Thank you for a reasonable discussion of the problem, although I don't really
understand what you said. This is a WSGI webapp configured for one-process and
one-thread.
I can imagine my unorthodox handling of imported modules is suspect. To
explain, my webapp first loads modules from a dict of allowed pages:
__init__
for module in self.allowedPages:
try:
self.Pages[module]=getattr(__import__(module), module)
This gives me a dict of objects like this:
self.Pages
{'Yijing': <Yijing.YijingProto object at 0x1067a4f90>, 'Strand':
<Strand.StrandProto object at 0x1067b52d0>, 'Gnomon': <Gnomon.GnomonProto
object at 0x10675a450>, 'Lexicon': <Lexicon.LexiconProto object at
0x1067c4a50>, 'Dream': <Dream.DreamProto object at 0x106800a50>, 'Grid':
<Grid.GridProto object at 0x1067ac310>}
I can then extract the first query string variable name and get the page
content:
__call__
page='Gnomon'
xml=self.Pages[page](EnvDict, qList) # sends environ & query list
I don't know how several modules are normally handled in a CGI webapp, but this
homegrown system has served me well. Threadlocking, however, may find this sort
of referencing problematic. That would be my first suspicion.
-- Gnarlie
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list