# Server mechanics bind = "0.0.0.0:8000" backlog = 2048 daemon = False pidfile = None umask = 0 user = None group = None tmp_upload_dir = None proc_name = None # Logging errorlog = "-" loglevel = "info" accesslog = "-" access_log_format = '%(h)s %(l)s %(u)s %(t)s "%(r)s" %(s)s %(b)s "%(f)s" "%(a)s"' # # Worker processes # # workers - The number of worker processes that this server # should keep alive for handling requests. # # A positive integer generally in the 2-4 x $(NUM_CORES) # range. You'll want to vary this a bit to find the best # for your particular application's work load. # # worker_class - The type of workers to use. The default # sync class should handle most 'normal' types of work # loads. You'll want to read # http://docs.gunicorn.org/en/latest/design.html#choosing-a-worker-type # for information on when you might want to choose one # of the other worker classes. # # An string referring to a 'gunicorn.workers' entry point # or a python path to a subclass of # gunicorn.workers.base.Worker. The default provided values # are: # # egg:gunicorn#sync # egg:gunicorn#eventlet - Requires eventlet >= 0.9.7 # egg:gunicorn#gevent - Requires gevent >= 0.12.2 (?) # egg:gunicorn#tornado - Requires tornado >= 0.2 # # worker_connections - For the eventlet and gevent worker classes # this limits the maximum number of simultaneous clients that # a single process can handle. # # A positive integer generally set to around 1000. # # timeout - If a worker does not notify the master process in this # number of seconds it is killed and a new worker is spawned # to replace it. # # Generally set to thirty seconds. Only set this noticeably # higher if you're sure of the repercussions for sync workers. # For the non sync workers it just means that the worker # process is still communicating and is not tied to the length # of time required to handle a single request. # # keepalive - The number of seconds to wait for the next request # on a Keep-Alive HTTP connection. # # A positive integer. Generally set in the 1-5 seconds range. # workers = 1 worker_class = "sync" worker_connections = 1000 timeout = 30 keepalive = 2 spew = False # # Server hooks # # post_fork - Called just after a worker has been forked. # # A callable that takes a server and worker instance # as arguments. # # pre_fork - Called just prior to forking the worker subprocess. # # A callable that accepts the same arguments as after_fork # # pre_exec - Called just prior to forking off a secondary # master process during things like config reloading. # # A callable that takes a server instance as the sole argument. # def post_fork(server, worker): server.log.info("Worker spawned (pid: %s)", worker.pid) def pre_fork(server, worker): pass def pre_exec(server): server.log.info("Forked child, re-executing.") def when_ready(server): server.log.info("Server is ready. Spawning workers") def worker_int(worker): worker.log.info("worker received INT or QUIT signal") # get traceback info import threading, sys, traceback id2name = dict([(th.ident, th.name) for th in threading.enumerate()]) code = [] for threadId, stack in sys._current_frames().items(): code.append("\n# Thread: %s(%d)" % (id2name.get(threadId, ""), threadId)) for filename, lineno, name, line in traceback.extract_stack(stack): code.append('File: "%s", line %d, in %s' % (filename, lineno, name)) if line: code.append(" %s" % (line.strip())) worker.log.debug("\n".join(code)) def worker_abort(worker): worker.log.info("worker received SIGABRT signal")