Hi Luke, Yes. I could not find the root cause of the issue but i managed a workaround. I got it working by using before_first_request hook in flask. By loading the keys there i can use more than one worker without encountering the issue.
Here is the sample app: import os, sys from flask import Flask, request, Response, jsonify, g, url_for, make_response, session import riak app = Flask(__name__) riak_client = riak.RiakClient(host='127.0.0.1', pb_port=10017, protocol='pbc') content_keys = [] @app.before_first_request def _run_on_start(): print 'Content bucket' content_bucket =riak_client.bucket_type('content').bucket('content') print 'cache content keys' #content_keys = content_bucket.get_keys() for keys in content_bucket.stream_keys(): for key in keys: content_keys.append(key) @app.route("/") def myapp(): print 'get bucket' user_bucket = riak_client.bucket_type('user_type').bucket('users') print 'Total content: %s' % len(content_keys) print '####################### get user info from bucket' user_info = user_bucket.get('auser') return '', 200 if __name__ == '__main__': app.run( host="0.0.0.0",debug=False, port=int("5000") ) :tele On Mon, 6 Jul 2015 08:49:59 -0700 Luke Bakken <lbak...@basho.com> wrote: > Question at the bottom, thanks. > > On Sat, Jun 20, 2015 at 1:10 PM, tele <t...@rhizomatica.org> wrote: > > Hi All, > > > > This is going to be a long post but it explains exactly how to > > reproduce the issue. > > Code listing: > > > print 'cache content keys' > > content_keys = [] > > #content_keys = content_bucket.get_keys() > > for keys in content_bucket.stream_keys(): > > for key in keys: > > content_keys.append(key) > > Do you run into the same issue if you use get_keys() rather than > stream_keys() ? > > -- > Luke Bakken > Engineer > lbak...@basho.com _______________________________________________ riak-users mailing list riak-users@lists.basho.com http://lists.basho.com/mailman/listinfo/riak-users_lists.basho.com