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Posts Tagged ‘QTimer’
Terminate a script after X seconds
December 8, 2012
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Problem
In Qt, there is a class called QTimer. With QTimer you can, for instance, terminate your application in X seconds. Example:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import sys
from PySide.QtCore import *
from PySide.QtGui import *
SEC = 1000 # 1 sec. is 1000 msec.
def main():
app = QApplication(sys.argv)
form = QDialog()
form.show()
# suicide in 3 seconds:
QTimer.singleShot(3 * SEC, app.quit)
app.exec_()
if __name__ == "__main__":
main()
Question: how to have the same effect in a command-line application?
Solution
I came up with the following solution:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import sys
from time import sleep
import signal
class MyTimer(object):
"""
Similar to Qt's QTimer. Call a function in a specified time.
Time is given in sec. Usage:
mt = MyTimer()
mt.singleShot(<sec>, <function_name>)
After setting it, you can still disable it:
mt.disable()
If you call it several times, any previously scheduled alarm
will be canceled (only one alarm can be scheduled at any time).
"""
def singleShot(self, sec, func):
self.f = func
signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, self.handler)
signal.alarm(sec)
def handler(self, *args):
self.f()
def disable(self):
signal.alarm(0)
def main():
while True:
print '.',
sleep(0.5)
if __name__ == "__main__":
mt = MyTimer()
mt.singleShot(3, sys.exit)
main()
As can be seen, the main function has an eternal loop. However, this program will terminate in 3 seconds. I’m imitating QTimer’s singleshot. The differences: (1) you must create a MyTimer object, and (2) time is given in seconds, not in milliseconds. You can also write it in one line if you want: MyTimer().singleShot(3, sys.exit).
It is written in a general form, so instead of sys.exit, you can also call a different function.
Categories: python
command-line, kill, qt, QTimer, SIGALRM, signal, singleShot, suicide
