cpython/Doc/distutils/builtdist.rst
Christian Heimes 81ee3efede Merged revisions 62425-62429,62434-62436,62441,62444,62446-62448,62450-62455,62463,62465-62466,62469,62474,62476-62478,62480,62485,62492,62497-62498,62500,62507,62513-62514,62516,62521,62531,62535,62545-62546,62548-62551,62553-62559,62569,62574,62577,62593,62595,62604-62606,62608,62616,62626-62627,62636,62638,62644-62645,62647-62648,62651-62653,62656,62661,62663,62680,62686-62687,62696,62699-62703,62711 via svnmerge from
svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk

................
  r62425 | andrew.kuchling | 2008-04-21 03:45:57 +0200 (Mon, 21 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  Comment typo
................
  r62426 | mark.dickinson | 2008-04-21 03:55:50 +0200 (Mon, 21 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Silence 'r may be used uninitialized' compiler warning.
................
  r62427 | andrew.kuchling | 2008-04-21 04:08:00 +0200 (Mon, 21 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  Markup fix
................
  r62428 | andrew.kuchling | 2008-04-21 04:08:13 +0200 (Mon, 21 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  Wording changes
................
  r62429 | andrew.kuchling | 2008-04-21 04:14:24 +0200 (Mon, 21 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  Add various items
................
  r62434 | thomas.heller | 2008-04-21 15:46:55 +0200 (Mon, 21 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  Fix typo.
................
  r62435 | david.goodger | 2008-04-21 16:40:22 +0200 (Mon, 21 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  corrections ("reStructuredText" is one word)
................
  r62436 | david.goodger | 2008-04-21 16:43:33 +0200 (Mon, 21 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  capitalization
................
  r62441 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-04-21 19:46:40 +0200 (Mon, 21 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  explicitly flush after the ... since there wasn't a newline
................
  r62444 | jeroen.ruigrok | 2008-04-21 22:15:39 +0200 (Mon, 21 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Windows x64 also falls under VER_PLATFORM_WIN32_NT.
................
  r62446 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-04-21 23:31:08 +0200 (Mon, 21 Apr 2008) | 3 lines

  If sys.stdin is not a tty, fall back to default_getpass after printing
  a warning instead of failing with a termios.error.
................
  r62447 | mark.dickinson | 2008-04-22 00:32:24 +0200 (Tue, 22 Apr 2008) | 8 lines

  test_math and test_cmath are failing on the FreeBSD 6.2 trunk buildbot,
  apparently because tanh(-0.) loses the sign of zero on that platform.
  If true, this is a bug in FreeBSD.

  Added a configure test to verify this.  I still need to figure out
  how best to deal with this failure.
................
  r62448 | amaury.forgeotdarc | 2008-04-22 00:35:30 +0200 (Tue, 22 Apr 2008) | 7 lines

  Issue 2665: On Windows, sys.stderr does not contain a valid file when running without a console.
  It seems to work, but will fail at the first flush.

  This causes IDLE to crash when too many warnings are printed.

  Will backport.
................
  r62450 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-04-22 00:57:00 +0200 (Tue, 22 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Fix Sphinx warnings
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  r62451 | mark.dickinson | 2008-04-22 02:54:27 +0200 (Tue, 22 Apr 2008) | 3 lines

  Make configure test for tanh(-0.) == -0. committed in r62447 actually
  work.  (The test wasn't properly linked with libm.  Sigh.)
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  r62452 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-04-22 04:16:03 +0200 (Tue, 22 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Various io doc updates
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  r62453 | neal.norwitz | 2008-04-22 07:07:47 +0200 (Tue, 22 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  Add Thomas Lee
................
  r62454 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-04-22 10:08:41 +0200 (Tue, 22 Apr 2008) | 8 lines

  Major improvements:
  * Default to using /dev/tty for the password prompt and input before
    falling back to sys.stdin and sys.stderr.
  * Use sys.stderr instead of sys.stdout.
  * print the 'password may be echoed' warning to stream used to display
    the prompt rather than always sys.stderr.
  * warn() with GetPassWarning when input may be echoed.
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  r62455 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-04-22 10:11:33 +0200 (Tue, 22 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  update the getpass entry
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  r62463 | amaury.forgeotdarc | 2008-04-22 23:14:41 +0200 (Tue, 22 Apr 2008) | 5 lines

  Issue #2670: urllib2.build_opener() failed when two handlers
  derive the same default base class.

