I am 100% new to Python I am bumping into this weird issue regarding compatibility when switching between Windows and Linux. I implemented a small program that implements a TCP/IP socket that communicates with a device that supports server socket over TCP/IP. My program works fine when running on Windows so I decided to test it on Linux because ultimately I want to run it on CRONTAB as a scheduled task grabbing information from a server and export to an XML. This is the weird compilation error I received when trying to compile the same code on Linux (under python 2.6, 2.7 as well as 3.1)
python2.7 weatherScript.py
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "weatherScript.py", line 1, in <module>
import socket
File "/media/SWAP/weatherData/socket.py", line 117, in <module>
except socket.error, msg:
AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'error'
The corresponding code segments for that would be
import socket
import sys
import re
from time import sleep
from xml.dom.minidom import Document
and
try:
comSocket = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
except socket.error, msg:
sys.stderr.write("[ERROR] %s\n" % msg[1])
sys.exit(1)
#connecting to weather station
try:
comSocket.connect(())
except socket.error, msg:
sys.stderr.write("[ERROR] %s\n" % msg[1])
sys.exit(2)
Even when I remove the try-catch, the problem still persists. I am not sure whether there is any compilation incompatibility between Windows or Linux or not. Any help?
Other question would be: I want to run that python program under CRONTAB, is there any thing that I should change or include so that I can run it as a "script" or such?
Thank you so much!
weatherScript.pylocated, what is yoursys.path(or at least the part of it that corresponds toweatherData/socket.py)? – Rosh Oxymoron Jun 16 '11 at 20:56