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Fix bug when network map is disconnected (#13925)...
Fix bug when network map is disconnected (#13925) Hi there :) I encounter a little bug with the ipython logger. When using the `%logstart` magic and writing the log to a remote path, everything works fine until the network map gets disconnected. After the network drive is disconnected you basically powerless, and you have to reopen the console. This can be easily reproduce by sharing a windows folder ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/23289491/216761685-1bbcc92a-13e4-409c-badf-513f610fef46.png) Mounting it using ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/23289491/216761695-8b413c89-b4f8-4423-b9c0-d68c2997af38.png) Start an IPython session, start a log with `%logstart Z:\log` and disconnect. Anything you will try to do from now on will not work, and you can't use the Session, and will result `OSError: [Errno 22] Invalid argument` I couldn't reproduce it in Linux environment, i guess it really depends on the `OS` here. Also weirdly this happens when the client close the connection. that's mean if the Server close the connection to the mount everything still working perfectly I added a `try except` block to allow you to stop the logger and continue using your ipython normally I Search for a way to test it but I couldn't find an easy way to reproduce it in test.

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encoding.py
71 lines | 2.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# coding: utf-8
"""
Utilities for dealing with text encodings
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008-2012 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
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import sys
import locale
import warnings
# to deal with the possibility of sys.std* not being a stream at all
def get_stream_enc(stream, default=None):
"""Return the given stream's encoding or a default.
There are cases where ``sys.std*`` might not actually be a stream, so
check for the encoding attribute prior to returning it, and return
a default if it doesn't exist or evaluates as False. ``default``
is None if not provided.
"""
if not hasattr(stream, 'encoding') or not stream.encoding:
return default
else:
return stream.encoding
# Less conservative replacement for sys.getdefaultencoding, that will try
# to match the environment.
# Defined here as central function, so if we find better choices, we
# won't need to make changes all over IPython.
def getdefaultencoding(prefer_stream=True):
"""Return IPython's guess for the default encoding for bytes as text.
If prefer_stream is True (default), asks for stdin.encoding first,
to match the calling Terminal, but that is often None for subprocesses.
Then fall back on locale.getpreferredencoding(),
which should be a sensible platform default (that respects LANG environment),
and finally to sys.getdefaultencoding() which is the most conservative option,
and usually UTF8 as of Python 3.
"""
enc = None
if prefer_stream:
enc = get_stream_enc(sys.stdin)
if not enc or enc=='ascii':
try:
# There are reports of getpreferredencoding raising errors
# in some cases, which may well be fixed, but let's be conservative here.
enc = locale.getpreferredencoding()
except Exception:
pass
enc = enc or sys.getdefaultencoding()
# On windows `cp0` can be returned to indicate that there is no code page.
# Since cp0 is an invalid encoding return instead cp1252 which is the
# Western European default.
if enc == 'cp0':
warnings.warn(
"Invalid code page cp0 detected - using cp1252 instead."
"If cp1252 is incorrect please ensure a valid code page "
"is defined for the process.", RuntimeWarning)
return 'cp1252'
return enc
DEFAULT_ENCODING = getdefaultencoding()