Well, I've found about a hundred thousand web pages where people have had the same problem I have but nary a page with a solution that works for me.
I want to do a simple embed, so I've followed the example in the Extending and Embedding documentation: In the .c file, #include <Python.h> int routine() { Py_Initialize(); PyRun_SimpleString("from time import time,ctime\n" "print 'Today is',ctime(time())\n"); Py_Finalize(); return 0; } The code compiles just fine, but when I execute it the call to Py_Initialize() comes back with: 'import site' failed; use -v for traceback Traceback (most recent call last): File "<string>", line 1, in <module> ImportError: No module named time I found a lot of websites that say to set PYTHONHOME to the the path to the directory where site.py lives. I did that but I get the same error. Here are a few bits o' additional information: 'python -v' tells me it was built with gcc 3.4.4 (and has no trouble at all finding site.py whether PYTHONHOME is defined or not). The following code snippet: >>> import distutils.sysconfig >>> distutils.sysconfig.get_config_var('LINKFORSHARED') comes back with '-Xlinker -export-dynamic'. My own code needs to use Portland Group's pgi. I did some googling for various permutations of nouns from the preceding few paragraphs and found Pythonic mention of using "-Wl,-export-dynamic" as a flag for the PG linker. OK, try that, builds fine, same error. I cannot recompile Python on this machine and I don't really understand exactly what is happening with the Py_* function calls in the C snippet above, or whether I can get more detailed traceback info. This is the first time I've tried embedding and it's rather obvious that I've run into a problem that everyone but Messrs. van Rossum and Lundh has hit. Somebody, somewhere must have an honest-to-glub solution. If you are that somebody, please let me know what to do because I'm about to throw in the towel and embed That Other Language. Oh, one more thing: if I launch python from the shell and type in the strings from the C snippet it works fine. Thanks, Jim -- It's not "pretexting", it's "lying." -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list