tornado.tcpserver
— Basic IOStream
-based TCP server¶
A non-blocking, single-threaded TCP server.
-
class
tornado.tcpserver.
TCPServer
(io_loop=None, ssl_options=None, max_buffer_size=None, read_chunk_size=None)[source]¶ A non-blocking, single-threaded TCP server.
To use
TCPServer
, define a subclass which overrides thehandle_stream
method.To make this server serve SSL traffic, send the
ssl_options
keyword argument with anssl.SSLContext
object. For compatibility with older versions of Pythonssl_options
may also be a dictionary of keyword arguments for thessl.wrap_socket
method.:ssl_ctx = ssl.create_default_context(ssl.Purpose.CLIENT_AUTH) ssl_ctx.load_cert_chain(os.path.join(data_dir, "mydomain.crt"), os.path.join(data_dir, "mydomain.key")) TCPServer(ssl_options=ssl_ctx)
TCPServer
initialization follows one of three patterns:listen
: simple single-process:server = TCPServer() server.listen(8888) IOLoop.current().start()
bind
/start
: simple multi-process:server = TCPServer() server.bind(8888) server.start(0) # Forks multiple sub-processes IOLoop.current().start()
When using this interface, an
IOLoop
must not be passed to theTCPServer
constructor.start
will always start the server on the default singletonIOLoop
.add_sockets
: advanced multi-process:sockets = bind_sockets(8888) tornado.process.fork_processes(0) server = TCPServer() server.add_sockets(sockets) IOLoop.current().start()
The
add_sockets
interface is more complicated, but it can be used withtornado.process.fork_processes
to give you more flexibility in when the fork happens.add_sockets
can also be used in single-process servers if you want to create your listening sockets in some way other thanbind_sockets
.
New in version 3.1: The
max_buffer_size
argument.-
listen
(port, address='')[source]¶ Starts accepting connections on the given port.
This method may be called more than once to listen on multiple ports.
listen
takes effect immediately; it is not necessary to callTCPServer.start
afterwards. It is, however, necessary to start theIOLoop
.
-
add_sockets
(sockets)[source]¶ Makes this server start accepting connections on the given sockets.
The
sockets
parameter is a list of socket objects such as those returned bybind_sockets
.add_sockets
is typically used in combination with that method andtornado.process.fork_processes
to provide greater control over the initialization of a multi-process server.
-
add_socket
(socket)[source]¶ Singular version of
add_sockets
. Takes a single socket object.
-
bind
(port, address=None, family=<AddressFamily.AF_UNSPEC: 0>, backlog=128)[source]¶ Binds this server to the given port on the given address.
To start the server, call
start
. If you want to run this server in a single process, you can calllisten
as a shortcut to the sequence ofbind
andstart
calls.Address may be either an IP address or hostname. If it’s a hostname, the server will listen on all IP addresses associated with the name. Address may be an empty string or None to listen on all available interfaces. Family may be set to either
socket.AF_INET
orsocket.AF_INET6
to restrict to IPv4 or IPv6 addresses, otherwise both will be used if available.The
backlog
argument has the same meaning as forsocket.listen
.This method may be called multiple times prior to
start
to listen on multiple ports or interfaces.
-
start
(num_processes=1)[source]¶ Starts this server in the
IOLoop
.By default, we run the server in this process and do not fork any additional child process.
If num_processes is
None
or <= 0, we detect the number of cores available on this machine and fork that number of child processes. If num_processes is given and > 1, we fork that specific number of sub-processes.Since we use processes and not threads, there is no shared memory between any server code.
Note that multiple processes are not compatible with the autoreload module (or the
autoreload=True
option totornado.web.Application
which defaults to True whendebug=True
). When using multiple processes, no IOLoops can be created or referenced until after the call toTCPServer.start(n)
.
-
stop
()[source]¶ Stops listening for new connections.
Requests currently in progress may still continue after the server is stopped.
-
handle_stream
(stream, address)[source]¶ Override to handle a new
IOStream
from an incoming connection.This method may be a coroutine; if so any exceptions it raises asynchronously will be logged. Accepting of incoming connections will not be blocked by this coroutine.
If this
TCPServer
is configured for SSL,handle_stream
may be called before the SSL handshake has completed. UseSSLIOStream.wait_for_handshake
if you need to verify the client’s certificate or use NPN/ALPN.Changed in version 4.2: Added the option for this method to be a coroutine.