Hello everyone!
I seem to have found the problem!
In my program, I have "print" commands. These print commands are
turned off only when the "noprint" command line argument is supplied.
When the Linux service launched the program, it was not using the
"noprint" argument. When I started using it,
Hi Gary,
That is actually what I do. Each time the program prints something to
the file, it flushes the buffer. I also tried opening and closing the
file, same result.
I could indeed post the code. That is only a fraction of the program,
as the log is managed through the Queue module:
def __n
Bernard Lebel wrote:
>Hello,
>
>I have this strange problem. I have written a program that writes a
>log to a log file.
>
>To start the program (I'm on Linux Fedora Core 3), I used a service.
>This service runs a bash file, wich in turn runs the Python top
>program file.
>
>Sooner or later the pro
Hello,
I have this strange problem. I have written a program that writes a
log to a log file.
To start the program (I'm on Linux Fedora Core 3), I used a service.
This service runs a bash file, wich in turn runs the Python top
program file.
Sooner or later the program stops writing to the log fi