On Sep 13, 5:34 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > >> I don't want to handle writing of a PID file because it is too > >> Unix/Linux specific way to do this, and I need to keep the code to be > >> cross-platform. > >> > >> I think the better way to achieve this is to use some process > >> control, but I'm a neebie and I don't see how to do this in a safe > >> and clean way. > > Aaron> You could use msvcrt.locking, and just lock the script file. I > Aaron> am not sure about this. > > If you want a cross-platform solution, you might try the lockfile module > instead: > > http://pypi.python.org/pypi/lockfile > > Skip
Would it suffice to call 'os.open' with flags= _O_CREAT| _O_EXCL ? Would that be platform-independent? Windows docs (_open): _O_CREAT| _O_EXCL Returns an error value if the file specified by filename exists. Applies only when used with _O_CREAT. man page: O_EXCL If O_EXCL and O_CREAT are set, open will fail if the file exists. The check for the existence of the file and the creation of the file if it does not exist is atomic with respect to other processes executing open naming the same filename in the same directory with O_EXCL and O_CREAT set. CreateDirectory: The CreateDirectory function does seem to guarantee this as well, though is not as explicit: Possible errors include the following. ERROR_ALREADY_EXISTS The specified directory already exists. But the lock operation wouldn't need the 'if hasattr(os, "link")' test. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list