Mr.M, 29.01.2010 23:50: > I can't figure out if there is a way to run a specialized cleanup > function when a module needs to be "unloaded" (i.e. just before a > reload() or when i quit the interpreter). > > I'm thinking of something like tp_dealloc. > > If I call Py_InitModule3 and look at module->ob_type->tp_dealloc, I find > that Python provides a default tp_dealloc for me. > > Now, suppose my module needs to allocate some resources at startup, I'm > not sure, but I think I'd have to do it in my PyMODINIT_FUNC, right? > > But, if I reload() my module or if I quit the Python interpreter, I'd > like to free those resources (before allocate them again, in case of a > reload). > > Is there a way to make this work?
Gabriel already pointed you to the module cleanup support in Py3, which can be used to provide reload capabilities to your module. In Py2, there are at least some ways to free resources when terminating the interpreter. See the "atexit" module and the Py_AtExit() function: http://docs.python.org/library/atexit.html http://docs.python.org/c-api/sys.html Note that both have their specific limitations, though, as you can see from the docs. Also note that it might help you to take a look at Cython, a Python-to-C compiler for writing fast C extensions. It has an option for generating module-level cleanup code automatically, and generally simplifies writing binary extension modules quite a bit. Stefan -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list