Ivan Sagalaev wrote:
> I think so too... I was investigating Alex's report and it looks like
> somewhere onr thread is creating a QueryDict and another tries to access
> it while it's being created. It's the only place where it doesn't
> contain self._mutable.
>
> This may mean that mod_python somehow supplies shared request object
> which it shouldn't. On a mod-python list I saw a suggestion
> (http://www.modpython.org/pipermail/mod_python/2003-October/014398.html):
>
> >It means your Python that mod_python was built against doesn't support
> >threads. You might have a thread.py module under your python libs dir
> >but that doesn't mean your python supports threads.
> >
> >Go the the mod_python page, get the appropriate version per your apache
> >version, and then get EXACTLY the version of Python recommended. Build
> >this python in your source tree (with threads!) and mod_python against
> >this. Everything will work fine.
> >
> But I didn't put it here since it's to unfounded :-). Alex, could you
> check these versioning issues anyway?

Ivan,

My python and mod_python were both compiled with threading. Whilst
investigating these issues I did find mention in a few posts that
mod_python 3.1.4 and earlier having some thread related bugs.  I was
running 3.1.3 and when I upgraded to 3.2.5b at least one of my apache
crashing issues seemed to disappeared.

Eugene's patch did also seem to resolve the QueryDict issue I reported.

Thanks

Alex


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