Being a non-professional programmer, I've managed to use Pyro to do what I need to do with very minimal fuss. In fact, I don't even understand a lot of what's under the cover. All I did was to mimic what one of the sample program is doing and adapted it to my need.
So far I am very happy with Pyro. And no, I don't need to use profanity to describe to you how amazing I think Pyro is. :=) writeson wrote: > Hi all, > > At work I'm considering proposing a solution for our distributed > processing system (a web based shopping cart that feeds an actual > printing production line) based on Pyro. I've done some minor > experiments with this and Pyro looks interesting and like a good > implementation of what I want. I've got a couple of questions though: > > 1) Has anyone had any experience with Pyro, and if so, have you had > any stability, or memory use issues running Pyro servers or nameservers > on the various participating computers? (We have a mixed environment of > Linux and Windows, but will be heading to an all Linux (RedHat) > environment soon. > > 2) One of the guys I work with is more inclined to set up XMLRPC > communication between the processes, and he is also leery of running > daemon processes. His solution is to have essentially Python CGI code > that responds to the various XMLRPC requests. Does anyone have any > opinions on this? I know what mine are already. :) > > 3) I've considered using CORBA, which is more powerful, and certainly > faster, but it's complexity to set up compared to the rather simple > work I'm trying to do seems prohibative. Does anyone have any thoughts > on this? > > Thanks in advance, > Doug -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list