2.1 KiB
2.1 KiB
1.5.1
- When not using a portserver (you really should), try the
bind(0)
approach before hunting for random unused ports. More reliable per https://github.com/google/python_portpicker/issues/16.
1.5.0
- Add portserver support to Windows using named pipes. To create or connect to
a server, prefix the name of the server with
@
(e.g.@unittest-portserver
).
1.4.0
- Use
async def
instead of@asyncio.coroutine
in order to support 3.10. - The portserver now checks for and rejects pid values that are out of range.
- Declare a minimum Python version of 3.6 in the package config.
- Rework
portserver_test.py
to launch an actual portserver process instead of mocks.
1.3.9
- No portpicker or portserver code changes
- Fixed the portserver test on recent Python 3.x versions.
- Switched to setup.cfg based packaging.
- We no longer declare ourselves Python 2.7 or 3.3-3.5 compatible.
1.3.1
- Fix a race condition in
pick_unused_port()
involving the free ports set.
1.3.0
- Adds an optional
portserver_address
parameter topick_unused_port()
so that callers can specify their own regardless ofos.environ
. pick_unused_port()
now raisesNoFreePortFoundError
when no available port could be found rather than spinning in a loop trying forever.- Fall back to
socket.AF_INET
whensocket.AF_UNIX
support is not available to communicate with a portserver.
1.2.0
- Introduced
add_reserved_port()
andreturn_port()
APIs to allow ports to be recycled and allow users to bring ports of their own.
1.1.1
- Changed default port range to 15000-24999 to avoid ephemeral ports.
- Portserver bugfix.
1.1.0
- Renamed portpicker APIs to use PEP8 style function names in code and docs.
- Legacy CapWords API name compatibility is maintained (and explicitly tested).
1.0.1
- Code reindented to use 4 space indents and run through YAPF for consistent style.
- Not packaged for release.
1.0.0
- Original open source release.