We have a client using a fully embedded python in a large DTP app. It used to be Mac OS 9/X only, but the MAC 9 support has gone away and we now have support for the PC with the embedding being used in C# via external DLL aliasing/marshalling etc etc.
The embedding DLL has effectively a single entry point called _run_string; this takes an LPStr string and with minor wrapping (to collect sys.stderr) is passed to an exec statement doing exec code in __main__.__dict__ The client is having problems with a pair of executions looking effectively like String 0 class C: ..... def F(a): ... C().... import pprint pprint.pprint(globals(),open('/tmp/dump0.txt','w')) String 1 import pprint pprint.pprint(globals(),open('/tmp/dump1.txt','w')) F('namesonly') The import pprint stuff is used to attempt to resolve the problem of F having vanished in the second environment. From the outputs dump0.txt/dump1.txt I can see that both C and F are defined at the end of 0, but at the beginning of 1 C still exists (and appears to have the same address), but F is nowhere to be seen. I'm guessing that someone is cleaning up somewhere, but could this be some .Net threading issue? When I run this with a simple C# test harness it does exactly as expected and F exists. I have suggested wrapping the function as a class instance with a __del__ method having a stack dump to see if the function is deleted deliberately somehow, but that won't work if in fact the second environment is in fact not the same as the other. Is there some way to work out if I'm in the same interpreter if in fact we're joining the DLL in two places perhaps? -- Robin Becker -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list