On Aug 27, 4:22 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Douglas Wells) wrote:
> In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
>
>
>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
> > On Aug 27, 12:32 pm, Larry Bates <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Changing it to IP gives me the same exact error...
>
> > File "bin/prgram.py", line 123, in notify
> > smtp = smtplib.SMTP("XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX")
>
> > File "/usr/lib/python2.4/smtplib.py", line 255, in __init__
> > addr = socket.gethostbyname(socket.gethostname())
>
> > gaierror: (-2, 'Name or service not known')
>
> > Looks like the smtp port is closed on the client machine...doh Should
> > have gotten to that!
>
> > ~Sean
>
> Note that the lookup is of your *local* system name
> (socket.gethostname()). I suspect that the name of your client
> system (the one running the python script) is not registered in
> DNS.
>
> Try ping'ing your own system and see if that resolves in DNS. In
> UNIX/Linux you can use the hostname command; in any system you can
> write a python script to print the result of socket.gethostname().
>
> - dmw
>
> --
> . Douglas Wells . Connection Technologies .
> . Internet: -sp9804- -at - contek.com- .
I found a solution...but still not sure why that happened.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:17:08:5E:EF:0F:/usr/local/sw/program/bin# hostname
00:17:08:5E:EF:0F
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:17:08:5E:EF:0F:/usr/local/sw/program/bin# ping 00:17:08:5E:EF:
0F
ping: unknown host 00:17:08:5E:EF:0F
>>> socket.gethostname()
'00:17:08:5E:EF:0F'
Workaround: pass the 'local_hostname' arg to the smtplib.SMTP() call
with "localhost"
ie smtp.SMTP("some.computer", local_hostname="localhost")
This is just overriding the socket.gethostname() call entirely.
Did a bit of testing with the /etc/hosts file, and even with an entry
to the hostname it can't resolve the ip.
The problem is the name "00:17:08:5E:EF:0F" PS. I didn't choose to
set the hostname that way.
~Sean
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