Hello,
2009/9/17 Matt Perry :
> Make sure you're using the @inlineCallbacks decorator and the yield
> statement referenced previously. Without those you're just adding several
> callbacks to the same Deferred; with them, the function will wait until the
> Deferred fires before continuing.
>
> def
James Y Knight wrote:
> On Sep 16, 2009, at 12:33 PM, David Yoakley wrote:
>> Thanks Phil for the reference to ampoule. We will look at that
>> next. We are still hoping to get the parent set up in such a way
>> that whatever the forking :-) shared state is, it does not get
>> established
On Wed, 2008-08-27 at 17:31 -0400, Pedro Sanchez wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have a sample XMPP client with the following structure:
>
> from twisted.words.protocols.jabber import client, jid
> from twisted.internet import reactor
> ...
> factory = client.basicClientFactory(myJid, myPasswd)
> reactor.c
That way works, but the original problem was that a failure in one of them
was stopping the whole callback chain.
Missing from my example (but present in a past example) was a try/except
around the yield keyword. So:
...
try:
yield deferred1
except:
pass
...
try:
yield deferred2
except:
Matt Perry wrote:
> would swallow any exceptions thrown by deferred1 and continue on to
> create deferred2. If you did:
>
> d.addCallback(foo)
> d.addCallback(bar)
> d.addCallback(baz)
>
> then an exception in "foo" would break the whole callback chain.
You can also use addBoth(), which adds a ca
Good day,
I have scanned through the docs a few times, and I am in need of some
advice and explanation to determine if Twisted's Perspective Broker
meetings my perceived needs
What I am trying to do : create a client/server project where the
server is a a typical access multiple data sources, enf
Arthur Pemberton wrote:
> 1) Is the Twisted Matrix book published by Orielly relevant ie. updated
> enough?
Yes. I just read it and it has excellent Perspective Broker examples in
chapters 5 & 6 which got me to a flying start recently. Obviously
you'll want to read the online docs too.
It do
On Thu, Sep 17, 2009 at 04:33:43PM +0200, Ralph Meijer wrote:
> On Wed, 2008-08-27 at 17:31 -0400, Pedro Sanchez wrote:
Oh, ahum. That's quite the latency...
--
Groetjes,
ralphm
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On Thu, Sep 17, 2009 at 2:09 PM, Brett Sheffield wrote:
> Arthur Pemberton wrote:
>> 1) Is the Twisted Matrix book published by Orielly relevant ie. updated
>> enough?
>
> Yes. I just read it and it has excellent Perspective Broker examples in
> chapters 5 & 6 which got me to a flying start rec
Arthur Pemberton wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 17, 2009 at 2:09 PM, Brett Sheffield wrote:
>> It doesn't cover twisted.web and nevoew very well because the API was
>> still shifting about then, but the rest seems pretty good. It was
>> published in 2006.
>
> I know it was published in 2006, but 3 years c
It just doesn't want to go past PASV. Spent past 3 hours trying to figure
this one out. Any help is appreciated.
Log:
2009-09-17 16:26:56-0700 [-] Log opened.
2009-09-17 16:26:56-0700 [-] twisted.protocols.ftp.FTPFactory starting on
*
2009-09-17 16:26:56-0700 [-] Starting factory
2009-09-17
On Sep 17, 2009, at 7:29 PM, Slava Yanson wrote:
It just doesn't want to go past PASV. Spent past 3 hours trying to
figure this one out. Any help is appreciated.
Since PASV mode goes to higher ports (> 1023), is it possible that a
firewall's at the server getting in the way?
http://slack
Here is part of ipconfig file:
-A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -m tcp -p tcp --dport 65000:65200 -j ACCEPT
-A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -m udp -p udp --dport 65000:65200 -j ACCEPT
And I just tried setting passivePortRange to that range and it still didn't
work. netstat showed that port listening and it still di
On 2009-09-17, Slava Yanson wrote:
> Here is part of ipconfig file:
>
> -A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -m tcp -p tcp --dport 65000:65200 -j ACCEPT
> -A RH-Firewall-1-INPUT -m udp -p udp --dport 65000:65200 -j ACCEPT
>
> And I just tried setting passivePortRange to that range and it still didn't
> work. n
On 9/17/09 1:31 PM, Arthur Pemberton wrote:
> 2) How easy it to package Twisted for distribution on Windows system
> (which would be inevitable)
You can use py2exe to distribute your application as one or more
executables. It is also possible to create NT services using the
win32all package.
Luc
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