Description
When trying to check for the existence of a Collection in client.collections using "collection_name" in client.collections, the program stalls seemingly forever, consuming all the available RAM relatively quickly, regardless of if the collection does indeed exist or not.
Steps to reproduce
import typesense
client = typesense.Client(
{
"nodes": [{"host": "localhost", "port": "8108", "protocol": "http"}],
"api_key": "yourapikey",
"connection_timeout_seconds": 2,
}
)
if "documentname" in client.collections:
print("'documentname' collection exists")
My particular environment is on Windows 10, using Docker Desktop with Docker Engine version 26.1.4 and the typesense container created using
docker run -p "8108:8108" -v "${pwd}/typesense-data:/data" typesense/typesense:26.0 --data-dir "/data" --api-key "$env:TYPESENSE_API_KEY" --enable-cors
on Powershell.
Expected Behavior
Either for it return if the collection exists or not, or to error gracefully.
Actual Behavior
The program stalls forever, consuming more and more RAM until the script is interrupted and the Docker container shut down.
Metadata
Typesense Version: 26.0
typesense-python Version: 0.21.0
OS: Windows 10 x64
Description
When trying to check for the existence of a Collection in
client.collectionsusing"collection_name" in client.collections, the program stalls seemingly forever, consuming all the available RAM relatively quickly, regardless of if the collection does indeed exist or not.Steps to reproduce
My particular environment is on Windows 10, using Docker Desktop with Docker Engine version 26.1.4 and the typesense container created using
on Powershell.
Expected Behavior
Either for it return if the collection exists or not, or to error gracefully.
Actual Behavior
The program stalls forever, consuming more and more RAM until the script is interrupted and the Docker container shut down.
Metadata
Typesense Version: 26.0
typesense-python Version: 0.21.0
OS: Windows 10 x64