  Will backport.
................
  r62465 | skip.montanaro | 2008-04-23 00:45:09 +0200 (Wed, 23 Apr 2008) | 3 lines

  Factor in documentation changes from issue 1753732.
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  r62466 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-04-23 03:06:42 +0200 (Wed, 23 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  syntax fixup
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  r62469 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-04-23 22:38:06 +0200 (Wed, 23 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  #2673 Fix example typo in optparse docs
................
  r62474 | martin.v.loewis | 2008-04-24 11:50:50 +0200 (Thu, 24 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Add Guilherme Polo.
................
  r62476 | martin.v.loewis | 2008-04-24 15:16:36 +0200 (Thu, 24 Apr 2008) | 3 lines

  Remove Py_Refcnt, Py_Type, Py_Size, as they were added only
  for backwards compatibility, yet 2.5 did not have them at all.
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  r62477 | martin.v.loewis | 2008-04-24 15:17:24 +0200 (Thu, 24 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Fix typo.
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  r62478 | martin.v.loewis | 2008-04-24 15:18:03 +0200 (Thu, 24 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Add Jesus Cea.
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  r62480 | amaury.forgeotdarc | 2008-04-24 20:07:05 +0200 (Thu, 24 Apr 2008) | 4 lines

  Issue2681: the literal 0o8 was wrongly accepted, and evaluated as float(0.0).
  This happened only when 8 is the first digit.
  Credits go to Lukas Meuser.
................
  r62485 | amaury.forgeotdarc | 2008-04-24 22:10:26 +0200 (Thu, 24 Apr 2008) | 5 lines

  Disable gc when running test_trace, or we may record the __del__ of collected objects.

  See http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-checkins/2008-April/068633.html
  the extra events perfectly match several calls to socket._fileobject.__del__()
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  r62492 | neal.norwitz | 2008-04-25 05:40:17 +0200 (Fri, 25 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  Fix typo (now -> no)
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  r62497 | armin.rigo | 2008-04-25 11:35:18 +0200 (Fri, 25 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  A new crasher.
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  r62498 | thomas.heller | 2008-04-25 17:44:16 +0200 (Fri, 25 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  Add from_buffer and from_buffer_copy class methods to ctypes types.
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  r62500 | mark.dickinson | 2008-04-25 18:59:09 +0200 (Fri, 25 Apr 2008) | 3 lines

  Issue 2635: fix bug in the fix_sentence_endings option to textwrap.fill.
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  r62507 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-04-25 23:43:56 +0200 (Fri, 25 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Allow test_import to work when it is invoked directly
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  r62513 | georg.brandl | 2008-04-26 20:31:07 +0200 (Sat, 26 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  #2691: document PyLong (s)size_t APIs, patch by Alexander Belopolsky.
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  r62514 | georg.brandl | 2008-04-26 20:32:17 +0200 (Sat, 26 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Add missing return type to dealloc.
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  r62516 | alexandre.vassalotti | 2008-04-27 02:52:24 +0200 (Sun, 27 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Fixed URL of PEP 205 in weakref's module docstring.
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  r62521 | georg.brandl | 2008-04-27 11:39:59 +0200 (Sun, 27 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  #2677: add note that not all functions may accept keyword args.
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  r62531 | georg.brandl | 2008-04-27 19:38:55 +0200 (Sun, 27 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Use correct XHTML tags.
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  r62535 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-04-27 20:14:39 +0200 (Sun, 27 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  #2700 Document PyNumber_ToBase
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  r62545 | skip.montanaro | 2008-04-27 22:53:57 +0200 (Sun, 27 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  minor wording changes, rewrap a few lines
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  r62546 | kurt.kaiser | 2008-04-27 23:07:41 +0200 (Sun, 27 Apr 2008) | 7 lines

  Home / Control-A toggles between left margin and end of leading white
  space.  Patch 1196903 Jeff Shute.

  M    idlelib/PyShell.py
  M    idlelib/EditorWindow.py
  M    idlelib/NEWS.txt
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  r62548 | kurt.kaiser | 2008-04-27 23:38:05 +0200 (Sun, 27 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Improved AutoCompleteWindow logic.  Patch 2062 Tal Einat.
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  r62549 | kurt.kaiser | 2008-04-27 23:52:19 +0200 (Sun, 27 Apr 2008) | 4 lines

  Autocompletion of filenames now support alternate separators, e.g. the
  '/' char on Windows.  Patch 2061 Tal Einat.
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  r62550 | skip.montanaro | 2008-04-28 00:49:56 +0200 (Mon, 28 Apr 2008) | 6 lines

