to clarify: when I said "The console view gives me access to the
datastore" in that last message, I meant the data viewer at
appengine.google.com, not appengine_console.py.
-Nick

On Aug 4, 7:00 pm, Nick_Zaillian <nzaill...@gmail.com> wrote:
> Thanks Nick J,
> Alright.  This is probably just me being stupid, but I've been beating
> my head against the wall for, like, an hour trying to get things
> working.  I wrote a simple app.yaml file with your remote_api mapping
> and deployed it to App Engine as v2 of my app.  The console view gives
> me access to the datastore, so I think this is all fine.
> I modified your appengine_console.py such that the call to
> ConfigureRemoteDatastore now reads:
>
> remote_api_stub.ConfigureRemoteDatastore(app_id=None, path='/
> remote_api', auth_func=auth_func, servername='http://
> 2.latest.nicksmap.appspot.com/')
>
> I've visited the url "http://2.latest.nicksmap.appspot.com/remote_api";
> in my browser and it seems to be active (I see "This request did not
> contain a necessary header" rather than some 403/404 error message) so
> I'm pretty sure that my app configuration is alright.  When I run
> "python appengine_console.py [appid]" (with my app id -- though I know
> that last argument doesn't really do anything anymore) in the shell, I
> get an error message reading as follows:
>
> Traceback (most recent call last):
>   File "appengine_console.py", line 27, in <module>
>     remote_api_stub.ConfigureRemoteDatastore(app_id=None, path='/
> remote_api', auth_func=auth_func, servername='http://
> 2.latest.nicksmap.appspot.com/')
>   File "/home/nick/google_appengine/google/appengine/ext/remote_api/
> remote_api_stub.py", line 433, in ConfigureRemoteDatastore
>     response = server.Send(path, payload=None, **urlargs)
>   File "/home/nick/google_appengine/google/appengine/tools/
> appengine_rpc.py", line 344, in Send
>     f = self.opener.open(req)
>   File "/usr/lib/python2.5/urllib2.py", line 381, in open
>     response = self._open(req, data)
>   File "/usr/lib/python2.5/urllib2.py", line 399, in _open
>     '_open', req)
>   File "/usr/lib/python2.5/urllib2.py", line 360, in _call_chain
>     result = func(*args)
>   File "/usr/lib/python2.5/urllib2.py", line 1107, in http_open
>     return self.do_open(httplib.HTTPConnection, req)
>   File "/usr/lib/python2.5/urllib2.py", line 1064, in do_open
>     h = http_class(host) # will parse host:port
>   File "/usr/lib/python2.5/httplib.py", line 639, in __init__
>     self._set_hostport(host, port)
>   File "/usr/lib/python2.5/httplib.py", line 651, in _set_hostport
>     raise InvalidURL("nonnumeric port: '%s'" % host[i+1:])
> httplib.InvalidURL: nonnumeric port: ''
>
> Not really sure what's going on here.  I think that the parameters
> that I'm passing to the ConfigureRemoteDatastore method are valid,
> right?  Any thoughts?
>
> I'm sure that Remote API is a great tool and I'm eager to be able to
> work with it.
>
> - Nick Z
>
> On Aug 4, 8:04 am, "Nick Johnson (Google)" <nick.john...@google.com>
> wrote:
>
> > Hi Nick,
>
> > If you're happy to use a Python local client, you can do the following:
>
> > - Create a Python app.yaml with the same app_id as your Java app, but
> > a different major version.
> > - Install the remote_api mapping in the app.yaml
> > - Deploy the Python app to App Engine
> > - When you initialize remote_api with ConfigureRemoteDatastore, pass
> > the parameter server="majorversion.latest.myapp.appspot.com"
> > (substituting majorversion and latest as appropriate).
>
> > You can now access your Java app's datastore via Python Remote API.
>
> > -Nick Johnson
>
> > On Tue, Aug 4, 2009 at 3:19 AM, Nick_Zaillian<nzaill...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > > Just to clarify: I wouldn't mind working in Python on the local end of
> > > things if that were necessary (because that would just mean rewriting
> > > one or two routines).  What I am unwilling to do is to rewrite my
> > > whole application in Python just so that I can make use of the Remote
> > > API/AppRocker/App3.  It looks to me like Remote API, AppRocket and
> > > app3 are all just python scripts, so I'm not too hopeful about the
> > > prospect of integrating them with my java app.  App3 is probably the
> > > closest thing to what I'm looking for.  It occurs to me that it may
> > > not be so complicated to implement this sort thing in java on my own,
> > > so I may just go ahead and try to do that...unless someone has a
> > > better idea.
> > > Cheers,
> > > Nick
>
> > > On Aug 3, 11:58 pm, Nick_Zaillian <nzaill...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > >> I would like to be able to do some batch processing for a site I'm
> > >> running on GAE (at nicksmap.org).  Right now I've got various database
> > >> maintenance routines bound to URLs that I hit with cron.  Problem is
> > >> that one of these routines requires a few minutes to excecute.  And
> > >> can (and sort of have) hacked up a workaround, but I would be able to
> > >> stretch my quotas much further if I could use something like Remote
> > >> API, App Rocket, or app3.  So far as I can tell, though, all of these
> > >> tools are python only (or am I mistaken?).  Any thoughts on how I
> > >> might be able to accomplish what I'm trying to accomplish (basically
> > >> be able to take a hunk of records from my database and run some time-
> > >> consuming routines on them on a local machine so as not to have to
> > >> hack around the 30 second cutoff for processes)?
> > >> Thanks,
> > >> Nick Zaillian
>
> > --
> > Nick Johnson, Developer Programs Engineer, App Engine
>
>
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