What is the global default timeout

Question:

Python 3.4 .
Trying to find what is the default timeout in urllib.request.urlopen() .

Its signature is:
urllib.request.urlopen(url, data=None, [timeout, ]*, cafile=None, capath=None, cadefault=False, context=None)

The doc says that its “global default timeout”, and looking at the code its:
socket._GLOBAL_DEFAULT_TIMEOUT

Still what is the actual value in secs?

Asked By: user3139774

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Answers:

I suspect this is implementation-dependent. That said, for CPython:

From socket.create_connection,

If no timeout is supplied, the global default timeout setting returned by :func:getdefaulttimeout is used.

From socketmodule.c,

static PyObject *
socket_getdefaulttimeout(PyObject *self)
{
    if (defaulttimeout < 0.0) {
        Py_INCREF(Py_None);
        return Py_None;
    }
    else
        return PyFloat_FromDouble(defaulttimeout);
}

Earlier in the same file,

static double defaulttimeout = -1.0; /* Default timeout for new sockets */

So it looks like Py_None, aka None, is the default timeout. In other words, urlopen never times out. At least not from the Python end. I guess a timeout can still occur if the networking functions supplied by the OS have timeouts themselves.


Edit: oops, I guess I didn’t need to go source diving for the answer at all, since it’s right there in the docs.

A value of None indicates that new socket objects have no timeout. When the socket module is first imported, the default is None.

Answered By: Kevin
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