  A few small changes:
  * The only exception we should catch when trying to import cStringIO is an
    ImportError.
  * Delete the function signatures embedded in the mk*temp docstrings.
  * The tempdir global variable was initialized twice.
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  r62551 | skip.montanaro | 2008-04-28 00:52:02 +0200 (Mon, 28 Apr 2008) | 4 lines

  Wrap some long paragraphs and include the default values for optional
  function parameters.
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  r62553 | skip.montanaro | 2008-04-28 04:57:23 +0200 (Mon, 28 Apr 2008) | 7 lines

  Minor cleanups:
  * Avoid creating unused local variables where we can.  Where we can't prefix
    the unused variables with '_'.
  * Avoid shadowing builtins where it won't change the external interface of a
    function.
  * Use None as default path arg to readmodule and readmodule_ex.
................
  r62554 | skip.montanaro | 2008-04-28 04:59:45 +0200 (Mon, 28 Apr 2008) | 6 lines

  Correct documentation to match implementation: "Class" instead of
  "class_descriptor", "Function" instead of "function_descriptor".  Note
  default path value for readmodule*.  Wrap some long paragraphs.  Don't
  mention 'inpackage' which isn't part of the public API.
................
  r62555 | brett.cannon | 2008-04-28 05:23:50 +0200 (Mon, 28 Apr 2008) | 5 lines

  Fix a bug introduced by the warnings rewrite where tracebacks were being
  improperly indented.

  Closes issue #2699.
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  r62556 | skip.montanaro | 2008-04-28 05:25:37 +0200 (Mon, 28 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Wrap some long lines.
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  r62557 | skip.montanaro | 2008-04-28 05:27:53 +0200 (Mon, 28 Apr 2008) | 6 lines

  Get rid of _test(), _main(), _debug() and _check().  Tests are no longer
  needed (better set available in Lib/test/test_robotparser.py).  Clean up a
  few PEP 8 nits (compound statements on a single line, whitespace around
  operators).
................
  r62558 | brett.cannon | 2008-04-28 06:50:06 +0200 (Mon, 28 Apr 2008) | 3 lines

  Rename the test_traceback_print() function to traceback_print() to prevent
  test_capi from automatically calling the function.
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  r62559 | georg.brandl | 2008-04-28 07:16:30 +0200 (Mon, 28 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Fix markup.
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  r62569 | amaury.forgeotdarc | 2008-04-28 23:07:06 +0200 (Mon, 28 Apr 2008) | 5 lines

  test_sundry performs minimal tests (a simple import...) on modules that are not tested otherwise.

  Some of them now have tests and can be removed.
  Only 70 to go...
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  r62574 | andrew.kuchling | 2008-04-29 04:03:54 +0200 (Tue, 29 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  Strip down SSL docs; I'm not managing to get test programs working, so I'll just give a minimal description
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  r62577 | martin.v.loewis | 2008-04-29 08:10:53 +0200 (Tue, 29 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Add Rodrigo and Heiko.
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  r62593 | nick.coghlan | 2008-04-30 16:23:36 +0200 (Wed, 30 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  Update command line usage documentation to reflect 2.6 changes (also includes some minor cleanups). Addresses TODO list issue 2258
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  r62595 | andrew.kuchling | 2008-04-30 18:19:55 +0200 (Wed, 30 Apr 2008) | 1 line

  Typo fix
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  r62604 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-04-30 23:03:58 +0200 (Wed, 30 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  make test_support's captured_output a bit more robust when exceptions happen
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  r62605 | georg.brandl | 2008-04-30 23:08:42 +0200 (Wed, 30 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  #1748: use functools.wraps instead of rolling own metadata update.
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  r62606 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-04-30 23:25:55 +0200 (Wed, 30 Apr 2008) | 2 lines

  Remove some from __future__ import with_statements
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  r62608 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-05-01 00:03:36 +0200 (Thu, 01 May 2008) | 2 lines

  Fix typo in whatsnew
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  r62616 | georg.brandl | 2008-05-01 20:24:32 +0200 (Thu, 01 May 2008) | 2 lines

  Fix synopsis.
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  r62626 | brett.cannon | 2008-05-02 04:25:09 +0200 (Fri, 02 May 2008) | 6 lines

  Fix a backwards-compatibility mistake where a new optional argument for
  warnings.showwarning() was being used. This broke pre-existing replacements for
  the function since they didn't support the extra argument.

