2009/9/28 Leonardo Santagada <[email protected]>: > I am very interested, I thought to do something like it. Where could I see > your code? > > On Sep 28, 2009, at 10:04 AM, Gabriel Lavoie wrote: > >> Hello Andrew, >> I'm currently experimenting with PyPy's implementation of >> Stackless to add new features for a university master degree project. >> I chose PyPy's implementation because it's easier to play with Python >> code than with C code. Also, since PyPy is "still experimental", it >> was the best implementation to choose to hack with and I don't regret >> my choice. What I'm trying to achieve is to add distributed features >> to Stackless: >> >> - Local and networked channels with automatic switch between both >> - Easy tasklet migration to a remote host, keeping the channel >> connections between tasklets. >> - Transparent/automatic dependencies migration when a tasklet is sent >> to a remote host. >> >> Most of the features are done and I'm currently working on the >> dependencies migration. The only bad part is that I'm doing this >> project part time since I have a full time job but I have to complete >> the programming part in the next two months (I've been working for too >> long on this). >> >> If you're interested to see what I've done, just ask! :) >> >> See ya, >> >> Gabriel >> >> 2009/9/25 Andrew Francis <[email protected]>: >>> >>> Hi Folks: >>> >>> Again as a part of my Stackless Python talk, I wanted to include a >>> section on the "Future." I assume a part of Stackless Python's future is >>> PyPy? Or am I being presumptuous? >>> >>> Regardless I would like to end the talk with a brief section on PyPy. I >>> noticed the Stackless.py module in lib that contains the Stackless >>> implementation in Python. >>> >>> What I plan to do in my talk is show how a rough approximation of Limbo's >>> alt (selecting the first ready channel from a list) could be implemented. >>> >>> I am a newbie in regards to PyPy. However I have been reading the >>> Stackless documentation. I thought it would be neat if I ended the talk with >>> redoing this, but in PyPy as a part of how one could quickly prototype new >>> Stackless Python features. Any thoughts? Is there anything gotchas? >>> >>> Cheers, >>> Andrew >>> >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> [email protected] >>> http://codespeak.net/mailman/listinfo/pypy-dev >>> >> >> >> >> -- >> Gabriel Lavoie >> [email protected] >> _______________________________________________ >> [email protected] >> http://codespeak.net/mailman/listinfo/pypy-dev > > -- > Leonardo Santagada > santagada at gmail.com > > > >
I still haven't shown publicly my work. I'll try to quickly prepare something this week with my current test code samples and a quick description of the API. I think the code quality is pretty bad as this is my first real Python project. My priority is to have something that works before doing a big cleanup. Gabriel -- Gabriel Lavoie [email protected] _______________________________________________ [email protected] http://codespeak.net/mailman/listinfo/pypy-dev
