cpython/README
Guido van Rossum cd16bf6404 Merged revisions 55817-55961 via svnmerge from
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/branches/p3yk

................
  r55837 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-08 16:04:42 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  PEP 3119 -- the abc module.
................
  r55838 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-08 17:38:55 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  Implement part of PEP 3119 -- One Trick Ponies.
................
  r55847 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-09 08:28:06 -0700 (Sat, 09 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  Different way to do one trick ponies, allowing registration (per PEP strawman).
................
  r55849 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-09 18:06:38 -0700 (Sat, 09 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

  Make sure that the magic looking for __hash__ (etc.) doesn't apply to
  real subclasses of Hashable.
................
  r55852 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-10 08:29:51 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  Add some more examples, e.g. generators and dict views.
................
  r55853 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-10 08:31:59 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  keys() and items() *are* containers -- just values() isn't.
................
  r55864 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-10 15:29:40 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  PEP 3127: new octal literals, binary literals.
................
  r55865 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-10 15:31:37 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  Some octal literal fixes in Tools.
................
  r55866 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-10 15:37:43 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  Tokenizer changes for PEP 3127.
................
  r55867 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-10 15:37:55 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  Some docs for PEP 3127.
................
  r55868 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-10 15:44:39 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  Missed a place in intobject.c. Is that used anymore anyway?
................
  r55871 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 18:31:49 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 182 lines

  Merged revisions 55729-55868 via svnmerge from
  svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

  ........
    r55731 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-01 00:29:12 -0700 (Fri, 01 Jun 2007) | 7 lines

    SF 1668596/1720897: distutils now copies data files
    even if package_dir is empty.

    This needs to be backported.  I'm too tired tonight.  It would be great
    if someone backports this if the buildbots are ok with it.  Otherwise,
    I will try to get to it tomorrow.
  ........
    r55732 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-01 04:33:33 -0700 (Fri, 01 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    Bug #1722484: remove docstrings again when running with -OO.
  ........
    r55735 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-01 12:20:27 -0700 (Fri, 01 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    Fix wrong issue number.
  ........
    r55739 | brett.cannon | 2007-06-01 20:02:29 -0700 (Fri, 01 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    Have configure raise an error when building on AtheOS.  Code specific to AtheOS
    will be removed in Python 2.7.
  ........
    r55746 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-02 11:33:53 -0700 (Sat, 02 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Update expected birthday of 2.6
  ........
    r55751 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-03 13:32:50 -0700 (Sun, 03 Jun 2007) | 10 lines

    Backout the original 'fix' to 1721309 which had no effect.
    Different versions of Berkeley DB handle this differently.
    The comments and bug report should have the details.  Memory is allocated
    in 4.4 (and presumably earlier), but not in 4.5.  Thus
    4.5 has the free error, but not earlier versions.

    Mostly update comments, plus make the free conditional.

    This fix was already applied to the 2.5 branch.
  ........
    r55752 | brett.cannon | 2007-06-03 16:13:41 -0700 (Sun, 03 Jun 2007) | 6 lines

    Make _strptime.TimeRE().pattern() use ``\s+`` for matching whitespace instead
    of ``\s*``.  This prevents patterns from "stealing" bits from other patterns in
    order to make a match work.

    Closes bug #1730389.  Will be backported.
  ........
    r55766 | hyeshik.chang | 2007-06-05 11:16:52 -0700 (Tue, 05 Jun 2007) | 4 lines

    Fix build on FreeBSD.  Bluetooth HCI API in FreeBSD is quite different
    from Linux's.  Just fix the build for now but the code doesn't
    support the complete capability of HCI on FreeBSD yet.
  ........
    r55770 | hyeshik.chang | 2007-06-05 11:58:51 -0700 (Tue, 05 Jun 2007) | 4 lines

    Bug #1728403: Fix a bug that CJKCodecs StreamReader hangs when it
    reads a file that ends with incomplete sequence and sizehint argument
    for .read() is specified.
  ........
    r55775 | hyeshik.chang | 2007-06-05 12:28:15 -0700 (Tue, 05 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    Fix for Windows: close a temporary file before trying to delete it.
  ........
    r55783 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-05 14:24:47 -0700 (Tue, 05 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    Patch by Tim Delany (missing DECREF). SF #1731330.
  ........
    r55785 | collin.winter | 2007-06-05 17:17:35 -0700 (Tue, 05 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    Patch #1731049: make threading.py use a proper "raise" when checking internal state, rather than assert statements (which get stripped out by -O).
  ........
    r55786 | facundo.batista | 2007-06-06 08:13:37 -0700 (Wed, 06 Jun 2007) | 4 lines


    FTP.ntransfercmd method now uses create_connection when passive,
    using the timeout received in connection time.
  ........
    r55792 | facundo.batista | 2007-06-06 10:15:23 -0700 (Wed, 06 Jun 2007) | 7 lines


    Added an optional timeout parameter to function urllib2.urlopen,
    with tests in test_urllib2net.py (must have network resource
    enabled to execute them). Also modified test_urllib2.py because
    testing mock classes must take it into acount. Docs are also
    updated.
  ........
    r55793 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-06 13:19:19 -0700 (Wed, 06 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Build _ctypes and _ctypes_test in the ReleaseAMD64 configuration.
  ........
    r55802 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-07 06:23:24 -0700 (Thu, 07 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    Disallow function calls like foo(None=1).
    Backport from py3k rev. 55708 by Guido.
  ........
    r55804 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-07 06:30:24 -0700 (Thu, 07 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    Make reindent.py executable.
  ........
    r55805 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-07 06:34:10 -0700 (Thu, 07 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    Patch #1667860: Fix UnboundLocalError in urllib2.
  ........
    r55821 | kristjan.jonsson | 2007-06-07 16:53:49 -0700 (Thu, 07 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Fixing changes to getbuildinfo.c that broke linux builds
  ........
    r55828 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-08 09:10:27 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Make this test work with older Python releases where struct has no 't' format character.
  ........
    r55829 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-06-08 10:29:20 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    Bug #1733488: Fix compilation of bufferobject.c on AIX.
    Will backport to 2.5.
  ........
    r55831 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-08 11:20:09 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    [ 1715718 ] x64 clean compile patch for _ctypes, by Kristj?n Valur
    with small modifications.
  ........
    r55832 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-08 12:01:06 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Fix gcc warnings intruduced by passing Py_ssize_t to PyErr_Format calls.
  ........
    r55833 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-08 12:08:31 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    Fix wrong documentation, and correct the punktuation.
    Closes [1700455].
  ........
    r55834 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-08 12:14:23 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Fix warnings by using proper function prototype.
  ........
    r55839 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-08 20:36:34 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 7 lines

    Prevent expandtabs() on string and unicode objects from causing a segfault when
    a large width is passed on 32-bit platforms.  Found by Google.

