Michael Felt added the comment: I cannot comment on uuid directly, but for me, this is yet another example of how assumptions can break things.
imho - if you know the exact version of s shared library that you want, calling cdll directly should be find. Maybe find_library is historic. However, an advantage to calling find_library is that it should lead to an OSError if it cannot be loaded. But trapping OSError on a call to ctypes.cdll or testing for None (NULL) from find_library() is the option of a developer using the ctypes interface. As far as libFOO.so.N - do you always want to assume it is going to be version N, or are you expecting to be able to work work version N+X? Again, find_library() can give you the library name it would load - but a programmer must be aware of the platform differences (e.g., AIX returns not a filename, but a libFOO.a(libFOO.so.N) - as just one example. p.s. as far as ldconfig being part of the problem on AIX (as it does not exist and can lead to OSError or just long delays, I have worked out a (pending) patch for ctypes/util (and ctypes/cdll) that may address the issues with uuid import on AIX. (see issue26439 for the patch) ---------- nosy: +Michael.Felt _______________________________________ Python tracker <rep...@bugs.python.org> <http://bugs.python.org/issue11063> _______________________________________ _______________________________________________ Python-bugs-list mailing list Unsubscribe: https://mail.python.org/mailman/options/python-bugs-list/archive%40mail-archive.com