Hi all, I hope this hasn't been brought up before, but if it did i missed it, so bear with me please :) anyway, i'm trying to embed Python into a C program. A sample python syript i want to run is as follows:
---SNIP--- import time import threading go_on = 1 t = 0 def ProcessMessage(): print "... ProcessMessage" def Main(): global go_on print "... Main" while go_on: ProcessMessage () print "... ... ", time.sleep (0.2) def Setup(): global t print "... Setup" t = threading.Thread (None, Main) t.start () # t.join (0) # print t.isAlive() def Shutdown(): global go_on, t go_on = 0 t.join () print "... Shutdown" ---SNIP--- I call "Setup" from C, which should create a new thread which should enter the loop in Main. well, it doesn't :) It prints "... Setup" and does nothing. when i call Shutdown from C, it prints "... Main" , followed by "... Shutdown", and exits... So it seems to me the python interpreter wants to run the seperate thread, but doesn't get time from the scheduler (is that the thing about 100 opcodes?) How can i handle this problem? Do I need to wrap all the Py_Stuff() into its own thread? do i need artificial python code that only serves the purpose of piling up enough opcodes so that the Main() thread gets eventually called? I hope you can help me, if you need more code (f.ex. the C-code ), i will post more :) (basically I modified the run_func.cc file from the docs, added PyEval_InitThreads() and monkeyed around with GIL and Acquire/ReleaseLock, but so far i had no luck :) Cheers, Nico -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list