    It would be good for people to review this especially carefully and verify
    I don't have an off by one error and there is no other way to cause overflow.
  ........
    r55841 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-08 21:48:22 -0700 (Fri, 08 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Use macro version of GET_SIZE to avoid Coverity warning (#150) about a possible error.
  ........
    r55842 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-06-09 00:42:52 -0700 (Sat, 09 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    Patch #1733960: Allow T_LONGLONG to accept ints.
    Will backport to 2.5.
  ........
    r55843 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-06-09 00:58:05 -0700 (Sat, 09 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    Fix Windows build.
  ........
    r55845 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-06-09 03:10:26 -0700 (Sat, 09 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    Provide LLONG_MAX for S390.
  ........
    r55854 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-10 08:59:17 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 4 lines


    First version of build scripts for Windows/AMD64 (no external
    components are built yet, and 'kill_python' is disabled).
  ........
    r55855 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-10 10:55:51 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    For now, disable the _bsddb, _sqlite3, _ssl, _testcapi, _tkinter
    modules in the ReleaseAMD64 configuration because they do not compile.
  ........
    r55856 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-10 11:27:54 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Need to set the environment variables, otherwise devenv.com is not found.
  ........
    r55860 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-10 14:01:17 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Revert commit 55855.
  ........
................
  r55880 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 22:07:36 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 5 lines

  Fix the refleak counter on test_collections.  The ABC metaclass creates
  a registry which must be cleared on each run.  Otherwise, there *seem*
  to be refleaks when there really aren't any.  (The class is held within
  the registry even though it's no longer needed.)
................
  r55884 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 22:46:33 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line

  These tests have been removed, so they are no longer needed here
................
  r55886 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-11 00:26:37 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

  Optimize access to True and False in the compiler (if True)
  and the peepholer (LOAD_NAME True).
................
  r55905 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-11 10:02:26 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 5 lines

  Remove __oct__ and __hex__ and use __index__ for converting
  non-ints before formatting in a base.

  Add a bin() builtin.
................
  r55906 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-11 10:04:44 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  int(x, 0) does not "guess".
................
  r55907 | georg.brandl | 2007-06-11 10:05:47 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  Add a comment to explain that nb_oct and nb_hex are nonfunctional.
................
  r55908 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 10:49:18 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  Get rid of unused imports and comment.
................
  r55910 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 13:05:17 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  _Abstract.__new__ now requires either no arguments or __init__ overridden.
................
  r55911 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 13:07:49 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 7 lines

  Move the collections ABCs to a separate file, _abcoll.py, in order to avoid
  needing to import _collections.so during the bootstrap (this will become
  apparent in the next submit of os.py).

  Add (plain and mutable) ABCs for Set, Mapping, Sequence.
................
  r55912 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 13:09:31 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  Rewrite the _Environ class to use the new collections ABCs.
................
  r55913 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 13:59:45 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 72 lines

  Merged revisions 55869-55912 via svnmerge from
  svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

  ........
    r55869 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 17:42:11 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Add Atul Varma for patch # 1667860
  ........
    r55870 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 18:22:03 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Ignore valgrind problems on Ubuntu from ld
  ........
    r55872 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 18:48:46 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    Ignore config.status.lineno which seems new (new autoconf?)
  ........
    r55873 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 19:14:39 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Prevent these tests from running on Win64 since they don\'t apply there either
  ........
    r55874 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 19:16:10 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 5 lines

    Fix a bug when there was a newline in the string expandtabs was called on.
    This also catches another condition that can overflow.

    Will backport.
  ........
    r55879 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 21:52:37 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Prevent hang if the port cannot be opened.
  ........
    r55881 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 22:28:45 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 4 lines

    Add all of the distuils modules that don't seem to have explicit tests. :-(
    Move an import in mworkscompiler so that this module can be imported on
    any platform.  Hopefully this works on all platforms.
  ........
    r55882 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 22:35:10 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 4 lines

    SF #1734732, lower case the module names per PEP 8.

    Will backport.
  ........
    r55885 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-10 23:16:48 -0700 (Sun, 10 Jun 2007) | 4 lines

    Not sure why this only fails sometimes on Unix machines. Better
    to disable it and only import msvccompiler on Windows since that's
    the only place it can work anyways.
  ........
    r55887 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-11 00:29:43 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 4 lines

    Bug #1734723: Fix repr.Repr() so it doesn't ignore the maxtuple attribute.

    Will backport
  ........
    r55889 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-11 00:36:24 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Reflow long line
  ........
    r55896 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-11 08:58:33 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    Use "O&" in calls to PyArg_Parse when we need a 'void*' instead of "k"
    or "K" codes.
  ........
    r55901 | facundo.batista | 2007-06-11 09:27:08 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 5 lines


    Added versionchanged flag to all the methods which received
    a new optional timeout parameter, and a versionadded flag to
    the socket.create_connection function.
  ........
................
  r55914 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 14:19:50 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

  New super() implementation, for PEP 3135 (though the PEP is not yet updated
  to this design, and small tweaks may still be made later).
................
  r55923 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 21:15:24 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 4 lines

  I'm guessing this module broke when Neal ripped out the types module --
  it used 'list' both as a local variable and as the built-in list type.
  Renamed the local variable since that was easier.
................
  r55924 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-11 21:20:05 -0700 (Mon, 11 Jun 2007) | 5 lines

  Change all occurrences of super(<thisclass>, <firstarg>) to super().
  Seems to have worked, all the tests still pass.
  Exception: test_descr and test_descrtut, which have tons of these
  and are there to test the various usages.
................
  r55939 | collin.winter | 2007-06-12 13:57:33 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 1 line

  Patch #1735485: remove StandardError from the exception hierarchy.
................
  r55954 | neal.norwitz | 2007-06-12 21:56:32 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 51 lines

  Merged revisions 55913-55950 via svnmerge from
  svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

  ........
    r55926 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2007-06-12 02:09:58 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    Apply patch #1734945 to support TurboLinux as distribution.
  ........
    r55927 | marc-andre.lemburg | 2007-06-12 02:26:49 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    Add patch #1726668: Windows Vista support.
  ........
    r55929 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 08:36:22 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 1 line

    Checkout, but do not yet try to build, exernal sources.
  ........
    r55930 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 09:08:27 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 6 lines

    Add bufferoverflowU.lib to the libraries needed by _ssl (is this the
    right thing to do?).

    Set the /XP64 /RETAIL build enviroment in the makefile when building
    ReleaseAMD64.
  ........
    r55931 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 09:23:19 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 5 lines

    Revert this change, since it breaks the win32 build:

    Add bufferoverflowU.lib to the libraries needed by _ssl (is this the
    right thing to do?).
  ........
    r55934 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 10:28:31 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    Specify the bufferoverflowU.lib to the makefile on the command line
    (for ReleaseAMD64 builds).
  ........
    r55937 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 12:02:59 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    Add bufferoverflowU.lib to PCBuild\_bsddb.vcproj.
    Build sqlite3.dll and bsddb.
  ........
    r55938 | thomas.heller | 2007-06-12 12:56:12 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

    Don't rebuild Berkeley DB if not needed (this was committed by accident).
  ........
    r55948 | martin.v.loewis | 2007-06-12 20:42:19 -0700 (Tue, 12 Jun 2007) | 3 lines

    Provide PY_LLONG_MAX on all systems having long long.
    Will backport to 2.5.
  ........
................
  r55959 | guido.van.rossum | 2007-06-13 09:22:41 -0700 (Wed, 13 Jun 2007) | 2 lines

