Hello,
I am trying to run my app as a windows service however I run
into the following problem:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File hqmonitor.py, line 220, inmodule
File win32serviceutil.pyc, line 528, in HandleCommandLine
File win32serviceutil.pyc, line 468, in GetServiceClassString
Well, you get that specific error from something like:
list1 = ['this is a','list']
anError = list1[2]
Traceback (most recent call last):
File stdin, line 1, in module
IndexError: list index out of range
What does the code look like at hqmonitor.py line 220?
--
VC
On Mon, Jul 19, 2010 at
Hi,
Is the value of sys.path private for each new scripting engine I create ? Or is
it global value ?
According to my test results, any new paths added to sys.path from a specific
engine seems to be available to others. Is it the expected behavior ?
thanks
-mab
Marc-Andre Belzile wrote:
Is the value of sys.path private for each new scripting engine I
create ? Or is it global value ?
According to my test results, any new paths added to sys.path from a
specific engine seems to be available to others. Is it the expected
behavior ?
I'm not
Michael Mileusnich wrote:
I am trying to run my app as a windows service however I run
into the following problem:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File hqmonitor.py, line 220, inmodule
File win32serviceutil.pyc, line 528, in HandleCommandLine
File win32serviceutil.pyc, line 468,
On Jul 19, 2010, at 5:39 AM, Michael Mileusnich wrote:
Hello,
I am trying to run my app as a windows service however I run
into the following problem:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File hqmonitor.py, line 220, inmodule
File win32serviceutil.pyc, line 528, in HandleCommandLine
Michael Mileusnich wrote:
This is all local to my C drive. I opened up win32serviceutil and
printed out fname and it is the directory where my app is running out
of which is on C. It is longer than 8 characters I'm not sure how
FindFiles works.
FindFiles returns a tuple of interesting