Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Gregory P. Smith dd96db63f6 This reverts r63675 based on the discussion in this thread:
http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2008-June/079988.html

Python 2.6 should stick with PyString_* in its codebase.  The PyBytes_* names
in the spirit of 3.0 are available via a #define only.  See the email thread.
2008-06-09 04:58:54 +00:00
Ronald Oussoren 0d236eb05a Fix build issue on OSX 10.4 2008-06-06 21:31:33 +00:00
Ronald Oussoren 5640ce2f1e MacOS X: Enable 4-way universal builds
This patch adds a new configure argument on OSX:
        --with-universal-archs=[32-bit|64-bit|all]

When used with the --enable-universalsdk option this controls which
CPU architectures are includes in the framework. The default is 32-bit,
meaning i386 and ppc. The most useful alternative is 'all', which includes
all 4 CPU architectures supported by MacOS X (i386, ppc, x86_64 and ppc64).

This includes limited support for the Carbon bindings in 64-bit mode as well,
limited because (a) I haven't done extensive testing and (b) a large portion
of the Carbon API's aren't available in 64-bit mode anyway.

I've also duplicated a feature of Apple's build of python: setting the
environment variable 'ARCHFLAGS' controls the '-arch' flags used for building
extensions using distutils.
2008-06-05 12:58:24 +00:00
Christian Heimes 593daf545b Renamed PyString to PyBytes 2008-05-26 12:51:38 +00:00
Benjamin Peterson 236819310d Add warnings to and deprecated all those Mac modules 2008-05-12 21:42:13 +00:00
Christian Heimes 000a074c95 Modified PyImport_Import and PyImport_ImportModule to always use absolute imports by calling __import__ with an explicit level of 0
Added a new API function PyImport_ImportModuleNoBlock. It solves the problem with dead locks when mixing threads and imports
2008-01-03 22:16:32 +00:00
Ronald Oussoren bfbfe1f8b9 Fix for bug #1525447 (renaming to MacOSmodule.c would also work, but not
without causing problems for anyone that is on a case-insensitive filesystem).

Setup.py tries to compile the MacOS extension from MacOSmodule.c, while the
actual file is named macosmodule.c. This is no problem on the (default)
case-insensitive filesystem, but doesn't work on case-sensitive filesystems.
2006-07-25 19:20:54 +00:00