  Closes issue 2705.
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  r62627 | gregory.p.smith | 2008-05-02 09:26:52 +0200 (Fri, 02 May 2008) | 20 lines

  This should fix issue2632.  A long description of the two competing
  problems is in the bug report (one old, one recently introduced trying
  to fix the old one).  In short:

  buffer data during socket._fileobject.read() and readlines() within a
  cStringIO object instead of a [] of str()s returned from the recv()
  call.

  This prevents excessive memory use due to the size parameter being
  passed to recv() being grossly larger than the actual size of the data
  returned *and* prevents excessive cpu usage due to looping in python
  calling recv() with a very tiny size value if min() is used as the
  previous memory-use bug "fix" did.

  It also documents what the socket._fileobject._rbufsize member is
  actually used for.

  This is a candidate for back porting to 2.5.
................
  r62636 | mark.hammond | 2008-05-02 14:48:15 +0200 (Fri, 02 May 2008) | 2 lines

  #2581: Vista UAC/elevation support for bdist_wininst
................
  r62638 | facundo.batista | 2008-05-02 19:39:00 +0200 (Fri, 02 May 2008) | 3 lines


  Fixed some test structures. Thanks Mark Dickinson.
................
  r62644 | ronald.oussoren | 2008-05-02 21:45:11 +0200 (Fri, 02 May 2008) | 7 lines

  Fix for issue #2573: Can't change the framework name on OS X builds

  This introduces a new configure option: --with-framework-name=NAME
  (defaulting to 'Python'). This allows you to install several copies
  of the Python framework with different names (such as a normal build
  and a debug build).
................
  r62645 | ronald.oussoren | 2008-05-02 21:58:56 +0200 (Fri, 02 May 2008) | 2 lines

  Finish fix for issue2573, previous patch was incomplete.
................
  r62647 | martin.v.loewis | 2008-05-02 23:30:20 +0200 (Fri, 02 May 2008) | 13 lines

  Merged revisions 62263-62646 via svnmerge from
  svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/sandbox/trunk/2to3/lib2to3

  ........
    r62470 | david.wolever | 2008-04-24 02:11:07 +0200 (Do, 24 Apr 2008) | 3 lines

    Fixed up and applied the patch for #2431 -- speeding up 2to3 with a lookup table.
  ........
    r62646 | martin.v.loewis | 2008-05-02 23:29:27 +0200 (Fr, 02 Mai 2008) | 2 lines

    Fix whitespace.
  ........
................
  r62648 | ronald.oussoren | 2008-05-02 23:42:35 +0200 (Fri, 02 May 2008) | 4 lines

  Fix for #1905: PythonLauncher not working correctly on OSX 10.5/Leopard

  This fixes both Python Launchar and the terminalcommand module.
................
  r62651 | ronald.oussoren | 2008-05-02 23:54:56 +0200 (Fri, 02 May 2008) | 2 lines

  Fix for issue #2520 (cannot import macerrors)
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  r62652 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-05-03 00:12:58 +0200 (Sat, 03 May 2008) | 2 lines

  capitalization nit for reStructuredText
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  r62653 | brett.cannon | 2008-05-03 03:02:41 +0200 (Sat, 03 May 2008) | 2 lines

  Fix some indentation errors.
................
  r62656 | brett.cannon | 2008-05-03 05:19:39 +0200 (Sat, 03 May 2008) | 6 lines

  Fix the C implementation of 'warnings' to infer the filename of the module that
  raised an exception properly when __file__ is not set, __name__ == '__main__',
  and sys.argv[0] is a false value.

  Closes issue2743.
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  r62661 | amaury.forgeotdarc | 2008-05-03 14:21:13 +0200 (Sat, 03 May 2008) | 8 lines

  In test_io, StatefulIncrementalDecoderTest was not part of the test suite.
  And of course, the test failed:
  a bytearray was used without reason in io.TextIOWrapper.tell().

  The difference is that iterating over bytes (i.e. str in python2.6) returns 1-char bytes,
  whereas bytearrays yield integers.
  This code should still work with python3.0
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  r62663 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-05-03 17:56:42 +0200 (Sat, 03 May 2008) | 2 lines

  The compiling struct is now passed around to all AST helpers (see issue 2720)
................
  r62680 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-05-03 23:35:18 +0200 (Sat, 03 May 2008) | 2 lines

  Moved testing of builtin types out of test_builtin and into type specific modules
................
  r62686 | mark.dickinson | 2008-05-04 04:25:46 +0200 (Sun, 04 May 2008) | 4 lines

  Make sure that Context traps and flags dictionaries have values 0 and 1
  (as documented) rather than True and False.
................
  r62687 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-05-04 05:05:49 +0200 (Sun, 04 May 2008) | 2 lines

  Fix typo in whatsnew
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  r62696 | georg.brandl | 2008-05-04 11:15:04 +0200 (Sun, 04 May 2008) | 2 lines

  #2752: wrong meaning of '' for socket host.
................
  r62699 | christian.heimes | 2008-05-04 13:50:53 +0200 (Sun, 04 May 2008) | 1 line

  Added note that Python requires at least Win2k SP4
................
  r62700 | gerhard.haering | 2008-05-04 14:59:57 +0200 (Sun, 04 May 2008) | 3 lines

  SQLite requires 64-bit integers in order to build. So the whole HAVE_LONG_LONG
  #ifdefing was useless.
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  r62701 | gerhard.haering | 2008-05-04 15:15:12 +0200 (Sun, 04 May 2008) | 3 lines

  Applied sqliterow-richcmp.diff patch from Thomas Heller in Issue2152. The
  sqlite3.Row type is now correctly hashable.
................
  r62702 | gerhard.haering | 2008-05-04 15:42:44 +0200 (Sun, 04 May 2008) | 5 lines

  Implemented feature request 2157: Converter names are cut off at '('
  characters. This avoids the common case of something like 'NUMBER(10)' not
  being parsed as 'NUMBER', like expected. Also corrected the docs about
  converter names being case-sensitive. They aren't any longer.
................
  r62703 | georg.brandl | 2008-05-04 17:45:05 +0200 (Sun, 04 May 2008) | 2 lines

  #2757: Remove spare newline.
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  r62711 | benjamin.peterson | 2008-05-04 21:10:02 +0200 (Sun, 04 May 2008) | 2 lines

