client_address)
File "/usr/lib/python2.6/SocketServer.py", line 307, in process_request
self.finish_request(request, client_address)
File "/usr/lib/python2.6/SocketServer.py", line 320, in finish_request
self.RequestHandlerClass(request, client_address, self)
File "/home/
Yes, seems that since the server is single threaded and Chrome likes to
keep a connection open for further requests (when loading a lot of
small images at least), the server hangs until Chrome lets go of the
connection. I could verify this by reloading an image while the server
hangs, and that requ
Tried including "Connection: close" header in dev_appserver replies,
but at least that didn't help.
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Thanks. Decided to move small images to another server, that seems to
make it much less likely that Chrome would try to keep the connection
open.
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Each month I need a receipt to show to my accountant for each
individual item on my credit card bill. As there is no pre-payment or
aggregate billing, I end up having dozens of line-items from app
engine. For example in March more than half of my line items were App
Engine -related.
What would be
I had the same problem and just got it to work.
As the OP mentioned, I could not manage to get it to work following the
steps suggested by the appcfg.py error message
(*oauth2client.client.ApplicationDefaultCredentialsError:
The Application Default Credentials are not available. They are availa
As part of my site about Japan, I have a feature where the user can
get a large PNG for use as desktop background that shows the user's
name in Japanese. After switching my site hosting entirely to App
Engine, I removed this particular feature because I could not find any
way to render text to a PN
If I just know a key, how do I query by that in the admin console data
viewer?
My keys are people, so if I get complaints about mistakes in user
data, it would be convenient to pull up that user's data by key. I've
tried doing the following:
SELECT * FROM User WHERE __key__ = 'myspace.com:472071
Thank you. Mental model adjusted.
On Aug 10, 6:02 pm, "Nick Johnson (Google)"
wrote:
> Hi Bemmu,
>
>
>
> On Mon, Aug 10, 2009 at 3:39 PM, Bemmu wrote:
>
> > If I just know a key, how do I query by that in the admin console data
> > viewer?
>
> >
I decided to finally do something about the Timeout exceptions
littering my log.
I read somewhere on this forum that I am supposed to code around data
store accesses to try things out several times in case of timeouts. Is
this still necessary? Why won't the methods just do that internally?
This
Seems super useful, thanks a lot!
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I'm thinking out loud here in case someone has better ideas on how I
should be doing this.
I have an OpenSocial application with a Python App Engine back-end,
and would like to make a copy of it to use for development, so that
users don't experience strange problems when I make mistakes. I notice
I have an OpenSocial application with a Python App Engine back-end,
and would like to make a copy of it to use for development, so that
users don't experience strange problems when I make mistakes. I notice
that there is versioning available, but I would like a separate data
store too.
It would b
First of all, thanks for the great development environment. It has
been a pleasure to use it.
I was testing my app when no-one else was still using it, and was
getting response times of 0.5 - 3 seconds. My app calls MySpace over
REST and then fetches about 100 datastore objects on each call, so
A
I have a MySpace REST url, for which I am getting the contents. I
think that content is UTF-8 encoded, although I'm not totally sure.
response = urlfetch.fetch(url)
If I then do json.read(response), I get the following:
UnicodeDecodeError: 'ascii' codec can't decode byte 0xe2 in position
0: ordi
Got it. It was because I was using a third party JSON library instead
of
from django.utils import simplejson
On Mar 10, 2:29 am, Bemmu wrote:
> I have a MySpace REST url, for which I am getting the contents. I
> think that content is UTF-8 encoded, although I'm not totally sure.
&
important thing is that it works now. There is no doubt I will be
using App Engine instead of PHP running on my own servers from now on.
Already I can see that the better response times are leading to a lot
more visits to my MySpace app.
-Bemmu
On Mar 10, 4:36 am, Brett Slatkin wrote:
> Hi th
I am trying to use Google App Engine to host my pre-existing site, and
got it to work on "fi.bemmu.com", but not "bemmu.com". I discovered
App Engine does not support "naked domains" like bemmu.com, and in the
instructions I was told to forward bemmu.com to fi.bemmu.com (I use
"fi" instead of "www
I'm also interested in this. I have 300 million entities I no longer need,
they cost $5 / day to store, but short test with the Datastore Admin seemed
to show that they would cost $1500 to delete. Not a nice thing to discover
since I'd like to delete them precisely because I need to save money.
Crossposting my reply from stackoverflow.
I got advice on #appengine in IRC that simply getting the keys of 2000
entities at a time and spawning tasks to delete them in pieces (can pass
keys as strings to tasks) may be cheaper than using the Datastore Admin
tool. I am trying this now. I will tr
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