For every client connecting to my server I spawn a new thread, like this:
# Create a new client
c = Client(self.server.accept(), globQueue[globQueueIndex], globQueueIndex, serverQueue )
# Start it
c.start()
# And thread it
self.threads.append(c)
Now, I know I can close all the threads using this code:
# Loop through all the threads and close (join) them
for c in self.threads:
c.join()
But how can I close the thread from within that thread?
Yes, it doesn't. I guess it can be confusing because e.g. Thread. sleep() affects the current thread, but Thread. sleep() is a static method.
Short answer: Just make the def run() end. So, if you are waiting for data from a socket, do it with timeout, then if timeout occur just break the while that you should have, and the thread will be killed. You can check from main thread if a thread is alive with isAlive() method.
When you start a thread, it begins executing a function you give it (if you're extending threading.Thread, the function will be run()). To end the thread, just return from that function.
According to this, you can also call thread.exit(), which will throw an exception that will end the thread silently.
How about sys.exit() from the module sys.
If sys.exit() is executed from within a thread it will close that thread only.
This answer here talks about that: Why does sys.exit() not exit when called inside a thread in Python?
A little late, but I use a _is_running variable to tell the thread when I want to close. It's easy to use, just implement a stop() inside your thread class.
def stop(self):
self._is_running = False
And in run() just loop on while(self._is_running)
If you want force stop your thread:
thread._Thread_stop()
For me works very good.
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With