makes the test more robust."""
import socket, errno
- # some random ports that hopefully no one is listening on.
- for port in [preferred_port, 9907, 10243, 32999]:
+
+ # Find some random ports that hopefully no one is listening on.
+ # Ideally each test would clean up after itself and not continue listening
+ # on any ports. However, this isn't the case. The last port (0) is
+ # a stop-gap that asks the O/S to assign a port. Whenever the warning
+ # message below is printed, the test that is listening on the port should
+ # be fixed to close the socket at the end of the test.
+ # Another reason why we can't use a port is another process (possibly
+ # another instance of the test suite) is using the same port.
+ for port in [preferred_port, 9907, 10243, 32999, 0]:
try:
sock.bind((host, port))
+ if port == 0:
+ port = sock.getsockname()[1]
return port
except socket.error, (err, msg):
if err != errno.EADDRINUSE: