Thanks for the lead. I have the pywin32 source code and have found the files that appear to contain the code I need inside of some "*.i" files. After a bit of Googling and paying attention to the blatantly obvious *.cpp files, I realized Hammond's code is written in C++ whereas Python uses C. I am familiar with neither language very well but if I can't find a work-around for Windows asynchronous I/O, I will be learning a bit of both of them.
Please feel free to suggest any other ideas that don't rely on my sparse knowledge of C and C++. Eric On Thu, Jun 18, 2009 at 13:32, Christian Heimes <li...@cheimes.de> wrote: > Eric Pruitt schrieb: > > Hello, > > > > I am looking for alternatives to Josiah Carlson's asynchronous I/O patch > for > > subprocess.Popen. While his patch seems to work well, it relies on > pywin32 > > which is not part of the standard Python library. If I cannot find an > > alternative, I will be using cTypes with the parts of Mark Hammond's code > > that I need, license permitting. Any suggestions are greatly appreciated. > > The subprocess module several wrappers for win32 APIs in > Modules/_subprocess.c. You could add the necessary functions. > > Christian >
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