Hi David,
Thanks a lot.
As I have pywin32 already installed this is probbaly the way to go.
Meanwhile I implemented already a small module, which is parsing
sc.exe's output, but probably 'll change it as my implementation is a
little clumsy.
bye
N
David Bolen wrote:
alex23
On 16/02/2010 13:51, Alf P. Steinbach wrote:
It doesn't seem to provide ordinary Windows services, but it's a bit unclear
since e.g. the URL above says
[... snip ...]
Well the useful info in there appears to come from:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa392783%28VS.85%29.aspx
Alf P. Steinbach al...@start.no wrote:
it's great that you provide the kind
of help that you did, pointing out a probably very good module that it seems
gives the required functionality, and giving an URL.
Yes, because that's _actually helping people_ and not just
contributing the usual
* alex23:
Alf P. Steinbach al...@start.no wrote:
it's great that you provide the kind
of help that you did, pointing out a probably very good module that it seems
gives the required functionality, and giving an URL.
Yes, because that's _actually helping people_ and not just
contributing the
alex23 wuwe...@gmail.com writes:
Yes, because that's _actually helping people_ and not just
contributing the usual self-serving pontificating nonsense that just
_flows_ from your goddamn mouth like a river of effluent psuedotruths.
I can't see what improvement you hope to achieve by sending
Thanks for your answers,
The security wouldn't be a concern, as I would run while being only
accessible by trusted hosts.
I don't use the script often, so if it would start a WMI service during
runtime and stop it afterwards it would be fine.
I just wonder whether installing another 3rd
On 16/02/2010 12:18, News123 wrote:
I don't use the script often, so if it would start a WMI service during
runtime and stop it afterwards it would be fine.
FWIW -- your other considerations notwithstanding -- I'm not aware
of WMI having this effect. Generally you can assume that the WMI
* Tim Golden:
On 16/02/2010 12:18, News123 wrote:
I don't use the script often, so if it would start a WMI service during
runtime and stop it afterwards it would be fine.
FWIW -- your other considerations notwithstanding -- I'm not aware
of WMI having this effect. Generally you can assume
On 16/02/2010 12:48, Alf P. Steinbach wrote:
I just googled the filename from memory, found
url: http://www.neuber.com/taskmanager/process/wmiprvse.exe.html
Don't know if I've disabled it because invoking wmic didn't produce it.
Uh, wait, since it hosts the provider service(s), perhaps...
* Tim Golden:
On 16/02/2010 12:48, Alf P. Steinbach wrote:
I just googled the filename from memory, found
url: http://www.neuber.com/taskmanager/process/wmiprvse.exe.html
Don't know if I've disabled it because invoking wmic didn't produce it.
Uh, wait, since it hosts the provider
On 02/16/10 13:51, Alf P. Steinbach wrote:
cut
- Alf (is this off-topic for the group?)
Strictly speaking yes, but I do find it interesting and there is nothing
wrong with ignoring posts you don't like to read.
--
mph
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Feb 16, 2010, at 4:04 AM, Ben Finney wrote:
Please, don't send the above kind of vitriol to this public forum.
Better yet, compose it in your editor, bask in what you've written, then
delete it unsent.
+1
If you kids want to have some sort of pissing-in-your-sockpuppet type of
contest
Alf P. Steinbach wrote:
[...]
I'll do some further research to see what's going on there.
Cheers,
- Alf (is this off-topic for the group?)
It's gone a lot further off than this without anyone complaining. I
think your experiences to date should convince you that you can rely on
being told
* Steve Holden:
Alf P. Steinbach wrote:
[...]
I'll do some further research to see what's going on there.
Cheers,
- Alf (is this off-topic for the group?)
It's gone a lot further off than this without anyone complaining. I
think your experiences to date should convince you that you can
alex23 wuwe...@gmail.com writes:
News123 news...@free.fr wrote:
What is the best way with python to get a list of all windows services.
As a start I would be glad to receive only the service names.
However it would be nicer if I could get all the properties of a service
as well.
I highly
Hi,
What is the best way with python to get a list of all windows services.
As a start I would be glad to receive only the service names.
However it would be nicer if I could get all the properties of a service
as well.
Thanks for any info and bye
N
--
* News123:
Hi,
What is the best way with python to get a list of all windows services.
As a start I would be glad to receive only the service names.
However it would be nicer if I could get all the properties of a service
as well.
Thanks for any info and bye
* Library:
If there is some
News123 news...@free.fr wrote:
What is the best way with python to get a list of all windows services.
As a start I would be glad to receive only the service names.
However it would be nicer if I could get all the properties of a service
as well.
I highly recommend Tim Golden's fantastic
* alex23:
News123 news...@free.fr wrote:
What is the best way with python to get a list of all windows services.
As a start I would be glad to receive only the service names.
However it would be nicer if I could get all the properties of a service
as well.
I highly recommend Tim Golden's
On Mon, Feb 15, 2010 at 18:17, Alf P. Steinbach al...@start.no wrote:
* News123:
Hi,
What is the best way with python to get a list of all windows services.
As a start I would be glad to receive only the service names.
However it would be nicer if I could get all the properties of a
On Feb 16, 1:28 pm, Alf P. Steinbach al...@start.no wrote:
It's probably Very Good, but one Microsoft-thing one should be aware of: using
WMI functionality generally starts up a background WMI service...
Probably? You haven't even used the module but you felt the need to
contribute anyway? And
* alex23:
On Feb 16, 1:28 pm, Alf P. Steinbach al...@start.no wrote:
It's probably Very Good, but one Microsoft-thing one should be aware of: using
WMI functionality generally starts up a background WMI service...
Probably?
That means that since you say it's fantastic, it's probably very
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