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r = self._doRequest(url, method, body, headers) |
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|
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retry_http_codes = [503, 504] |
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if r.status_code in retry_http_codes and retry: |
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tries = 5 |
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delay = .5 |
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backoff = 2 |
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while r.status_code in retry_http_codes and tries > 0: |
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tries -= 1 |
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time.sleep(delay) |
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delay *= backoff |
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r = self._doRequest(url, method, body, headers) |
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|
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r.raise_for_status() |
The actual error message is in
response.text and can't be accessed after the
raise_for_status anymore. It's hard to know on application level what went wrong if the error is just "400 bad request". It would be good if the actual error message would be part of the exception message.
After hacking the library I found out that I actually got the error message {"msg":"Message must be no more than 64k"} from ironmq. I was spending have the day searching why my request is not working.
iron_core_python/iron_core.py
Lines 239 to 252 in f09a160
The actual error message is in
response.textand can't be accessed after theraise_for_statusanymore. It's hard to know on application level what went wrong if the error is just "400 bad request". It would be good if the actual error message would be part of the exception message.After hacking the library I found out that I actually got the error message
{"msg":"Message must be no more than 64k"}from ironmq. I was spending have the day searching why my request is not working.