##// END OF EJS Templates
Manage and propagate argv correctly....
Manage and propagate argv correctly. All Application objects should take argv in their constructor, akin to how the standard signature of C programs is "main(int argc, char *argv)". This makes it possible to initialize them from code with different command-line options (otherwise, they end up directly accessing sys.argv[1:] via argparse).

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test_contexts.py
46 lines | 1.1 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# Tell nose to skip this module
__test__ = {}
#from __future__ import with_statement
# XXX This file is currently disabled to preserve 2.4 compatibility.
#def test_simple():
if 0:
# XXX - for now, we need a running cluster to be started separately. The
# daemon work is almost finished, and will make much of this unnecessary.
from IPython.kernel import client
mec = client.MultiEngineClient(('127.0.0.1',10105))
try:
mec.get_ids()
except ConnectionRefusedError:
import os, time
os.system('ipcluster -n 2 &')
time.sleep(2)
mec = client.MultiEngineClient(('127.0.0.1',10105))
mec.block = False
import itertools
c = itertools.count()
parallel = RemoteMultiEngine(mec)
mec.pushAll()
## with parallel as pr:
## # A comment
## remote() # this means the code below only runs remotely
## print 'Hello remote world'
## x = range(10)
## # Comments are OK
## # Even misindented.
## y = x+1
## with pfor('i',sequence) as pr:
## print x[i]
print pr.x + pr.y