  Fix typo in bugs.rst
................
2008-05-04 22:42:01 +00:00

447 lines
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ReStructuredText

.. _built-dist:
****************************
Creating Built Distributions
****************************
A "built distribution" is what you're probably used to thinking of either as a
"binary package" or an "installer" (depending on your background). It's not
necessarily binary, though, because it might contain only Python source code
and/or byte-code; and we don't call it a package, because that word is already
spoken for in Python. (And "installer" is a term specific to the world of
mainstream desktop systems.)
A built distribution is how you make life as easy as possible for installers of
your module distribution: for users of RPM-based Linux systems, it's a binary
RPM; for Windows users, it's an executable installer; for Debian-based Linux
users, it's a Debian package; and so forth. Obviously, no one person will be
able to create built distributions for every platform under the sun, so the
Distutils are designed to enable module developers to concentrate on their
specialty---writing code and creating source distributions---while an
intermediary species called *packagers* springs up to turn source distributions
into built distributions for as many platforms as there are packagers.
Of course, the module developer could be his own packager; or the packager could
be a volunteer "out there" somewhere who has access to a platform which the
original developer does not; or it could be software periodically grabbing new
source distributions and turning them into built distributions for as many
platforms as the software has access to. Regardless of who they are, a packager
uses the setup script and the :command:`bdist` command family to generate built
distributions.
As a simple example, if I run the following command in the Distutils source
tree::
python setup.py bdist
then the Distutils builds my module distribution (the Distutils itself in this
case), does a "fake" installation (also in the :file:`build` directory), and
creates the default type of built distribution for my platform. The default
format for built distributions is a "dumb" tar file on Unix, and a simple
executable installer on Windows. (That tar file is considered "dumb" because it
has to be unpacked in a specific location to work.)
Thus, the above command on a Unix system creates
:file:`Distutils-1.0.{plat}.tar.gz`; unpacking this tarball from the right place
installs the Distutils just as though you had downloaded the source distribution
and run ``python setup.py install``. (The "right place" is either the root of
the filesystem or Python's :file:`{prefix}` directory, depending on the options
given to the :command:`bdist_dumb` command; the default is to make dumb
distributions relative to :file:`{prefix}`.)
Obviously, for pure Python distributions, this isn't any simpler than just
running ``python setup.py install``\ ---but for non-pure distributions, which
include extensions that would need to be compiled, it can mean the difference
between someone being able to use your extensions or not. And creating "smart"
built distributions, such as an RPM package or an executable installer for
Windows, is far more convenient for users even if your distribution doesn't
include any extensions.
The :command:`bdist` command has a :option:`--formats` option, similar to the
:command:`sdist` command, which you can use to select the types of built
distribution to generate: for example, ::
python setup.py bdist --format=zip
would, when run on a Unix system, create :file:`Distutils-1.0.{plat}.zip`\
---again, this archive would be unpacked from the root directory to install the
Distutils.
The available formats for built distributions are:
+-------------+------------------------------+---------+
| Format | Description | Notes |
+=============+==============================+=========+
| ``gztar`` | gzipped tar file | (1),(3) |
| | (:file:`.tar.gz`) | |
+-------------+------------------------------+---------+
| ``ztar`` | compressed tar file | \(3) |
| | (:file:`.tar.Z`) | |
+-------------+------------------------------+---------+
| ``tar`` | tar file (:file:`.tar`) | \(3) |
+-------------+------------------------------+---------+
| ``zip`` | zip file (:file:`.zip`) | \(4) |
+-------------+------------------------------+---------+
| ``rpm`` | RPM | \(5) |
+-------------+------------------------------+---------+
| ``pkgtool`` | Solaris :program:`pkgtool` | |
+-------------+------------------------------+---------+
| ``sdux`` | HP-UX :program:`swinstall` | |
+-------------+------------------------------+---------+
| ``rpm`` | RPM | \(5) |
+-------------+------------------------------+---------+
| ``wininst`` | self-extracting ZIP file for | (2),(4) |
| | Windows | |
+-------------+------------------------------+---------+
Notes:
(1)
default on Unix
(2)
default on Windows
**\*\*** to-do! **\*\***
(3)
requires external utilities: :program:`tar` and possibly one of :program:`gzip`,
:program:`bzip2`, or :program:`compress`
(4)
requires either external :program:`zip` utility or :mod:`zipfile` module (part
of the standard Python library since Python 1.6)
(5)
requires external :program:`rpm` utility, version 3.0.4 or better (use ``rpm
--version`` to find out which version you have)
You don't have to use the :command:`bdist` command with the :option:`--formats`
option; you can also use the command that directly implements the format you're
interested in. Some of these :command:`bdist` "sub-commands" actually generate
several similar formats; for instance, the :command:`bdist_dumb` command
generates all the "dumb" archive formats (``tar``, ``ztar``, ``gztar``, and
``zip``), and :command:`bdist_rpm` generates both binary and source RPMs. The
:command:`bdist` sub-commands, and the formats generated by each, are:
+--------------------------+-----------------------+
| Command | Formats |
+==========================+=======================+
| :command:`bdist_dumb` | tar, ztar, gztar, zip |
+--------------------------+-----------------------+
| :command:`bdist_rpm` | rpm, srpm |
+--------------------------+-----------------------+
| :command:`bdist_wininst` | wininst |
+--------------------------+-----------------------+
The following sections give details on the individual :command:`bdist_\*`
commands.
.. _creating-dumb:
Creating dumb built distributions
=================================
**\*\*** Need to document absolute vs. prefix-relative packages here, but first
I have to implement it! **\*\***
