pushy – remote interpreter access

Release:0.5
Date:September 17, 2011

About Pushy

The Pushy package provides applicaton developers with a simple interface for connecting two Python interpreters, either on the local host, or over a network. Once connected, the interpreters may access objects in each other, as if they were local. Where objects are mutable (i.e. may change over time), then objects are “proxied”. This means that a local object is created that mirrors the remote object, and sends all local function/attribute access calls to the remote object. Special care has been taken to proxy builtin types properly, so that proxied objects may be passed to Python’s various builtin functions.

Pushy contains multiple transports for connecting interpreters, as well as a means for users to provide their own transport modules. Builtin transports are provided for connecting to local interpreters, and to remote interpreters via SSH, named pipes (using SMB) on Microsoft Windows, and over plain old TCP/IP sockets (using daemon).

One of the most useful features of Pushy is that it will take care of starting the target Python interpreter for you, depending on which transport is selected. Of particular note, the SSH transport will start a remote Python interpreter and initialise a Pushy connection, without having Pushy installed on the remote system. Similarly, the local transport will create a new Python interpreter on the local host.

Resources

Home Page
http://awilkins.id.au/pushy
Download
http://launchpad.net/pushy/+download
Code Repository and Issue Tracking
http://launchpad.net/pushy

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