  Fix a compilation warning.
................
2007-06-13 18:07:49 +00:00

1281 lines
53 KiB
Plaintext

This is Python 3000 -- unversioned (branched off 2.5 in various beta stages)
=================================================================
Copyright (c) 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007
Python Software Foundation.
All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 2000 BeOpen.com.
All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 1995-2001 Corporation for National Research Initiatives.
All rights reserved.
Copyright (c) 1991-1995 Stichting Mathematisch Centrum.
All rights reserved.
License information
-------------------
See the file "LICENSE" for information on the history of this
software, terms & conditions for usage, and a DISCLAIMER OF ALL
WARRANTIES.
This Python distribution contains no GNU General Public Licensed
(GPLed) code so it may be used in proprietary projects just like prior
Python distributions. There are interfaces to some GNU code but these
are entirely optional.
All trademarks referenced herein are property of their respective
holders.
Python 3000 disclaimer
----------------------
This README hasn't been updated for Python 3000 yet. If you see
anything that should clearly be deleted, let me know (guido@python.org)
or submit a patch to the Python 3000 category in SourceForge.
What's new in this release?
---------------------------
See the file "Misc/NEWS".
If you don't read instructions
------------------------------
Congratulations on getting this far. :-)
To start building right away (on UNIX): type "./configure" in the
current directory and when it finishes, type "make". This creates an
executable "./python"; to install in /usr/local, first do "su root"
and then "make install".
The section `Build instructions' below is still recommended reading.
What is Python anyway?
----------------------
Python is an interpreted, interactive object-oriented programming
language suitable (amongst other uses) for distributed application
development, scripting, numeric computing and system testing. Python
is often compared to Tcl, Perl, Java, JavaScript, Visual Basic or
Scheme. To find out more about what Python can do for you, point your
browser to http://www.python.org/.
How do I learn Python?
----------------------
The official tutorial is still a good place to start; see
http://docs.python.org/ for online and downloadable versions, as well
as a list of other introductions, and reference documentation.
There's a quickly growing set of books on Python. See
http://wiki.python.org/moin/PythonBooks for a list.
Documentation
-------------
All documentation is provided online in a variety of formats. In
order of importance for new users: Tutorial, Library Reference,
Language Reference, Extending & Embedding, and the Python/C API. The
Library Reference is especially of immense value since much of
Python's power is described there, including the built-in data types
and functions!
All documentation is also available online at the Python web site
(http://docs.python.org/, see below). It is available online for
occasional reference, or can be downloaded in many formats for faster
access. The documentation is available in HTML, PostScript, PDF, and
LaTeX formats; the LaTeX version is primarily for documentation
authors, translators, and people with special formatting requirements.
Unfortunately, new-style classes (new in Python 2.2) have not yet been
integrated into Python's standard documentation. A collection of
pointers to what has been written is at:
http://www.python.org/doc/newstyle.html
Web sites
---------
New Python releases and related technologies are published at
http://www.python.org/. Come visit us!
There's also a Python community web site at
http://starship.python.net/.
Newsgroups and Mailing Lists
----------------------------
Read comp.lang.python, a high-volume discussion newsgroup about
Python, or comp.lang.python.announce, a low-volume moderated newsgroup
for Python-related announcements. These are also accessible as
mailing lists: see http://www.python.org/community/lists.html for an
overview of these and many other Python-related mailing lists.
Archives are accessible via the Google Groups Usenet archive; see
http://groups.google.com/. The mailing lists are also archived, see
http://www.python.org/community/lists.html for details.
Bug reports
-----------
To report or search for bugs, please use the Python Bug
Tracker at http://sourceforge.net/bugs/?group_id=5470.
Patches and contributions
-------------------------
To submit a patch or other contribution, please use the Python Patch
Manager at http://sourceforge.net/patch/?group_id=5470. Guidelines
for patch submission may be found at http://www.python.org/patches/.
If you have a proposal to change Python, it's best to submit a Python
Enhancement Proposal (PEP) first. All current PEPs, as well as
guidelines for submitting a new PEP, are listed at
http://www.python.org/peps/.
Questions
---------
For help, if you can't find it in the manuals or on the web site, it's
best to post to the comp.lang.python or the Python mailing list (see
above). If you specifically don't want to involve the newsgroup or
mailing list, send questions to help@python.org (a group of volunteers
who answer questions as they can). The newsgroup is the most
efficient way to ask public questions.
Build instructions
==================
Before you can build Python, you must first configure it.
Fortunately, the configuration and build process has been automated
for Unix and Linux installations, so all you usually have to do is
type a few commands and sit back. There are some platforms where
things are not quite as smooth; see the platform specific notes below.
If you want to build for multiple platforms sharing the same source
tree, see the section on VPATH below.
Start by running the script "./configure", which determines your
system configuration and creates the Makefile. (It takes a minute or
two -- please be patient!) You may want to pass options to the
configure script -- see the section below on configuration options and
variables. When it's done, you are ready to run make.
To build Python, you normally type "make" in the toplevel directory.
If you have changed the configuration, the Makefile may have to be
rebuilt. In this case you may have to run make again to correctly
build your desired target. The interpreter executable is built in the
top level directory.
Once you have built a Python interpreter, see the subsections below on
testing and installation. If you run into trouble, see the next
section.
Previous versions of Python used a manual configuration process that
involved editing the file Modules/Setup. While this file still exists
and manual configuration is still supported, it is rarely needed any
more: almost all modules are automatically built as appropriate under
guidance of the setup.py script, which is run by Make after the
interpreter has been built.
Troubleshooting
---------------
See also the platform specific notes in the next section.
If you run into other trouble, see the FAQ
(http://www.python.org/doc/faq) for hints on what can go wrong, and
how to fix it.
If you rerun the configure script with different options, remove all
object files by running "make clean" before rebuilding. Believe it or
not, "make clean" sometimes helps to clean up other inexplicable
problems as well. Try it before sending in a bug report!
If the configure script fails or doesn't seem to find things that
should be there, inspect the config.log file.
If you get a warning for every file about the -Olimit option being no
longer supported, you can ignore it. There's no foolproof way to know
whether this option is needed; all we can do is test whether it is
accepted without error. On some systems, e.g. older SGI compilers, it
is essential for performance (specifically when compiling ceval.c,
which has more basic blocks than the default limit of 1000). If the
warning bothers you, edit the Makefile to remove "-Olimit 1500" from
the OPT variable.
If you get failures in test_long, or sys.maxint gets set to -1, you
are probably experiencing compiler bugs, usually related to
optimization. This is a common problem with some versions of gcc, and
some vendor-supplied compilers, which can sometimes be worked around