.. _creating-rpms:
Creating RPM packages
=====================
The RPM format is used by many popular Linux distributions, including Red Hat,
SuSE, and Mandrake. If one of these (or any of the other RPM-based Linux
distributions) is your usual environment, creating RPM packages for other users
of that same distribution is trivial. Depending on the complexity of your module
distribution and differences between Linux distributions, you may also be able
to create RPMs that work on different RPM-based distributions.
The usual way to create an RPM of your module distribution is to run the
:command:`bdist_rpm` command::
python setup.py bdist_rpm
or the :command:`bdist` command with the :option:`--format` option::
python setup.py bdist --formats=rpm
The former allows you to specify RPM-specific options; the latter allows you to
easily specify multiple formats in one run. If you need to do both, you can
explicitly specify multiple :command:`bdist_\*` commands and their options::
python setup.py bdist_rpm --packager="John Doe <jdoe@example.org>" \
bdist_wininst --target_version="2.0"
Creating RPM packages is driven by a :file:`.spec` file, much as using the
Distutils is driven by the setup script. To make your life easier, the
:command:`bdist_rpm` command normally creates a :file:`.spec` file based on the
information you supply in the setup script, on the command line, and in any
Distutils configuration files. Various options and sections in the
:file:`.spec` file are derived from options in the setup script as follows:
+------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
| RPM :file:`.spec` file option or section | Distutils setup script option |
+==========================================+==============================================+
| Name | :option:`name` |
+------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
| Summary (in preamble) | :option:`description` |
+------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
| Version | :option:`version` |
+------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
| Vendor | :option:`author` and :option:`author_email`, |
| | or --- & :option:`maintainer` and |
| | :option:`maintainer_email` |
+------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
| Copyright | :option:`license` |
+------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
| Url | :option:`url` |
+------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
| %description (section) | :option:`long_description` |
+------------------------------------------+----------------------------------------------+
Additionally, there are many options in :file:`.spec` files that don't have
corresponding options in the setup script. Most of these are handled through
options to the :command:`bdist_rpm` command as follows:
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
| RPM :file:`.spec` file option | :command:`bdist_rpm` option | default value |
| or section | | |
+===============================+=============================+=========================+
| Release | :option:`release` | "1" |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
| Group | :option:`group` | "Development/Libraries" |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
| Vendor | :option:`vendor` | (see above) |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
| Packager | :option:`packager` | (none) |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
| Provides | :option:`provides` | (none) |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
| Requires | :option:`requires` | (none) |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
| Conflicts | :option:`conflicts` | (none) |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
| Obsoletes | :option:`obsoletes` | (none) |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
| Distribution | :option:`distribution_name` | (none) |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
| BuildRequires | :option:`build_requires` | (none) |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
| Icon | :option:`icon` | (none) |
+-------------------------------+-----------------------------+-------------------------+
Obviously, supplying even a few of these options on the command-line would be
tedious and error-prone, so it's usually best to put them in the setup
configuration file, :file:`setup.cfg`\ ---see section :ref:`setup-config`. If
you distribute or package many Python module distributions, you might want to
put options that apply to all of them in your personal Distutils configuration
file (:file:`~/.pydistutils.cfg`).
There are three steps to building a binary RPM package, all of which are
handled automatically by the Distutils:
#. create a :file:`.spec` file, which describes the package (analogous to the
Distutils setup script; in fact, much of the information in the setup script
winds up in the :file:`.spec` file)
#. create the source RPM
#. create the "binary" RPM (which may or may not contain binary code, depending
on whether your module distribution contains Python extensions)
Normally, RPM bundles the last two steps together; when you use the Distutils,
all three steps are typically bundled together.
If you wish, you can separate these three steps. You can use the
:option:`--spec-only` option to make :command:`bdist_rpm` just create the
:file:`.spec` file and exit; in this case, the :file:`.spec` file will be
written to the "distribution directory"---normally :file:`dist/`, but
customizable with the :option:`--dist-dir` option. (Normally, the :file:`.spec`
file winds up deep in the "build tree," in a temporary directory created by
:command:`bdist_rpm`.)
.. % \XXX{this isn't implemented yet---is it needed?!}
.. % You can also specify a custom \file{.spec} file with the
.. % \longprogramopt{spec-file} option; used in conjunction with
.. % \longprogramopt{spec-only}, this gives you an opportunity to customize
.. % the \file{.spec} file manually:
.. %
.. % \ begin{verbatim}
.. % > python setup.py bdist_rpm --spec-only
.. % # ...edit dist/FooBar-1.0.spec
.. % > python setup.py bdist_rpm --spec-file=dist/FooBar-1.0.spec
.. % \ end{verbatim}
.. %
.. % (Although a better way to do this is probably to override the standard
.. % \command{bdist\_rpm} command with one that writes whatever else you want
.. % to the \file{.spec} file.)
.. _creating-wininst:
Creating Windows Installers
===========================
Executable installers are the natural format for binary distributions on
Windows. They display a nice graphical user interface, display some information
