svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk
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r77704 | tarek.ziade | 2010-01-23 10:23:15 +0100 (Sat, 23 Jan 2010) | 1 line
taking sysconfig out of distutils
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r77752 | tarek.ziade | 2010-01-26 00:19:56 +0100 (Tue, 26 Jan 2010) | 1 line
switched the call order so this call works without suffering from issue #7774
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svn+ssh://pythondev@svn.python.org/python/trunk
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r62127 | trent.nelson | 2008-04-03 08:39:17 -0700 (Thu, 03 Apr 2008) | 1 line
Remove the building of Berkeley DB step; _bsddb44.vcproj takes care of this for us now.
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r62136 | amaury.forgeotdarc | 2008-04-03 16:07:55 -0700 (Thu, 03 Apr 2008) | 9 lines
#1733757: the interpreter would hang on shutdown, if the function set by sys.settrace
calls threading.currentThread.
The correction somewhat improves the code, but it was close.
Many thanks to the "with" construct, which turns python code into C calls.
I wonder if it is not better to sys.settrace(None) just after
running the __main__ module and before finalization.
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r62141 | jeffrey.yasskin | 2008-04-03 21:51:19 -0700 (Thu, 03 Apr 2008) | 5 lines
Doh! os.read() raises an OSError, not an IOError when it's interrupted.
And fix some flakiness in test_itimer_prof, which could detect that the timer
had reached 0 before the signal arrived announcing that fact.
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r62142 | fred.drake | 2008-04-03 22:41:30 -0700 (Thu, 03 Apr 2008) | 4 lines
- Issue #2385: distutils.core.run_script() makes __file__ available, so the
controlled environment will more closely mirror the typical script
environment. This supports setup.py scripts that refer to data files.
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r62147 | fred.drake | 2008-04-04 04:31:14 -0700 (Fri, 04 Apr 2008) | 6 lines
my previous change did what I said it should not: it changed the current
directory to the directory in which the setup.py script lived (which made
__file__ wrong)
fixed, with test that the script is run in the current directory of the caller
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r62148 | fred.drake | 2008-04-04 04:38:51 -0700 (Fri, 04 Apr 2008) | 2 lines
stupid, stupid, stupid!
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r62150 | jeffrey.yasskin | 2008-04-04 09:48:19 -0700 (Fri, 04 Apr 2008) | 2 lines
Oops again. EINTR is in errno, not signal.
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r62158 | andrew.kuchling | 2008-04-04 19:42:20 -0700 (Fri, 04 Apr 2008) | 1 line
Minor edits
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r62159 | andrew.kuchling | 2008-04-04 19:47:07 -0700 (Fri, 04 Apr 2008) | 1 line
Markup fix; explain what interval timers do; typo fix
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r62160 | andrew.kuchling | 2008-04-04 20:38:39 -0700 (Fri, 04 Apr 2008) | 1 line
Various edits
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r62161 | neal.norwitz | 2008-04-04 21:26:31 -0700 (Fri, 04 Apr 2008) | 9 lines
Prevent test_sqlite from hanging on older versions of sqlite.
The problem is that when trying to do the second insert, sqlite seems to sleep
for a very long time. Here is the output from strace:
read(6, "SQLite format 3\0\4\0\1\1\0@ \0\0\0\1\0\0\0\0"..., 1024) = 1024
nanosleep({4294, 966296000}, <unfinished ...>
I don't know which version this was fixed in, but 3.2.1 definitely fails.
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There's one major and one minor category still unfixed:
doctests are the major category (and I hope to be able to augment the
refactoring tool to refactor bona fide doctests soon);
other code generating print statements in strings is the minor category.
(Oh, and I don't know if the compiler package works.)
Not all code has been fixed yet; this is just a checkpoint...
The C API still has PyDict_HasKey() and _HasKeyString(); not sure
if I want to change those just yet.
requires and provides. requires is a sequence of strings, of the
form 'packagename-version'. The dependency checking so far merely
does an '__import__(packagename)' and checks for packagename.__version__
You can also leave off the version, and any version of the package
will be installed.
There's a special case for the package 'python' - sys.version_info
is used, so
requires= ( 'python-2.3', )
just works.
Provides is of the same format as requires - but if it's not supplied,
a provides is generated by adding the version to each entry in packages,
or modules if packages isn't there.
Provides is currently only used in the PKG-INFO file. Shortly, PyPI
will grow the ability to accept these lines, and register will be
updated to send them.
There's a new command 'checkdep' command that runs these checks.
For this version, only greater-than-or-equal checking is done. We'll
add the ability to specify an optional operator later.
Fixed by catching all exceptions that are subclasses of DistutilsError,
so only the error message will be printed. You can still get the
whole traceback by enabling the Distutils debugging mode.
whether the Distutils being used supports a particularly capability.
(This idea was originally suggested by Juergen Hermann as a method
on the Distribution class. I think it makes more sense as a
function in core.py, and that's what this patch implements.)
This is a conservative version of SF patch 504889. It uses the log
module instead of calling print in various places, and it ignores the
verbose argument passed to many functions and set as an attribute on
some objects. Instead, it uses the verbosity set on the logger via
the command line.
The log module is now preferred over announce() and warn() methods
that exist only for backwards compatibility.
XXX This checkin changes a lot of modules that have no test suite and
aren't exercised by the Python build process. It will need
substantial testing.
fairly tight control, and the '_setup_stop_after' and '_setup_distribution'
globals to provide the tight control.
This isn't entirely reliable yet: it dies horribly with a NameError on the
example PIL setup script in examples/pil_setup.py (at least with Python
1.5.2; untested with current Python). There's some strangeness going
on with execfile(), but I don't understand it and don't have time
to track it down right now.
Changed 'core.setup()' so it sets them to reasonable defaults.
Tweaked how the "usage" string is generated: 'core' now provides
'gen_usage()', which is used instead of 'USAGE'.
Modified "build_py" and "sdist" commands to refer to
'self.distribution.script_name' rather than 'sys.argv[0]'.