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| Author | cwalther |
|---|---|
| Recipients | Rhamphoryncus, amaury.forgeotdarc, brett.cannon, cwalther, gregory.p.smith |
| Date | 2008年01月18日.08:54:59 |
| SpamBayes Score | 0.00143429 |
| Marked as misclassified | No |
| Message-id | <1200646502.59.0.595886054866.issue1596321@psf.upfronthosting.co.za> |
| In-reply-to |
| Content | |
|---|---|
> Is the bug avoided if you import threading first and use it instead of thread? Yes. The bug happens when the (first) import of threading and the call to Py_Finalize() happen in different threads. To reproduce the problem in pure Python, I therefore have to use thread instead of threading to create the secondary thread. (In the C++ application, it's created on the C++ side.) Has anyone checked if the solution I propose in the first post makes sense? |
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| History | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Date | User | Action | Args |
| 2008年01月18日 08:55:03 | cwalther | set | spambayes_score: 0.00143429 -> 0.00143429 recipients: + cwalther, brett.cannon, gregory.p.smith, amaury.forgeotdarc, Rhamphoryncus |
| 2008年01月18日 08:55:02 | cwalther | set | spambayes_score: 0.00143429 -> 0.00143429 messageid: <1200646502.59.0.595886054866.issue1596321@psf.upfronthosting.co.za> |
| 2008年01月18日 08:55:01 | cwalther | link | issue1596321 messages |
| 2008年01月18日 08:54:59 | cwalther | create | |