by turning off optimization. Consider switching to stable versions
(gcc 2.95.2, gcc 3.x, or contact your vendor.)
From Python 2.0 onward, all Python C code is ANSI C. Compiling using
old K&R-C-only compilers is no longer possible. ANSI C compilers are
available for all modern systems, either in the form of updated
compilers from the vendor, or one of the free compilers (gcc).
If "make install" fails mysteriously during the "compiling the library"
step, make sure that you don't have any of the PYTHONPATH or PYTHONHOME
environment variables set, as they may interfere with the newly built
executable which is compiling the library.
Unsupported systems
-------------------
A number of features are not supported in Python 2.5 anymore. Some
support code is still present, but will be removed in Python 2.6.
If you still need to use current Python versions on these systems,
please send a message to python-dev@python.org indicating that you
volunteer to support this system. For a more detailed discussion
regarding no-longer-supported and resupporting platforms, as well
as a list of platforms that became or will be unsupported, see PEP 11.
More specifically, the following systems are not supported any
longer:
- SunOS 4
- DYNIX
- dgux
- Minix
- NeXT
- Irix 4 and --with-sgi-dl
- Linux 1
- Systems defining __d6_pthread_create (configure.in)
- Systems defining PY_PTHREAD_D4, PY_PTHREAD_D6,
or PY_PTHREAD_D7 in thread_pthread.h
- Systems using --with-dl-dld
- Systems using --without-universal-newlines
- MacOS 9
The following systems are still supported in Python 2.5, but
support will be dropped in 2.6:
- Systems using --with-wctype-functions
- Win9x, WinME
Warning on install in Windows 98 and Windows Me
-----------------------------------------------
Following Microsoft's closing of Extended Support for
Windows 98/ME (July 11, 2006), Python 2.6 will stop
supporting these platforms. Python development and
maintainability becomes easier (and more reliable) when
platform specific code targeting OSes with few users
and no dedicated expert developers is taken out. The
vendor also warns that the OS versions listed above
"can expose customers to security risks" and recommends
upgrade.
Platform specific notes
-----------------------
(Some of these may no longer apply. If you find you can build Python
on these platforms without the special directions mentioned here,
submit a documentation bug report to SourceForge (see Bug Reports
above) so we can remove them!)
XXX I think this next bit is out of date:
64-bit platforms: The audioop module doesn't work.
The setup.py script disables them on 64-bit installations.
Don't try to enable them in the Modules/Setup file. They
contain code that is quite wordsize sensitive. (If you have a
fix, let us know!)
Solaris: When using Sun's C compiler with threads, at least on Solaris
2.5.1, you need to add the "-mt" compiler option (the simplest
way is probably to specify the compiler with this option as
the "CC" environment variable when running the configure
script).
When using GCC on Solaris, beware of binutils 2.13 or GCC
versions built using it. This mistakenly enables the
-zcombreloc option which creates broken shared libraries on
Solaris. binutils 2.12 works, and the binutils maintainers
are aware of the problem. Binutils 2.13.1 only partially
fixed things. It appears that 2.13.2 solves the problem
completely. This problem is known to occur with Solaris 2.7
and 2.8, but may also affect earlier and later versions of the
OS.
When the dynamic loader complains about errors finding shared
libraries, such as
ld.so.1: ./python: fatal: libstdc++.so.5: open failed:
No such file or directory
you need to first make sure that the library is available on
your system. Then, you need to instruct the dynamic loader how
to find it. You can choose any of the following strategies:
1. When compiling Python, set LD_RUN_PATH to the directories
containing missing libraries.
2. When running Python, set LD_LIBRARY_PATH to these directories.
3. Use crle(8) to extend the search path of the loader.
4. Modify the installed GCC specs file, adding -R options into the
*link: section.
The complex object fails to compile on Solaris 10 with gcc 3.4 (at
least up to 3.4.3). To work around it, define Py_HUGE_VAL as
HUGE_VAL(), e.g.:
make CPPFLAGS='-D"Py_HUGE_VAL=HUGE_VAL()" -I. -I$(srcdir)/Include'
./python setup.py CPPFLAGS='-D"Py_HUGE_VAL=HUGE_VAL()"'
Linux: A problem with threads and fork() was tracked down to a bug in
the pthreads code in glibc version 2.0.5; glibc version 2.0.7
solves the problem. This causes the popen2 test to fail;
problem and solution reported by Pablo Bleyer.
Red Hat Linux: Red Hat 9 built Python2.2 in UCS-4 mode and hacked
Tcl to support it. To compile Python2.3 with Tkinter, you will
need to pass --enable-unicode=ucs4 flag to ./configure.
There's an executable /usr/bin/python which is Python
1.5.2 on most older Red Hat installations; several key Red Hat tools
require this version. Python 2.1.x may be installed as
/usr/bin/python2. The Makefile installs Python as
/usr/local/bin/python, which may or may not take precedence
over /usr/bin/python, depending on how you have set up $PATH.
FreeBSD 3.x and probably platforms with NCurses that use libmytinfo or
similar: When using cursesmodule, the linking is not done in
the correct order with the defaults. Remove "-ltermcap" from
the readline entry in Setup, and use as curses entry: "curses
cursesmodule.c -lmytinfo -lncurses -ltermcap" - "mytinfo" (so
called on FreeBSD) should be the name of the auxiliary library
required on your platform. Normally, it would be linked
automatically, but not necessarily in the correct order.
BSDI: BSDI versions before 4.1 have known problems with threads,
which can cause strange errors in a number of modules (for
instance, the 'test_signal' test script will hang forever.)
Turning off threads (with --with-threads=no) or upgrading to
BSDI 4.1 solves this problem.
DEC Unix: Run configure with --with-dec-threads, or with
--with-threads=no if no threads are desired (threads are on by
default). When using GCC, it is possible to get an internal
compiler error if optimization is used. This was reported for
GCC 2.7.2.3 on selectmodule.c. Manually compile the affected
file without optimization to solve the problem.
DEC Ultrix: compile with GCC to avoid bugs in the native compiler,
and pass SHELL=/bin/sh5 to Make when installing.
AIX: A complete overhaul of the shared library support is now in
place. See Misc/AIX-NOTES for some notes on how it's done.
(The optimizer bug reported at this place in previous releases
has been worked around by a minimal code change.) If you get
errors about pthread_* functions, during compile or during
testing, try setting CC to a thread-safe (reentrant) compiler,
like "cc_r". For full C++ module support, set CC="xlC_r" (or
CC="xlC" without thread support).
AIX 5.3: To build a 64-bit version with IBM's compiler, I used the
following:
export PATH=/usr/bin:/usr/vacpp/bin
./configure --with-gcc="xlc_r -q64" --with-cxx="xlC_r -q64" \
--disable-ipv6 AR="ar -X64"
make
HP-UX: When using threading, you may have to add -D_REENTRANT to the
OPT variable in the top-level Makefile; reported by Pat Knight,
this seems to make a difference (at least for HP-UX 10.20)
even though pyconfig.h defines it. This seems unnecessary when
using HP/UX 11 and later - threading seems to work "out of the
box".
HP-UX ia64: When building on the ia64 (Itanium) platform using HP's
compiler, some experience has shown that the compiler's
optimiser produces a completely broken version of python
(see http://www.python.org/sf/814976). To work around this,
edit the Makefile and remove -O from the OPT line.
To build a 64-bit executable on an Itanium 2 system using HP's
compiler, use these environment variables:
CC=cc
CXX=aCC
BASECFLAGS="+DD64"
LDFLAGS="+DD64 -lxnet"
and call configure as:
./configure --without-gcc
then *unset* the environment variables again before running
make. (At least one of these flags causes the build to fail
if it remains set.) You still have to edit the Makefile and
remove -O from the OPT line.
HP PA-RISC 2.0: A recent bug report (http://www.python.org/sf/546117)
suggests that the C compiler in this 64-bit system has bugs
in the optimizer that break Python. Compiling without
