On Thu, 6 Mar 2008, Bill Janssen wrote:

You can also get this env value by calling getVMEnv() as in:

  >>> import foo
  >>> foo.initVM(foo.CLASSPATH)

  >>> import os, foo, bar
  >>> bar.initVM(classpath=os.pathsep.join([foo.CLASSPATH, bar.CLASSPATH]),
                  env=foo.getVMEnv())


This gives me a type error:

% python
Python 2.5 (r25:51908, Apr 10 2007, 10:29:13)
[GCC 4.1.2 20070403 (Red Hat 4.1.2-8)] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
import lucene
lucene.initVM(classpath=lucene.CLASSPATH, maxheap='2000m')
<jcc.JCCEnv object at 0xb7ed0240>
import goodstuff
goodstuff.CLASSPATH
''
goodstuff.initVM(classpath=lucene.CLASSPATH, maxheap='2000m', 
env=lucene.getVMEnv())
Traceback (most recent call last):
 File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
TypeError: <jcc.JCCEnv object at 0xb7ed0240>

Hmm, strange, it seems to work for me.
But I only tried it with passing the env back to lucene.
Note that env is specified, all other keywords are ignored except for classpath.

Andi..
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