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From: Jens V. <je...@zo...> - 2002-02-28 17:30:59
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you could check which libraries the resulting .so file is linked against and verify if those libraries are in the place they should be. the command to check the linked libraries escapes me right now, i hardly ever use it : / jens On Thursday, February 28, 2002, at 11:44 , de...@il... wrote: > On Thu, 28 Feb 2002, Jens Vagelpohl wrote: > >> will setup.py fail when you run it and there is no ldap.py? i dimly >> remember seeing that warning but the build process never failed, i think >> that message is benign and doesn't mean much. > >> just sticking in a piece of code from a *totally* different version of >> python-ldap is probably not a good solution and will lead to problems. > > You have a very good point that I cannot dispute. It was late and I don't > remember now why I thought that would help. > > I started over with a clean copy of the python-ldap from cvs, edited > setup.cfg, ran python setup.py build & python setup.py install. > > When I try to import ldap this is what I see: > > $ python > Python 2.0.1 (#1, Jun 24 2001, 18:39:34) > [GCC 2.95.3 20010315 (release)] on linux2 > Type "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. >>>> import ldap > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "<stdin>", line 1, in ? > File "/usr/lib/python2.0/site-packages/ldap/__init__.py", line 5, in ? > from _ldap import * > ImportError: cannot open shared object file: cannot load shared object > file: No such file or directory >>>> > > > -- > --- > Dennis Sacks > de...@il... > "Things are falling down on me, heavy things I could not see" |