optimization solves the problems.
SCO: The following apply to SCO 3 only; Python builds out of the box
on SCO 5 (or so we've heard).
1) Everything works much better if you add -U__STDC__ to the
defs. This is because all the SCO header files are broken.
Anything that isn't mentioned in the C standard is
conditionally excluded when __STDC__ is defined.
2) Due to the U.S. export restrictions, SCO broke the crypt
stuff out into a separate library, libcrypt_i.a so the LIBS
needed be set to:
LIBS=' -lsocket -lcrypt_i'
UnixWare: There are known bugs in the math library of the system, as well as
problems in the handling of threads (calling fork in one
thread may interrupt system calls in others). Therefore, test_math and
tests involving threads will fail until those problems are fixed.
QNX: Chris Herborth (chrish@qnx.com) writes:
configure works best if you use GNU bash; a port is available on
ftp.qnx.com in /usr/free. I used the following process to build,
test and install Python 1.5.x under QNX:
1) CONFIG_SHELL=/usr/local/bin/bash CC=cc RANLIB=: \
./configure --verbose --without-gcc --with-libm=""
2) edit Modules/Setup to activate everything that makes sense for
your system... tested here at QNX with the following modules:
array, audioop, binascii, cPickle, cStringIO, cmath,
crypt, curses, errno, fcntl, gdbm, grp,
_locale, math, new, operator, parser,
posix, pwd, readline, regex,
select, signal, socket, struct,
syslog, termios, time, zlib, audioop
3) make SHELL=/usr/local/bin/bash
or, if you feel the need for speed:
make SHELL=/usr/local/bin/bash OPT="-5 -Oil+nrt"
4) make SHELL=/usr/local/bin/bash test
Using GNU readline 2.2 seems to behave strangely, but I
think that's a problem with my readline 2.2 port. :-\
5) make SHELL=/usr/local/bin/bash install
If you get SIGSEGVs while running Python (I haven't yet, but
I've only run small programs and the test cases), you're
probably running out of stack; the default 32k could be a
little tight. To increase the stack size, edit the Makefile
to read: LDFLAGS = -N 48k
BeOS: See Misc/BeOS-NOTES for notes about compiling/installing
Python on BeOS R3 or later. Note that only the PowerPC
platform is supported for R3; both PowerPC and x86 are
supported for R4.
Cray T3E: Mark Hadfield (m.hadfield@niwa.co.nz) writes:
Python can be built satisfactorily on a Cray T3E but based on
my experience with the NIWA T3E (2002-05-22, version 2.2.1)
there are a few bugs and gotchas. For more information see a
thread on comp.lang.python in May 2002 entitled "Building
Python on Cray T3E".
1) Use Cray's cc and not gcc. The latter was reported not to
work by Konrad Hinsen. It may work now, but it may not.
2) To set sys.platform to something sensible, pass the
following environment variable to the configure script:
MACHDEP=unicosmk
2) Run configure with option "--enable-unicode=ucs4".
3) The Cray T3E does not support dynamic linking, so extension
modules have to be built by adding (or uncommenting) lines
in Modules/Setup. The minimum set of modules is
posix, new, _sre, unicodedata
On NIWA's vanilla T3E system the following have also been
included successfully:
_codecs, _locale, _socket, _symtable, _testcapi, _weakref
array, binascii, cmath, cPickle, crypt, cStringIO, dbm
errno, fcntl, grp, math, operator, parser, pwd
rotor, select, struct, syslog, termios, time
4) Once the python executable and library have been built, make
will execute setup.py, which will attempt to build remaining
extensions and link them dynamically. Each of these attempts
will fail but should not halt the make process. This is
normal.
5) Running "make test" uses a lot of resources and causes
problems on our system. You might want to try running tests
singly or in small groups.
SGI: SGI's standard "make" utility (/bin/make or /usr/bin/make)
does not check whether a command actually changed the file it
is supposed to build. This means that whenever you say "make"
it will redo the link step. The remedy is to use SGI's much
smarter "smake" utility (/usr/sbin/smake), or GNU make. If
you set the first line of the Makefile to #!/usr/sbin/smake
smake will be invoked by make (likewise for GNU make).
WARNING: There are bugs in the optimizer of some versions of
SGI's compilers that can cause bus errors or other strange
behavior, especially on numerical operations. To avoid this,
try building with "make OPT=".
OS/2: If you are running Warp3 or Warp4 and have IBM's VisualAge C/C++
compiler installed, just change into the pc\os2vacpp directory
and type NMAKE. Threading and sockets are supported by default
in the resulting binaries of PYTHON15.DLL and PYTHON.EXE.
Monterey (64-bit AIX): The current Monterey C compiler (Visual Age)
uses the OBJECT_MODE={32|64} environment variable to set the
compilation mode to either 32-bit or 64-bit (32-bit mode is
the default). Presumably you want 64-bit compilation mode for
this 64-bit OS. As a result you must first set OBJECT_MODE=64
in your environment before configuring (./configure) or
building (make) Python on Monterey.
Reliant UNIX: The thread support does not compile on Reliant UNIX, and
there is a (minor) problem in the configure script for that
platform as well. This should be resolved in time for a
future release.
MacOSX: The tests will crash on both 10.1 and 10.2 with SEGV in
test_re and test_sre due to the small default stack size. If
you set the stack size to 2048 before doing a "make test" the
failure can be avoided. If you're using the tcsh or csh shells,
use "limit stacksize 2048" and for the bash shell (the default
as of OSX 10.3), use "ulimit -s 2048".
On naked Darwin you may want to add the configure option
"--disable-toolbox-glue" to disable the glue code for the Carbon
interface modules. The modules themselves are currently only built
if you add the --enable-framework option, see below.
On a clean OSX /usr/local does not exist. Do a
"sudo mkdir -m 775 /usr/local"
before you do a make install. It is probably not a good idea to
do "sudo make install" which installs everything as superuser,
as this may later cause problems when installing distutils-based
additions.
Some people have reported problems building Python after using "fink"
to install additional unix software. Disabling fink (remove all
references to /sw from your .profile or .login) should solve this.
You may want to try the configure option "--enable-framework"
which installs Python as a framework. The location can be set
as argument to the --enable-framework option (default
/Library/Frameworks). A framework install is probably needed if you
want to use any Aqua-based GUI toolkit (whether Tkinter, wxPython,
Carbon, Cocoa or anything else).
You may also want to try the configure option "--enable-universalsdk"
which builds Python as a universal binary with support for the
i386 and PPC architetures. This requires Xcode 2.1 or later to build.
See Mac/OSX/README for more information on framework and
universal builds.
Cygwin: With recent (relative to the time of writing, 2001-12-19)
Cygwin installations, there are problems with the interaction
of dynamic linking and fork(). This manifests itself in build
failures during the execution of setup.py.
There are two workarounds that both enable Python (albeit
without threading support) to build and pass all tests on
NT/2000 (and most likely XP as well, though reports of testing
on XP would be appreciated).
The workarounds:
(a) the band-aid fix is to link the _socket module statically
rather than dynamically (which is the default).
To do this, run "./configure --with-threads=no" including any
other options you need (--prefix, etc.). Then in Modules/Setup
uncomment the lines:
#SSL=/usr/local/ssl
#_socket socketmodule.c \
# -DUSE_SSL -I$(SSL)/include -I$(SSL)/include/openssl \
# -L$(SSL)/lib -lssl -lcrypto
and remove "local/" from the SSL variable. Finally, just run
"make"!
(b) The "proper" fix is to rebase the Cygwin DLLs to prevent
base address conflicts. Details on how to do this can be
found in the following mail:
http://sources.redhat.com/ml/cygwin/2001-12/msg00894.html
It is hoped that a version of this solution will be
incorporated into the Cygwin distribution fairly soon.
Two additional problems:
(1) Threading support should still be disabled due to a known
bug in Cygwin pthreads that causes test_threadedtempfile to
hang.
(2) The _curses module does not build. This is a known
