Hi John, I'm sorry to bear the bad news, but your code works just fine on 
both my ubuntu and debian installation, my ubuntu 12.04 is using 
the experimental nvidia driver version = 310.14-0ubuntu0.1
My kernel is version is 3.5.0-36-generic

The code you sent run for about 10 minutes without interruption my pc.

The kernel of my debian is 3.2.0-4-686-pae and the nvidia driver is 
304.88-1.

I'll keep you informed if anything changes.

On Thursday, November 7, 2013 3:56:56 PM UTC-2, John Ladasky wrote:
>
> Hi folks,
>
> I don't know whether anyone saw my update post from three days ago.  I'm 
> making one last request for additional insight.  Thanks.
>
> On Monday, November 4, 2013 12:15:30 AM UTC-8, John Ladasky wrote:
>>
>> Following up:
>>
>> I haven't installed the latest Linux NVidia driver yet.  Several people 
>> on Ubuntu Forums who have tried the 319.xx series drivers are reporting 
>> problems more serious than new OpenGL threads causing their parent 
>> applications to crash.  I went down that path once before and spent over a 
>> week undoing the mess.  Until I have a good handle on how to try a video 
>> driver in a way that allows me a quick and graceful recovery from trouble, 
>> I will wait.
>>
>> In the mean time, I have encountered the hanging problem in a Pyglet 
>> example program which generates NO graphics beyond the original blank 
>> window.  It uses no clocks, nor does it use sound.  I'm referring to the 
>> very simple examples/events.py.  Here's the entire code, minus comments:
>>
>> ===========================================
>>
>> import pyglet
>>
>> window = pyglet.window.Window(resizable=True)
>>
>> @window.event
>> def on_draw():
>>     window.clear()
>>
>> window.push_handlers(pyglet.window.event.WindowEventLogger())
>>
>> pyglet.app.run()
>>
>> ===========================================
>>
>> This will happily print mouse events and keyboard events to the console 
>> for a while -- and then, it freezes.  As before, the window close icon and 
>> the ESC key are rendered non-functional by the freeze, and I have to use 
>> the System Monitor to identify and end the Python interpreter which is 
>> running events.py.
>>
>> Now, I can't be sure that the window.clear() call doesn't make OpenGL do 
>> something.  But why should it, when the window contains no graphics?  I'm 
>> beginning to wonder whether this problem has anything to do with graphics 
>> at all.  The event loop itself seems to become unhooked after a while.
>>
>> Once again, I turn to you for advice.  Thanks.
>>
>>

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