Chris McDonough [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I was creeped out by Zope scheduling products that started a separate
thread to call methods at scheduled intervals and I got tired of setting
up cron+wget to call Zope methods via HTTP, thus:
http://plope.com/software/ClockServer
It works by
This doesn't really do all of what something like Xron does.. it's only
really a clock and you can't use it to schedule methods to run e.g.
every Wednesday at 3pm; instead you can only run things every x
seconds. But if that's all you need, it's probably a lot simpler to
use than something like
Chris McDonough wrote:
It works by posing as a medusa server, and injects things that look like
http requests into the publisher every so often.
Isn't that effectively just creating a seperate thread though?
cheers,
Chris
--
Simplistix - Content Management, Zope Python Consulting
-
On Fri, 2005-04-01 at 02:40, Chris Withers wrote:
Chris McDonough wrote:
It works by posing as a medusa server, and injects things that look like
http requests into the publisher every so often.
Isn't that effectively just creating a seperate thread though?
No. It reuses the thread pool
Am I getting this this is what
Zron should have been?
-Jon
Chris McDonough wrote:
On Fri, 2005-04-01 at 02:40, Chris Withers wrote:
Chris McDonough wrote:
It works by posing as a medusa server, and injects things that look like
http requests into the
Hi folks,
I was creeped out by Zope scheduling products that started a separate
thread to call methods at scheduled intervals and I got tired of setting
up cron+wget to call Zope methods via HTTP, thus:
http://plope.com/software/ClockServer
It works by posing as a medusa server, and injects