Cygwin ncurses problem that should be resolved the next time
that this package is released.
On older versions of Cygwin, test_poll may hang and test_strftime
may fail.
The situation on 9X/Me is not accurately known at present.
Some time ago, there were reports that the following
regression tests failed:
test_pwd
test_select (hang)
test_socket
Due to the test_select hang on 9X/Me, one should run the
regression test using the following:
make TESTOPTS='-l -x test_select' test
News regarding these platforms with more recent Cygwin
versions would be appreciated!
AtheOS: Official support has been stopped as of Python 2.6. All code will be
removed in Python 2.7 unless a maintainer steps forward for this
platform.
From Octavian Cerna <tavy at ylabs.com>:
Before building:
Make sure you have shared versions of the libraries you
want to use with Python. You will have to compile them
yourself, or download precompiled packages.
Recommended libraries:
ncurses-4.2
readline-4.2a
zlib-1.1.4
Build:
$ ./configure --prefix=/usr/python
$ make
Python is always built as a shared library, otherwise
dynamic loading would not work.
Testing:
$ make test
Install:
# make install
# pkgmanager -a /usr/python
AtheOS issues:
- large file support: due to a stdio bug in glibc/libio,
access to large files may not work correctly. fseeko()
tries to seek to a negative offset. ftello() returns a
negative offset, it looks like a 32->64bit
sign-extension issue. The lowlevel functions (open,
lseek, etc) are OK.
- sockets: AF_UNIX is defined in the C library and in
Python, but not implemented in the system.
- select: poll is available in the C library, but does not
work (It does not return POLLNVAL for bad fds and
hangs).
- posix: statvfs and fstatvfs always return ENOSYS.
- disabled modules:
- mmap: not yet implemented in AtheOS
- nis: broken (on an unconfigured system
yp_get_default_domain() returns junk instead of
error)
- dl: dynamic loading doesn't work via dlopen()
- resource: getrimit and setrlimit are not yet
implemented
- if you are getting segmentation faults, you probably are
low on memory. AtheOS doesn't handle very well an
out-of-memory condition and simply SEGVs the process.
Tested on:
AtheOS-0.3.7
gcc-2.95
binutils-2.10
make-3.78
Configuring the bsddb and dbm modules
-------------------------------------
Beginning with Python version 2.3, the PyBsddb package
<http://pybsddb.sf.net/> was adopted into Python as the bsddb package,
exposing a set of package-level functions which provide
backwards-compatible behavior. Only versions 3.3 through 4.4 of
Sleepycat's libraries provide the necessary API, so older versions
aren't supported through this interface. The
dbm module will still be built against the Sleepycat libraries if
other preferred alternatives (ndbm, gdbm) are not found.
Building the sqlite3 module
---------------------------
To build the sqlite3 module, you'll need the sqlite3 or libsqlite3
packages installed, including the header files. Many modern operating
systems distribute the headers in a separate package to the library -
often it will be the same name as the main package, but with a -dev or
-devel suffix.
The version of pysqlite2 that's including in Python needs sqlite3 3.0.8
or later. setup.py attempts to check that it can find a correct version.
Configuring threads
-------------------
As of Python 2.0, threads are enabled by default. If you wish to
compile without threads, or if your thread support is broken, pass the
--with-threads=no switch to configure. Unfortunately, on some
platforms, additional compiler and/or linker options are required for
threads to work properly. Below is a table of those options,
collected by Bill Janssen. We would love to automate this process
more, but the information below is not enough to write a patch for the
configure.in file, so manual intervention is required. If you patch
the configure.in file and are confident that the patch works, please
send in the patch. (Don't bother patching the configure script itself
-- it is regenerated each time the configure.in file changes.)
Compiler switches for threads
.............................
The definition of _REENTRANT should be configured automatically, if
that does not work on your system, or if _REENTRANT is defined
incorrectly, please report that as a bug.
OS/Compiler/threads Switches for use with threads
(POSIX is draft 10, DCE is draft 4) compile & link
SunOS 5.{1-5}/{gcc,SunPro cc}/solaris -mt
SunOS 5.5/{gcc,SunPro cc}/POSIX (nothing)
DEC OSF/1 3.x/cc/DCE -threads
(butenhof@zko.dec.com)
Digital UNIX 4.x/cc/DCE -threads
(butenhof@zko.dec.com)
Digital UNIX 4.x/cc/POSIX -pthread
(butenhof@zko.dec.com)
AIX 4.1.4/cc_r/d7 (nothing)
(buhrt@iquest.net)
AIX 4.1.4/cc_r4/DCE (nothing)
(buhrt@iquest.net)
IRIX 6.2/cc/POSIX (nothing)
(robertl@cwi.nl)
Linker (ld) libraries and flags for threads
...........................................
OS/threads Libraries/switches for use with threads
SunOS 5.{1-5}/solaris -lthread
SunOS 5.5/POSIX -lpthread
DEC OSF/1 3.x/DCE -lpthreads -lmach -lc_r -lc
(butenhof@zko.dec.com)
Digital UNIX 4.x/DCE -lpthreads -lpthread -lmach -lexc -lc
(butenhof@zko.dec.com)
Digital UNIX 4.x/POSIX -lpthread -lmach -lexc -lc
(butenhof@zko.dec.com)
AIX 4.1.4/{draft7,DCE} (nothing)
(buhrt@iquest.net)
IRIX 6.2/POSIX -lpthread
(jph@emilia.engr.sgi.com)
Building a shared libpython
---------------------------
Starting with Python 2.3, the majority of the interpreter can be built
into a shared library, which can then be used by the interpreter
executable, and by applications embedding Python. To enable this feature,
configure with --enable-shared.
If you enable this feature, the same object files will be used to create
a static library. In particular, the static library will contain object
files using position-independent code (PIC) on platforms where PIC flags
are needed for the shared library.
Configuring additional built-in modules
---------------------------------------
Starting with Python 2.1, the setup.py script at the top of the source
distribution attempts to detect which modules can be built and
automatically compiles them. Autodetection doesn't always work, so
you can still customize the configuration by editing the Modules/Setup
file; but this should be considered a last resort. The rest of this
section only applies if you decide to edit the Modules/Setup file.
You also need this to enable static linking of certain modules (which
is needed to enable profiling on some systems).
This file is initially copied from Setup.dist by the configure script;
if it does not exist yet, create it by copying Modules/Setup.dist
yourself (configure will never overwrite it). Never edit Setup.dist
-- always edit Setup or Setup.local (see below). Read the comments in
the file for information on what kind of edits are allowed. When you
have edited Setup in the Modules directory, the interpreter will
automatically be rebuilt the next time you run make (in the toplevel
directory).
Many useful modules can be built on any Unix system, but some optional
modules can't be reliably autodetected. Often the quickest way to
determine whether a particular module works or not is to see if it
will build: enable it in Setup, then if you get compilation or link
errors, disable it -- you're either missing support or need to adjust
the compilation and linking parameters for that module.
In addition to the file Setup, you can also edit the file Setup.local.
(the makesetup script processes both). You may find it more
convenient to edit Setup.local and leave Setup alone. Then, when
installing a new Python version, you can copy your old Setup.local
file.
Setting the optimization/debugging options
------------------------------------------
If you want or need to change the optimization/debugging options for
the C compiler, assign to the OPT variable on the toplevel make
command; e.g. "make OPT=-g" will build a debugging version of Python
on most platforms. The default is OPT=-O; a value for OPT in the
environment when the configure script is run overrides this default
(likewise for CC; and the initial value for LIBS is used as the base
set of libraries to link with).
When compiling with GCC, the default value of OPT will also include
the -Wall and -Wstrict-prototypes options.
