Anderson Ami writes:
> Anybody knows What is Medusa Monitor ? What it do ? How can I use it ?
The Medusa monitor allows you to connect to a running Zope
Server and get a Python interpreter in this context.
With it, you can (in principle) analyse your Zope system.
However, this way of debugging
Hi People,
Anybody knows What is Medusa Monitor ? What it do ? How can I use it ?
Thank you
hugs
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At 1:18 pm -0700 16/10/00, Karl Anderson wrote:
>Terry Kerr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
>> I don't think the monitor gives you any advantage? I have never
>>used a ptyhon prompt before...I will have to give it a go.
>>
>> terry
>
>Actually, the advantage of the monitor is that it runs in the
Terry Kerr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I don't think the monitor gives you any advantage? I have never used a ptyhon
>prompt before...I will have to give it a go.
>
> terry
Actually, the advantage of the monitor is that it runs in the same
process as your server, so you can track resource i
Hung Jung Lu writes:
> I know that, the stupid log file thingy. But you'll have to write an
> independent thread to display the log file (or peek the file manually each
> time), or implement some CString stuff to capture the file output (if that
> is possible).
As I understand it, the loggi
I don't think the monitor gives you any advantage? I have never used a ptyhon prompt
before...I will have to give it a go.
terry
Karl Anderson wrote:
> Jens Vagelpohl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > terry,
> >
> > you forgot the step of actually connecting to the monitor :) there is a very
Useless for debugging? I find it very useful and sometimes necessarybut
I right all my products in python so maybe it is different for ZClass people.
terry
Hung Jung Lu wrote:
> Thanks for the follow-ups on Medusa Monitor.
>
> But as I can see (after using Zope for 1.5 years, now), few pe
]>
>To: "Hung Jung Lu" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Re: [Zope] Medusa Monitor
>Date: Thu, 12 Oct 2000 23:47:35 +0200 (CEST)
>
>Hung Jung Lu writes:
> > A more useful debuging tool would be some mo
Hung Jung Lu writes:
> A more useful debuging tool would be some monitor where you can receive
> print message logs in real time. That would be great, especially if you have
> multiple thread problems.
You know Zope's logging support?
It provides a kind of "print message logs", you receive i
Jens Vagelpohl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> terry,
>
> you forgot the step of actually connecting to the monitor :) there is a very
> short howto on using the correct client program to log into the monitor at:
>
> http://www.zope.org/Members/teyc/howtoMonitorClient
>
> and similar info at:
>
Thanks for the follow-ups on Medusa Monitor.
But as I can see (after using Zope for 1.5 years, now), few people actually
use it. Unless one is really into the guts of Zope itself, the monitor is
pretty useless for debugging. It of course could be made more useful, but
one must implement some P
terry,
you forgot the step of actually connecting to the monitor :) there is a very
short howto on using the correct client program to log into the monitor at:
http://www.zope.org/Members/teyc/howtoMonitorClient
and similar info at:
http://www.zope.org/Documentation/Misc/DEBUGGING.txt
jens
Use it for debugging sometimes.
Is very easy to use. Basically
import Zope
z = Zope.app()
then z is the root of your zope tree so you can do anything. You will need
to import any other python modules you need too.
terry
Hung Jung Lu wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Zope comes with the Medusa monitor (port
Hi,
Zope comes with the Medusa monitor (port 8099 by default) which is kind of
cute and allows one to get into the guts of Zope. But do people really use
it? How do people use it? Is there any document describing the usages of
this monitor? Are there some features of this monitor that makes de
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