On Sun, Oct 11, 2009 at 12:46 PM, John Haggerty wrote:
> Does pyro work inside of stackless?
I have no idea, but you wouldn't need both. Only one or the other.
~Simon
> On Sat, Oct 10, 2009 at 9:54 AM, Simon Forman wrote:
>>
>> On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 1:11 AM, John Haggerty wrote:
>> > I am
Does pyro work inside of stackless?
On Sat, Oct 10, 2009 at 9:54 AM, Simon Forman wrote:
> On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 1:11 AM, John Haggerty wrote:
> > I am interested in seeing how it would be possible in python to have
> > persistent objects (basically be able to save objects midway through a
> >
On Fri, Oct 9, 2009 at 1:11 AM, John Haggerty wrote:
> I am interested in seeing how it would be possible in python to have
> persistent objects (basically be able to save objects midway through a
> computation, etc) and do so across multiple computers.
>
> Something that would allow for memory, d
Sorry about being interpreted as being vague.
You wasn't vague. I'm sorry!
`et me try to narrow it down. program a creates objects b c d which each need to
use 1 disk space 2 ram 3 processor time. I would like to create a checkpoint which
would save the work of the object to be later used a
On 10 oct, 05:39, "bouncy...@gmail.com" wrote:
> Sorry about being interpreted as being vague. `et me try to narrow it down.
> program a creates objects b c d which each need to use 1 disk space 2 ram 3
> processor time. I would like to create a heckpoint which would save the work
> of the obje
On 10 oct, 05:39, "bouncy...@gmail.com" wrote:
> Sorry about being interpreted as being vague. `et me try to narrow it down.
> program a creates objects b c d which each need to use 1 disk space 2 ram 3
> processor time. I would like to create a heckpoint which would save the work
> of the obje
Date: Fri, 9 Oct 2009 09:18:12 PM +0430
Subject: Re: Persistent Distributed Objects
>
>
> I've seen evidence about this being done wrt what looks like insanely
> complex stuff on this list but I'm wondering if there is something to
> do this with any number of nodes a
I've seen evidence about this being done wrt what looks like insanely
complex stuff on this list but I'm wondering if there is something to
do this with any number of nodes and just farm out random
classes/objects to them?
Designing and opreating distributed systems is a complex thing.
Esp
I am interested in seeing how it would be possible in python to have
persistent objects (basically be able to save objects midway through a
computation, etc) and do so across multiple computers.
Something that would allow for memory, disk space, processing power, etc to
be distributed across the n