Paul Probert wrote: > Yes, I'm doing this: > ..... > oldtime=time.time() > time.sleep(1) > newtime=time.time() > dt=newtime-oldtime > if dt > 2: > print 'dt=',dt,' time=',time.strftime('%Y_%m_%d_%Hh_%Mm_%Ss') > Its happening roughly 4 times a day total on our 20 machines, ie about > once every 5 days on a given machine.
So, it happens roughly one time out of 400 000 sleeps? With an operating system such as Windows, this is probably something you can expect to happen, although I'm surprised if such long lag times as 200 s are typical. If you need real time characteristics, you should probably use a real time operating system, not Windows. The operating system can schedule jobs as it likes, and your sleep is obviously just the right time to hand off the CPU to some other process. Of course, if something takes 200 seconds, it's typically because some process is waiting for IO, and if it's waiting for IO, the CPU should be used by other processes, such as yours. Perhaps you can use the event log or some performance measurement tools to check if something else on the system happens to coincide with your long delays. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list