Two Pythons talking to each other?
Hans Nowak
ivnowa at hvision.nl
Thu Jul 8 01:17:26 EDT 1999
More information about the Python-list mailing list
Thu Jul 8 01:17:26 EDT 1999
- Previous message (by thread): Two Pythons talking to each other?
- Next message (by thread): Two Pythons talking to each other?
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
On 7 Jul 99, Charles G Waldman wrote: > There's no reason, just because the two programs are running on the same > machine, that they can't talk to each other using network protocols > (TCP/IP, sockets, etc). You can use the "loopback" address of 127.0.0.1 > to make all connections. You really don't want to develop and test using > a completely different communications scheme (e.g. pipes, files) then > re-implement everything for the networked version, and debug it all over > again. Client and server can both run on the same box. Hmm, I didn't know that. My programs usually start out as client/server (one listening, one connecting), but once the connection is established they'll talk to each other on a peer-to- peer basis. Will this be a problem with this address 127.0.0.1? Thanks, --Hans Nowak (ivnowa at hvision.nl) Homepage: http://fly.to/zephyrfalcon
- Previous message (by thread): Two Pythons talking to each other?
- Next message (by thread): Two Pythons talking to each other?
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the Python-list mailing list