I have an odd problem that I'm sure someone here can help me solve. I am using Python 2.3 on a Linux box to process text files. At one point in my automated process, I have to zip and ship the files over to a Windows server running a proprietary package to do some manipulation to the file. Problem is that I need to know when the process completes processing the file. Complicating matters is that this package names the output file using a guid type notation, so I don't have a clue as the output filename (though I do know the output directory). We have considered running a query from the Linux box every 10 minutes or so looking for any "new" files in the windows directory, then monitoring the size of the files and when they stop growing bring them back to finish our work, but that doesn't make us feel very good. Is there a way to run a daemon (or whatever it's called on windows) to detect when a new file is created in a directory and, more importantly, when it is "complete" (if that makes sense)?
Thanks for your help. --greg -- Greg Lindstrom 501 975.4859 (office) Senior Programmer 501 219-4455 (fax) NovaSys Health [EMAIL PROTECTED] Little Rock, Arkansas "We are the music makers, and we are the dreamers of dreams." W.W. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list