I have a Python GUI that I use to test various aspects of my work. Currently I have a "stop" button which kills the process at the end of each test (there can be multiple tests set up to run at once). However, some tests take a long time to run and if I need to stop the test I would like it to stop instantly. My thoughts are to use
import pdb; pdb.set_trace()
exit
But I'm not sure how I would inject this into the next run line of code. Is this possible?
If it's a thread, you can use the lower-level thread
(or _thread
in Python 3) module to kill the thread with an exception by calling thread.exit()
.
From the documentation:
A cleaner method (depending on how your processing is set up) would be to signal the thread to stop processing and exit using an instance variable, then calling the join()
method from your main thread to wait until the thread exits.
Example:
class MyThread(threading.Thread):
def __init__(self):
super(MyThread, self).__init__()
self._stop_req = False
def run(self):
while not self._stop_req:
pass
# processing
# clean up before exiting
def stop(self):
# triggers the threading event
self._stop_req = True;
def main():
# set up the processing thread
processing_thread = MyThread()
processing_thread.start()
# do other things
# stop the thread and wait for it to exit
processing_thread.stop()
processing_thread.join()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
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