Hi, I'm not a Win ME fan myself (I'm a Mac user), but I'm here in Thailand developing software for special-needs kids, and the test PC in my home office is a Win ME machine (sigh). So when I ported my Python program today to the PC, it quickly crashed. Everything seems to work except for shelve. Using the latest version of Python (2.5.1), when I do the following in IDLE on the Win ME machine here's the result:
Python 2.5.1 (r251:54863, Apr 18 2007, 08:51:08) [MSC v.1310 32 bit (Intel)] on win32 IDLE 1.2.1 >>> import shelve >>> f=shelve.open("foo") Traceback (most recent call last): File "<pyshell#1>", line 1, in <module> f=shelve.open("foo") File "C:\PYTHON25\lib\shelve.py", line 225, in open return DbfilenameShelf(filename, flag, protocol, writeback) File "C:\PYTHON25\lib\shelve.py", line 209, in __init__ Shelf.__init__(self, anydbm.open(filename, flag), protocol, writeback) File "C:\PYTHON25\lib\anydbm.py", line 83, in open return mod.open(file, flag, mode) File "C:\PYTHON25\lib\dbhash.py", line 16, in open return bsddb.hashopen(file, flag, mode) File "C:\PYTHON25\lib\bsddb\__init__.py", line 306, in hashopen d.open(file, db.DB_HASH, flags, mode) DBError: (5, 'Input/output error') >>> For those who know shelve, this should actually run fine (if the file "foo" does not exist it should create it). Printing the value of "f" should show an empty dictionary {}. It does run fine on my iBook (under Python 2.4.4) and on my iBook's Virtual PC running Win XP & Python 2.5.0. I do not think this is a Python 2.5.1 problem, because my first attempt to run my program on the Win ME machine was with a version of the program I ported using Py2exe on the VPC under Python 2.5.0, and it crashed the same way when run on the Win ME machine (I subsequently installed Python on the Win ME PC to try to get to the root of the problem.) Help! How do I get Win ME (or at least the misbehaving Win ME machine in my office) to run shelve? (or more specifically run bsddb's hashopen?) Or should I trash shelve entirely and rewrite all my code to use a simpler, homemade database scheme? Thanks for any advice! Warmly, Joel [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list