Additional debugging code to help debug memory management problems can
be enabled by using the --with-pydebug option to the configure script.
For flags that change binary compatibility, use the EXTRA_CFLAGS
variable.
Profiling
---------
If you want C profiling turned on, the easiest way is to run configure
with the CC environment variable to the necessary compiler
invocation. For example, on Linux, this works for profiling using
gprof(1):
CC="gcc -pg" ./configure
Note that on Linux, gprof apparently does not work for shared
libraries. The Makefile/Setup mechanism can be used to compile and
link most extension modules statically.
Testing
-------
To test the interpreter, type "make test" in the top-level directory.
This runs the test set twice (once with no compiled files, once with
the compiled files left by the previous test run). The test set
produces some output. You can generally ignore the messages about
skipped tests due to optional features which can't be imported.
If a message is printed about a failed test or a traceback or core
dump is produced, something is wrong. On some Linux systems (those
that are not yet using glibc 6), test_strftime fails due to a
non-standard implementation of strftime() in the C library. Please
ignore this, or upgrade to glibc version 6.
IMPORTANT: If the tests fail and you decide to mail a bug report,
*don't* include the output of "make test". It is useless. Run the
failing test manually, as follows:
./python ./Lib/test/test_whatever.py
(substituting the top of the source tree for '.' if you built in a
different directory). This runs the test in verbose mode.
Installing
----------
To install the Python binary, library modules, shared library modules
(see below), include files, configuration files, and the manual page,
just type
make install
This will install all platform-independent files in subdirectories of
the directory given with the --prefix option to configure or to the
`prefix' Make variable (default /usr/local). All binary and other
platform-specific files will be installed in subdirectories if the
directory given by --exec-prefix or the `exec_prefix' Make variable
(defaults to the --prefix directory) is given.
If DESTDIR is set, it will be taken as the root directory of the
installation, and files will be installed into $(DESTDIR)$(prefix),
$(DESTDIR)$(exec_prefix), etc.
All subdirectories created will have Python's version number in their
name, e.g. the library modules are installed in
"/usr/local/lib/python<version>/" by default, where <version> is the
<major>.<minor> release number (e.g. "2.1"). The Python binary is
installed as "python<version>" and a hard link named "python" is
created. The only file not installed with a version number in its
name is the manual page, installed as "/usr/local/man/man1/python.1"
by default.
If you have a previous installation of Python that you don't
want to replace yet, use
make altinstall
This installs the same set of files as "make install" except it
doesn't create the hard link to "python<version>" named "python" and
it doesn't install the manual page at all.
The only thing you may have to install manually is the Python mode for
Emacs found in Misc/python-mode.el. (But then again, more recent
versions of Emacs may already have it.) Follow the instructions that
came with Emacs for installation of site-specific files.
On Mac OS X, if you have configured Python with --enable-framework, you
should use "make frameworkinstall" to do the installation. Note that this
installs the Python executable in a place that is not normally on your
PATH, you may want to set up a symlink in /usr/local/bin.
Configuration options and variables
-----------------------------------
Some special cases are handled by passing options to the configure
script.
WARNING: if you rerun the configure script with different options, you
must run "make clean" before rebuilding. Exceptions to this rule:
after changing --prefix or --exec-prefix, all you need to do is remove
Modules/getpath.o.
--with(out)-gcc: The configure script uses gcc (the GNU C compiler) if
it finds it. If you don't want this, or if this compiler is
installed but broken on your platform, pass the option
--without-gcc. You can also pass "CC=cc" (or whatever the
name of the proper C compiler is) in the environment, but the
advantage of using --without-gcc is that this option is
remembered by the config.status script for its --recheck
option.
--prefix, --exec-prefix: If you want to install the binaries and the
Python library somewhere else than in /usr/local/{bin,lib},
you can pass the option --prefix=DIRECTORY; the interpreter
binary will be installed as DIRECTORY/bin/python and the
library files as DIRECTORY/lib/python/*. If you pass
--exec-prefix=DIRECTORY (as well) this overrides the
installation prefix for architecture-dependent files (like the
interpreter binary). Note that --prefix=DIRECTORY also
affects the default module search path (sys.path), when
Modules/config.c is compiled. Passing make the option
prefix=DIRECTORY (and/or exec_prefix=DIRECTORY) overrides the
prefix set at configuration time; this may be more convenient
than re-running the configure script if you change your mind
about the install prefix.
--with-readline: This option is no longer supported. GNU
readline is automatically enabled by setup.py when present.
--with-threads: On most Unix systems, you can now use multiple
threads, and support for this is enabled by default. To
disable this, pass --with-threads=no. If the library required
for threads lives in a peculiar place, you can use
--with-thread=DIRECTORY. IMPORTANT: run "make clean" after
changing (either enabling or disabling) this option, or you
will get link errors! Note: for DEC Unix use
--with-dec-threads instead.
--with-sgi-dl: On SGI IRIX 4, dynamic loading of extension modules is
supported by the "dl" library by Jack Jansen, which is
ftp'able from ftp://ftp.cwi.nl/pub/dynload/dl-1.6.tar.Z.
This is enabled (after you've ftp'ed and compiled the dl
library) by passing --with-sgi-dl=DIRECTORY where DIRECTORY
is the absolute pathname of the dl library. (Don't bother on
IRIX 5, it already has dynamic linking using SunOS style
shared libraries.) THIS OPTION IS UNSUPPORTED.
--with-dl-dld: Dynamic loading of modules is rumored to be supported
on some other systems: VAX (Ultrix), Sun3 (SunOS 3.4), Sequent
Symmetry (Dynix), and Atari ST. This is done using a
combination of the GNU dynamic loading package
(ftp://ftp.cwi.nl/pub/dynload/dl-dld-1.1.tar.Z) and an
emulation of the SGI dl library mentioned above (the emulation
can be found at
ftp://ftp.cwi.nl/pub/dynload/dld-3.2.3.tar.Z). To
enable this, ftp and compile both libraries, then call
configure, passing it the option
--with-dl-dld=DL_DIRECTORY,DLD_DIRECTORY where DL_DIRECTORY is
the absolute pathname of the dl emulation library and
DLD_DIRECTORY is the absolute pathname of the GNU dld library.
(Don't bother on SunOS 4 or 5, they already have dynamic
linking using shared libraries.) THIS OPTION IS UNSUPPORTED.
--with-libm, --with-libc: It is possible to specify alternative
versions for the Math library (default -lm) and the C library
(default the empty string) using the options
--with-libm=STRING and --with-libc=STRING, respectively. For
example, if your system requires that you pass -lc_s to the C
compiler to use the shared C library, you can pass
--with-libc=-lc_s. These libraries are passed after all other
libraries, the C library last.
--with-libs='libs': Add 'libs' to the LIBS that the python interpreter
is linked against.
--with-cxx-main=<compiler>: If you plan to use C++ extension modules,
then -- on some platforms -- you need to compile python's main()
function with the C++ compiler. With this option, make will use
<compiler> to compile main() *and* to link the python executable.
It is likely that the resulting executable depends on the C++
runtime library of <compiler>. (The default is --without-cxx-main.)
There are platforms that do not require you to build Python
with a C++ compiler in order to use C++ extension modules.
E.g., x86 Linux with ELF shared binaries and GCC 3.x, 4.x is such
a platform. We recommend that you configure Python
--without-cxx-main on those platforms because a mismatch
between the C++ compiler version used to build Python and to
build a C++ extension module is likely to cause a crash at
