> I've looked around, but I wasn't able to find anything about this > issue. I am writing an application that calls a separate windows > application as a process. That's not a problem, I can get it to run and > do what it needs to do. However, the normal way to stop the separate > windows application is to hit CTRL-C. That allows it to end and do > finishing processes. Is there a way to send a CTRL-C signal to a > process? I tried simply doing a TerminateProcess on the process, as > suggested to me earlier, however, this doesn't allow the normal cleanup > operations to do what they need to do. Any help you might have would be > greatly appreciated.
Sadly, I think GenerateConsoleCtrlEvent will not work for you. In short, it is nearly useless :) The description of the function says it "sends a specified signal to a console process group that shares the console associated with the calling process" and it means it literally. In your case, it sounds like you have a GUI program, so that will not have a console, so will never be able to be part of your process group. If the running program is not in the exact same console as your app, you are hosed. More info on this can be found at http://www.microsoft.com/msj/0698/win320698.aspx, where they describe a technique where they need to use another child process to make this work - but even then its not clear it would work if you app is a GUI one. hrm - re-reading your message above, it sounds like the child process *is* a console process. Either way, the above should get you in the right direction. Mark _______________________________________________ Python-win32 mailing list Python-win32@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-win32