On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 3:39 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> time.sleep() pauses ony the thread that executes it, not the
> others. And queue objects can hold large amount of data (if you have
> the RAM),
> so unless your subprocess is outputting data very fast, you should not
> have data los
>
> Inserting delay in the beginning of the loop causes feeling of command
> taking long to start and delay at the end of the loop may cause of
> data loss when both thread became inactive during delay.
time.sleep() pauses ony the thread that executes it, not the
others. And queue objects can hol
On Wed, Mar 5, 2008 at 1:34 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The Queue.get method by default is blocking. The documentation is not
> 100% clear about that (maybe it should report
> the full python definition of the function parameters, which makes
> self-evident the default value) but if you d
On 5 Mar, 10:33, "Dmitry Teslenko" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello!
> Here's my implementation of a function that executes some command and
> drains stdout/stderr invoking other functions for every line of
> command output:
>
> def __execute2_drain_pipe(queue, pipe):
> for line in pipe: