I know I've seen this discussed before, and I came away from observing the discussion thinking "Python doesn't do that very well...", but we have some people here who really would like to do this, and I need to better understand the pros and cons now.
Is there a good way of reimporting an _independent_ set of CPython modules? I'm aware of these issues: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1254370/reimport-a-module-in-python-while-interactive http://docs.python.org/library/functions.html#reload Are there more?<http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1254370/reimport-a-module-in-python-while-interactive> Does sandboxing Python code help in some way? If yes, then what kind of sandbox? Note that this isn't sandboxing to prevent execution of malicious code, it's sandboxing to preserve reimportability, which may be an easier constraint to satisfy. The modules are friendly to each other, they aren't trying to break into each other, we just have to be careful that they don't step on each other's ability to reimport accidentally. Although I love Pypy, I don't think we'll be able to use Pypy sandboxes this time around. Also, if we need to reload 3 modules at once, can reload() reimport them atomically, as a set? Or would it need to do them one at a time? In short, we're talking about having some code that allows automatically re-importing changed modules. These modules will be pretty independent of each other in the Python world, but might interact with each other in the REST world even though they're written in CPython. Thanks!
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