about the module distribution to be installed taken from the metadata in the
setup script, let the user select a few options, and start or cancel the
installation.
Since the metadata is taken from the setup script, creating Windows installers
is usually as easy as running::
python setup.py bdist_wininst
or the :command:`bdist` command with the :option:`--formats` option::
python setup.py bdist --formats=wininst
If you have a pure module distribution (only containing pure Python modules and
packages), the resulting installer will be version independent and have a name
like :file:`foo-1.0.win32.exe`. These installers can even be created on Unix or
Mac OS platforms.
If you have a non-pure distribution, the extensions can only be created on a
Windows platform, and will be Python version dependent. The installer filename
will reflect this and now has the form :file:`foo-1.0.win32-py2.0.exe`. You
have to create a separate installer for every Python version you want to
support.
The installer will try to compile pure modules into :term:`bytecode` after installation
on the target system in normal and optimizing mode. If you don't want this to
happen for some reason, you can run the :command:`bdist_wininst` command with
the :option:`--no-target-compile` and/or the :option:`--no-target-optimize`
option.
By default the installer will display the cool "Python Powered" logo when it is
run, but you can also supply your own bitmap which must be a Windows
:file:`.bmp` file with the :option:`--bitmap` option.
The installer will also display a large title on the desktop background window
when it is run, which is constructed from the name of your distribution and the
version number. This can be changed to another text by using the
:option:`--title` option.
The installer file will be written to the "distribution directory" --- normally
:file:`dist/`, but customizable with the :option:`--dist-dir` option.
.. _cross-compile-windows:
Cross-compiling on Windows
==========================
Starting with Python 2.6, distutils is capable of cross-compiling between
Windows platforms. In practice, this means that with the correct tools
installed, you can use a 32bit version of Windows to create 64bit extensions
and vice-versa.
To build for an alternate platform, specify the :option:`--plat-name` option
to the build command. Valid values are currently 'win32', 'win-amd64' and
'win-ia64'. For example, on a 32bit version of Windows, you could execute::
python setup.py build --plat-name=win-amd64
to build a 64bit version of your extension. The Windows Installers also
support this option, so the command::
python setup.py build --plat-name=win-amd64 bdist_wininst
would create a 64bit installation executable on your 32bit version of Windows.
To cross-compile, you must download the Python source code and cross-compile
Python itself for the platform you are targetting - it is not possible from a
binary installtion of Python (as the .lib etc file for other platforms are
not included.) In practice, this means the user of a 32 bit operating
system will need to use Visual Studio 2008 to open the
:file:`PCBuild/PCbuild.sln` solution in the Python source tree and build the
"x64" configuration of the 'pythoncore' project before cross-compiling
extensions is possible.
Note that by default, Visual Studio 2008 does not install 64bit compilers or
tools. You may need to reexecute the Visual Studio setup process and select
these tools (using Control Panel->[Add/Remove] Programs is a convenient way to
check or modify your existing install.)
.. _postinstallation-script:
The Postinstallation script
---------------------------
Starting with Python 2.3, a postinstallation script can be specified which the
:option:`--install-script` option. The basename of the script must be
specified, and the script filename must also be listed in the scripts argument
to the setup function.
This script will be run at installation time on the target system after all the
files have been copied, with ``argv[1]`` set to :option:`-install`, and again at
uninstallation time before the files are removed with ``argv[1]`` set to
:option:`-remove`.
The installation script runs embedded in the windows installer, every output
(``sys.stdout``, ``sys.stderr``) is redirected into a buffer and will be
displayed in the GUI after the script has finished.
Some functions especially useful in this context are available as additional
built-in functions in the installation script.
.. function:: directory_created(path)
file_created(path)
These functions should be called when a directory or file is created by the
postinstall script at installation time. It will register *path* with the
uninstaller, so that it will be removed when the distribution is uninstalled.
To be safe, directories are only removed if they are empty.
.. function:: get_special_folder_path(csidl_string)
This function can be used to retrieve special folder locations on Windows like
the Start Menu or the Desktop. It returns the full path to the folder.
*csidl_string* must be one of the following strings::
"CSIDL_APPDATA"
"CSIDL_COMMON_STARTMENU"
"CSIDL_STARTMENU"
"CSIDL_COMMON_DESKTOPDIRECTORY"
"CSIDL_DESKTOPDIRECTORY"
"CSIDL_COMMON_STARTUP"
"CSIDL_STARTUP"
"CSIDL_COMMON_PROGRAMS"
"CSIDL_PROGRAMS"
"CSIDL_FONTS"
If the folder cannot be retrieved, :exc:`OSError` is raised.
Which folders are available depends on the exact Windows version, and probably
also the configuration. For details refer to Microsoft's documentation of the
:cfunc:`SHGetSpecialFolderPath` function.
Vista User Access Control (UAC)
===============================
Starting with Python 2.6, bdist_wininst supports a :option:`--user-access-control`
option. The default is 'none' (meaning no UAC handling is done), and other
valid values are 'auto' (meaning prompt for UAC elevation if Python was
installed for all users) and 'force' (meaning always prompt for elevation)
.. function:: create_shortcut(target, description, filename[, arguments[, workdir[, iconpath[, iconindex]]]])
This function creates a shortcut. *target* is the path to the program to be
started by the shortcut. *description* is the description of the shortcut.
*filename* is the title of the shortcut that the user will see. *arguments*
specifies the command line arguments, if any. *workdir* is the working directory
for the program. *iconpath* is the file containing the icon for the shortcut,
and *iconindex* is the index of the icon in the file *iconpath*. Again, for
details consult the Microsoft documentation for the :class:`IShellLink`
interface.