From b4b50e7348815402634b6b559b48191dba00a751 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Sebastian Thiel Date: Wed, 12 Jan 2011 17:30:11 +0100 Subject: OSX Signal handling: removed previous hack to fix it somehow using sleep - the error was caused by PySide which, when instantiating a QApplication, changed the signal handlers to interrupt, instead of retry operating system calls, which caused git-python to fail subsequently. signal.siginterrupt can be used to fix this behaviour after an QApplication was instatiated. --- git/util.py | 10 +--------- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 9 deletions(-) (limited to 'git/util.py') diff --git a/git/util.py b/git/util.py index cbb6a66c..7cbef07f 100644 --- a/git/util.py +++ b/git/util.py @@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ from gitdb.util import ( ) __all__ = ( "stream_copy", "join_path", "to_native_path_windows", "to_native_path_linux", - "join_path_native", "sleep_on_gui_present_osx_crashfix", "Stats", "IndexFileSHA1Writer", "Iterable", "IterableList", + "join_path_native", "Stats", "IndexFileSHA1Writer", "Iterable", "IterableList", "BlockingLockFile", "LockFile", 'Actor', 'get_user_id', 'assure_directory_exists', 'RemoteProgress') @@ -100,14 +100,6 @@ def get_user_id(): # END get username from login return "%s@%s" % (username, platform.node()) -def sleep_on_gui_present_osx_crashfix(): - """This fixes a crash which appears when using pyside on OS X.""" - - #HACK: These two lines are necessary because OSX raises an error if you try to .wait() right after creating the process object. - # It is only necessary when using GUI frameworks to instantiate an application. - if sys.platform == "darwin" and "PySide" in sys.modules.keys(): - time.sleep(0.1) - #} END utilities #{ Classes -- cgit v1.2.1