I've recently been working on a Squish test script, and trying to do something like what's described in the solution at: Total memory used by Python process?
The relevant snippets from my code are as follows:
def measureMemory():
w = wmi.WMI('.')
result = w.query("SELECT WorkingSet FROM Win32_PerfRawData_PerfProc_Process WHERE Name=\"some_program\"")
print result
for WorkingSet in result:
print WorkingSet
subset = result[0]
print subset['WorkingSet']
# return result[0]['WorkingSet']
for i in range(50):
memory = measureMemory()
if memory:
# test.passes("%d memory used during undo." % memory)
print memory
Unfortunately, I've run into an error whenever I actually try to run the thing, as can be seen below.
[<_wmi_object: \\USER-PC\root\cimv2:Win32_PerfRawData_PerfProc_Process.Name="some_program">]
instance of Win32_PerfRawData_PerfProc_Process
{
Name = "some_program";
WorkingSet = "19386368";
};
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Python26\Test scripts\Testify", line 25, in -toplevel-
memory = measureMemory()
File "C:\Python26\Test scripts\Testify", line 19, in measureMemory
print subset['WorkingSet']
File "C:\Python24\Lib\site-packages\win32com\client\dynamic.py", line 242, in __getit开发者_StackOverflow中文版em__
raise TypeError("This object does not support enumeration")
TypeError: This object does not support enumeration
I'm not sure why this should be throwing an error, as I don't think I've changed anything significant from the example I took code from. I'm using Python 2.4.4, if that's significant, and unfortunately I can't really upgrade, no matter how much it might help.
The WMI syntax seems to have changed from the examples. Try using subset.WorkingSet instead of subset['WorkingSet']
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