# HG changeset patch # User Matt Harbison # Date 1730409858 14400 # Node ID 891f6d56f3dbd49226424b78d275d0133b705fb9 # Parent 8766d47edfd120eecdde8dff191850a49ce545cb hgweb: skip logging ConnectionAbortedError Not stacktracing on `ConnectionResetError` was added in 6bbb12cba5a8 (though it was spelled differently for py2 support), but for some reason Windows occasionally triggers a `ConnectionAbortedError` here across various *.t files (notably `test-archive.t` and `test-lfs-serve-access.t`, but there are others). The payload that fails to send seems to be the html that describes the error to the client, so I suspect some code is seeing the error status code and closing the connection before the server gets to write this html. So don't log it, for test stability- nothing we can do anyway. FWIW, the CPython implementation of wsgihander specifically ignores these two errors, plus `BrokenPipeError`, with a comment that "we expect the client to close the connection abruptly from time to time"[1]. The `BrokenPipeError` is swallowed a level up in `do_write()`, and avoids writing the response following this stacktrace. I'm puzzled why a response is being written after these connection errors are detected- the CPython code referenced doesn't, and the connection is now broken at this point. Perhaps these errors should both be handled with the `BrokenPipeError` after the freeze. (The refactoring away from py2 compat may not be desireable in the freeze, but this is much easier to read, and obviously correct given the referenced CPython code.) I suspect this is what 6bceecb28806 was attempting to fix, but it wasn't specific about the sporadic errors it was seeing. [1] https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/b2eaa75b176e07730215d76d8dce4d63fb493391/Lib/wsgiref/handlers.py#L139 diff -r 8766d47edfd1 -r 891f6d56f3db mercurial/hgweb/server.py --- a/mercurial/hgweb/server.py Fri Oct 25 17:15:53 2024 -0400 +++ b/mercurial/hgweb/server.py Thu Oct 31 17:24:18 2024 -0400 @@ -8,7 +8,6 @@ from __future__ import annotations -import errno import os import socket import sys @@ -124,8 +123,7 @@ # I/O below could raise another exception. So log the original # exception first to ensure it is recorded. if not ( - isinstance(e, (OSError, socket.error)) - and e.errno == errno.ECONNRESET + isinstance(e, (ConnectionResetError, ConnectionAbortedError)) ): tb = "".join(traceback.format_exception(*sys.exc_info())) # We need a native-string newline to poke in the log