Gabriel Genellina wrote: > En Wed, 09 Jul 2008 15:02:56 -0300, Mirko Vogt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> escribi�: > >> it seems that the socket-module behaves differently on unix / windows >> when a timeout is set. > [...] >> Now I will change the code slightly - to be precise I set a timeout on >> the socket: >> >> >> # test.py >> >> import socket >> sock=socket.socket(socket.AF_INET,socket.SOCK_STREAM) >> sock.settimeout(3.0) # <----- >> print 'trying to connect...' >> sock.connect(('127.0.0.1',9999)) >> print 'connected!' >> >> >> # executed on linux >> >> $ python test.py >> trying to connect... >> Traceback (most recent call last): >> File "test.py", line 5, in <module> >> sock.connect(('127.0.0.1',9999)) >> File "<string>", line 1, in connect >> socket.error: (111, 'Connection refused') >> $ >> >> >> # executed on windows >> >>> C:\Python25\python.exe test.py >> trying to connect... >> connected! > > Which Python version? Which Windows version? I've tried 2.3.4, 2.4.4, > 2.5.1 and 3.0a4, all on WinXP SP2, and in all cases I got an exception > (details differ between versions). In no case I could make the > connection succeed when nobody was listening at port 9999, as expected. >
Hey, this is strange. Linux: $ python --version Python 2.5.2 $ Windows: C:\Python25>python.exe --version Python 2.5.2 C:\Python25> Mirko -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list