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Lots of work on exception handling, including tests for traceback printing....
Lots of work on exception handling, including tests for traceback printing. We finally have some tests for various exception mode printing, via doctests that exercise all three modes! Also changed handling of sys.exit(X) to only print the summary message, as SystemExit is most often a 'handled' exception. It can still be 100% silenced via '%run -e', but now it's much less intrusive. Added a new %tb magic to print the last available traceback with the current xmode. One can then re-print the last traceback with more detail if desired, without having to cause it again.

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ipy_server.py
37 lines | 1.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
""" Simple TCP socket server that executes statements in IPython instance.
Usage:
import ipy_server
ipy_server.serve_thread(16455)
Now, to execute the statements in this ipython instance, open a TCP socket
(port 16455), write out the statements, and close the socket.
You can use e.g. "telnet localhost 16455" or a script to do this.
This is a bit like 'M-x server-start" or gnuserv in the emacs world.
"""
from IPython.core import ipapi
ip = ipapi.get()
import SocketServer
# user-accessible port
PORT = 8099
class IPythonRequestHandler(SocketServer.StreamRequestHandler):
def handle(self):
#print "connection from", self.client_address
inp = self.rfile.read().replace('\r\n','\n')
#print "Execute",inp
ip.runlines(inp)
def serve(port = PORT):
server = SocketServer.TCPServer(("", port), IPythonRequestHandler)
print "ipy_server on TCP port", port
server.serve_forever()
def serve_thread(port = PORT):
import thread
thread.start_new_thread(serve, (port,))