runtime.
The Python installation also stores the variable CXX that
determines, e.g., the C++ compiler distutils calls by default
to build C++ extensions. If you set CXX on the configure command
line to any string of non-zero length, then configure won't
change CXX. If you do not preset CXX but pass
--with-cxx-main=<compiler>, then configure sets CXX=<compiler>.
In all other cases, configure looks for a C++ compiler by
some common names (c++, g++, gcc, CC, cxx, cc++, cl) and sets
CXX to the first compiler it finds. If it does not find any
C++ compiler, then it sets CXX="".
Similarly, if you want to change the command used to link the
python executable, then set LINKCC on the configure command line.
--with-pydebug: Enable additional debugging code to help track down
memory management problems. This allows printing a list of all
live objects when the interpreter terminates.
--with(out)-universal-newlines: enable reading of text files with
foreign newline convention (default: enabled). In other words,
any of \r, \n or \r\n is acceptable as end-of-line character.
If enabled import and execfile will automatically accept any newline
in files. Python code can open a file with open(file, 'U') to
read it in universal newline mode. THIS OPTION IS UNSUPPORTED.
--with-tsc: Profile using the Pentium timestamping counter (TSC).
--with-system-ffi: Build the _ctypes extension module using an ffi
library installed on the system.
Building for multiple architectures (using the VPATH feature)
-------------------------------------------------------------
If your file system is shared between multiple architectures, it
usually is not necessary to make copies of the sources for each
architecture you want to support. If the make program supports the
VPATH feature, you can create an empty build directory for each
architecture, and in each directory run the configure script (on the
appropriate machine with the appropriate options). This creates the
necessary subdirectories and the Makefiles therein. The Makefiles
contain a line VPATH=... which points to a directory containing the
actual sources. (On SGI systems, use "smake -J1" instead of "make" if
you use VPATH -- don't try gnumake.)
For example, the following is all you need to build a minimal Python
in /usr/tmp/python (assuming ~guido/src/python is the toplevel
directory and you want to build in /usr/tmp/python):
$ mkdir /usr/tmp/python
$ cd /usr/tmp/python
$ ~guido/src/python/configure
[...]
$ make
[...]
$
Note that configure copies the original Setup file to the build
directory if it finds no Setup file there. This means that you can
edit the Setup file for each architecture independently. For this
reason, subsequent changes to the original Setup file are not tracked
automatically, as they might overwrite local changes. To force a copy
of a changed original Setup file, delete the target Setup file. (The
makesetup script supports multiple input files, so if you want to be
fancy you can change the rules to create an empty Setup.local if it
doesn't exist and run it with arguments $(srcdir)/Setup Setup.local;
however this assumes that you only need to add modules.)
Building on non-UNIX systems
----------------------------
For Windows (2000/NT/ME/98/95), assuming you have MS VC++ 7.1, the
project files are in PCbuild, the workspace is pcbuild.dsw. See
PCbuild\readme.txt for detailed instructions.
For other non-Unix Windows compilers, in particular MS VC++ 6.0 and
for OS/2, enter the directory "PC" and read the file "readme.txt".
For the Mac, a separate source distribution will be made available,
for use with the CodeWarrior compiler. If you are interested in Mac
development, join the PythonMac Special Interest Group
(http://www.python.org/sigs/pythonmac-sig/, or send email to
pythonmac-sig-request@python.org).
Of course, there are also binary distributions available for these
platforms -- see http://www.python.org/.
To port Python to a new non-UNIX system, you will have to fake the
effect of running the configure script manually (for Mac and PC, this
has already been done for you). A good start is to copy the file
pyconfig.h.in to pyconfig.h and edit the latter to reflect the actual
configuration of your system. Most symbols must simply be defined as
1 only if the corresponding feature is present and can be left alone
otherwise; however the *_t type symbols must be defined as some
variant of int if they need to be defined at all.
For all platforms, it's important that the build arrange to define the
preprocessor symbol NDEBUG on the compiler command line in a release
build of Python (else assert() calls remain in the code, hurting
release-build performance). The Unix, Windows and Mac builds already
do this.
Miscellaneous issues
====================
Emacs mode
----------
There's an excellent Emacs editing mode for Python code; see the file
Misc/python-mode.el. Originally written by the famous Tim Peters, it
is now maintained by the equally famous Barry Warsaw (it's no
coincidence that they now both work on the same team). The latest
version, along with various other contributed Python-related Emacs
goodies, is online at http://www.python.org/emacs/python-mode. And
if you are planning to edit the Python C code, please pick up the
latest version of CC Mode http://www.python.org/emacs/cc-mode; it
contains a "python" style used throughout most of the Python C source
files. (Newer versions of Emacs or XEmacs may already come with the
latest version of python-mode.)
Tkinter
-------
The setup.py script automatically configures this when it detects a
usable Tcl/Tk installation. This requires Tcl/Tk version 8.0 or
higher.
For more Tkinter information, see the Tkinter Resource page:
http://www.python.org/topics/tkinter/
There are demos in the Demo/tkinter directory.
Note that there's a Python module called "Tkinter" (capital T) which
lives in Lib/lib-tk/Tkinter.py, and a C module called "_tkinter"
(lower case t and leading underscore) which lives in
Modules/_tkinter.c. Demos and normal Tk applications import only the
Python Tkinter module -- only the latter imports the C _tkinter
module. In order to find the C _tkinter module, it must be compiled
and linked into the Python interpreter -- the setup.py script does
this. In order to find the Python Tkinter module, sys.path must be
set correctly -- normal installation takes care of this.
Distribution structure
----------------------
Most subdirectories have their own README files. Most files have
comments.
Demo/ Demonstration scripts, modules and programs
Doc/ Documentation sources (LaTeX)
Grammar/ Input for the parser generator
Include/ Public header files
LICENSE Licensing information
Lib/ Python library modules
Mac/ Macintosh specific resources
Makefile.pre.in Source from which config.status creates the Makefile.pre
Misc/ Miscellaneous useful files
Modules/ Implementation of most built-in modules
Objects/ Implementation of most built-in object types
PC/ Files specific to PC ports (DOS, Windows, OS/2)
PCbuild/ Build directory for Microsoft Visual C++
Parser/ The parser and tokenizer and their input handling
Python/ The byte-compiler and interpreter
README The file you're reading now
RISCOS/ Files specific to RISC OS port
Tools/ Some useful programs written in Python
pyconfig.h.in Source from which pyconfig.h is created (GNU autoheader output)
configure Configuration shell script (GNU autoconf output)
configure.in Configuration specification (input for GNU autoconf)
install-sh Shell script used to install files
setup.py Python script used to build extension modules
The following files will (may) be created in the toplevel directory by
the configuration and build processes:
Makefile Build rules
Makefile.pre Build rules before running Modules/makesetup
buildno Keeps track of the build number
config.cache Cache of configuration variables
pyconfig.h Configuration header
config.log Log from last configure run
config.status Status from last run of the configure script
getbuildinfo.o Object file from Modules/getbuildinfo.c
libpython<version>.a The library archive
python The executable interpreter
reflog.txt Output from running the regression suite with the -R flag
tags, TAGS Tags files for vi and Emacs
That's all, folks!
------------------
--Guido van Rossum (home page: http://www.python.org/~guido/)