En Thu, 29 Oct 2009 13:18:30 -0300, Anthra Norell <anthra.nor...@bluewin.ch> escribió:

Gabriel Genellina wrote:
En Wed, 28 Oct 2009 08:05:22 -0300, Anthra Norell <anthra.nor...@bluewin.ch> escribió:
Gabriel Genellina wrote:
En Tue, 27 Oct 2009 07:53:36 -0300, Anthra Norell
<anthra.nor...@bluewin.ch> escribió:

I am trying to upload a bunch of web pages to a hosting service.[...] I wrote a loop that iterates through the file names and calls either of the stor... () methods as appropriate. The loop successfully uploads eight of some twenty files and then freezes. Ctrl-C doesn't unlock the freeze. I have to kill the IDLE window

freezes are less predictable than it seemed in the beginning. On one occasion it occurred after the transfer of a single file from the IDLE command line (my_ftp_object.storlines ("STOR file_name", f). The file did upload. So the freezes seem to occur after a successful transfer.

In this thread from last month, Sean DiZazzo shows how to add a timeout parameter to storbinary:
http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp.python.general/639258
Do the same with storlines and see whether it helps.

Thanks a million! Here's a way out by the look of it. As the devil is in the details I get an error that indicates an inconsistency in my ftplib library (2.4) (*** marks my comments):

Traceback (most recent call last):
 File "<pyshell#65>", line 1, in -toplevel-
   d2jm = upload.run (1)
 File "I:/DOK/projects/WEB/JM\upload.py", line 369, in run
   D2JM.copy_1_2 (do)
 File "I:/DOK/projects/WEB/JM\upload.py", line 342, in copy_1_2
try: self.FS2.storbinary ('STOR %s' % name, f, timeout = timeout) *** Here's the call to the overwritten method with the timeout.
 File "I:/DOK/projects/WEB/JM\upload.py", line 440, in storbinary
self.connection = self.transfercmd (command) *** command is 'STOR (target file name)'. Control passes to ftplib
 File "C:\PYTHON24\lib\ftplib.py", line 345, in transfercmd
   return self.ntransfercmd(cmd, rest)[0]
 File "C:\PYTHON24\lib\ftplib.py", line 321, in ntransfercmd
   host, port = self.makepasv()
 File "C:\PYTHON24\lib\ftplib.py", line 299, in makepasv
   host, port = parse227(self.sendcmd('PASV'))
 File "C:\PYTHON24\lib\ftplib.py", line 566, in parse227
   raise error_reply, resp
error_reply: 200 TYPE is now 8-bit binary <*** 'is now' indicates something has changed resulting in an inconsistency

Is 'resp' supposed to be an int (227) rather than a string ('227')? Probably a wrong conclusion. In version 2.5 it is still a string. Anyway, I can't start editing the library trial-and-error style. So, I do thank you for the push. Mores pushes will be greatly appreciated, but I hesitate to invite travel companions for a stroll into this wilderness.

resp is a string, but not the response that PASV expected; apparently the server is sending some unexpected responses. r52739 seems to fix that. Perhaps you should upgrade to a newer Python version.

http://svn.python.org/view?view=rev&revision=52739

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Gabriel Genellina

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