From source code:
python setup.py install
From pypi:
pip install timeout-decorator
import time import timeout_decorator @timeout_decorator.timeout(5) def mytest(): print("Start") for i in range(1,10): time.sleep(1) print("{} seconds have passed".format(i)) if __name__ == '__main__': mytest()
Specify an alternate exception to raise on timeout:
import time import timeout_decorator @timeout_decorator.timeout(5, timeout_exception=StopIteration) def mytest(): print("Start") for i in range(1,10): time.sleep(1) print("{} seconds have passed".format(i)) if __name__ == '__main__': mytest()
By default, timeout-decorator uses signals to limit the execution time
of the given function. This appoach does not work if your function is
executed not in a main thread (for example if it's a worker thread of
the web application). There is alternative timeout strategy for this
case - by using multiprocessing. To use it, just pass
use_signals=False
to the timeout decorator function:
import time import timeout_decorator @timeout_decorator.timeout(5, use_signals=False) def mytest(): print "Start" for i in range(1,10): time.sleep(1) print("{} seconds have passed".format(i)) if __name__ == '__main__': mytest()
Warning
Make sure that in case of multiprocessing strategy for timeout, your function does not return objects which cannot be pickled, otherwise it will fail at marshalling it between master and child processes.
Derived from http://www.saltycrane.com/blog/2010/04/using-python-timeout-decorator-uploading-s3/ and https://code.google.com/p/verse-quiz/source/browse/trunk/timeout.py
I would love for you to fork and send me pull request for this project. Please contribute.
This software is licensed under the MIT license
See License file