # Try to clean up any file descriptors left open in the ioloop.
        # This avoids leaks, especially when tests are run repeatedly
        # in the same process with autoreload (because curl does not
        # set FD_CLOEXEC on its file descriptors)
        self.io_loop.close(all_fds=True)
    super(AsyncTestCase, self).tearDown()

So, overriding the tearDown() in the test class stops the stack trace.

class AllServersHandlerTest(AsyncHTTPTestCase):

    def tearDown(self):
        pass

    def get_app(self):
        return Application([('/rest/test/', AllServersHandler)])

    def test_server_status_with_advertiser(self):
        on_new_host(None, '127.0.0.1')
        response = self.fetch('/rest/test/', method='GET')
        result = json.loads(response.body, 'utf8').get('data')
        self.assertEquals(['127.0.0.1'], result)

I'm not sure what damage this approach could introduce, so if someone else has a better suggestion, let me know!

share|improve this answer

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.