##// END OF EJS Templates
restart channels on kernel restart...
restart channels on kernel restart generally not necessary, but sometimes the kernel connection can be dirty. We have only seen this by starting a qtconsole via %qtconsole, then killing the kernel, at which point the original notebook's connection (at the zmq level) is never restored to the new kernel at the same endpoint. It's weird, and probably a zmq bug, but a simple reconnect seems to solve it.

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warn.py
67 lines | 1.9 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# encoding: utf-8
"""
Utilities for warnings. Shoudn't we just use the built in warnings module.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008-2011 The IPython Development Team
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
# the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
from __future__ import print_function
import sys
from IPython.utils import io
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Code
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def warn(msg,level=2,exit_val=1):
"""Standard warning printer. Gives formatting consistency.
Output is sent to io.stderr (sys.stderr by default).
Options:
-level(2): allows finer control:
0 -> Do nothing, dummy function.
1 -> Print message.
2 -> Print 'WARNING:' + message. (Default level).
3 -> Print 'ERROR:' + message.
4 -> Print 'FATAL ERROR:' + message and trigger a sys.exit(exit_val).
-exit_val (1): exit value returned by sys.exit() for a level 4
warning. Ignored for all other levels."""
if level>0:
header = ['','','WARNING: ','ERROR: ','FATAL ERROR: ']
print(header[level], msg, sep='', file=io.stderr)
if level == 4:
print('Exiting.\n', file=io.stderr)
sys.exit(exit_val)
def info(msg):
"""Equivalent to warn(msg,level=1)."""
warn(msg,level=1)
def error(msg):
"""Equivalent to warn(msg,level=3)."""
warn(msg,level=3)
def fatal(msg,exit_val=1):
"""Equivalent to warn(msg,exit_val=exit_val,level=4)."""
warn(msg,exit_val=exit_val,level=4)