cpython/Lib/distutils
Alexandre Vassalotti 7663f9e4ff Revert distutils changes done in r63248.
As explained by Marc-Andre Lemburg, distutils needs to stay
backward-compatible. Therefore, it should use the old ConfigParser
module name.
2008-05-15 00:33:57 +00:00
..
command Revert distutils changes done in r63248. 2008-05-15 00:33:57 +00:00
tests Try setting HOME env.var to fix test on Win32 2008-05-11 20:08:33 +00:00
README
__init__.py Bump to 2.6a3 2008-05-08 13:16:19 +00:00
archive_util.py Replace instances of os.path.walk with os.walk 2008-05-08 22:09:54 +00:00
bcppcompiler.py
ccompiler.py
cmd.py
config.py Revert distutils changes done in r63248. 2008-05-15 00:33:57 +00:00
core.py #1858: re-apply patch for this, adding the missing files 2008-05-11 14:00:00 +00:00
cygwinccompiler.py
debug.py
dep_util.py
dir_util.py
dist.py Revert distutils changes done in r63248. 2008-05-15 00:33:57 +00:00
emxccompiler.py
errors.py
extension.py
fancy_getopt.py
file_util.py
filelist.py
log.py
msvc9compiler.py #2581: Vista UAC/elevation support for bdist_wininst 2008-05-02 12:48:15 +00:00
msvccompiler.py
mwerkscompiler.py
spawn.py
sysconfig.py
text_file.py
unixccompiler.py
util.py
version.py
versionpredicate.py

README

This directory contains only a subset of the Distutils, specifically
the Python modules in the 'distutils' and 'distutils.command'
packages.  This is all you need to distribute and install Python
modules using the Distutils.  There is also a separately packaged
standalone version of the Distutils available for people who want to
upgrade the Distutils without upgrading Python, available from the
Distutils web page:

    http://www.python.org/sigs/distutils-sig/

The standalone version includes all of the code in this directory,
plus documentation, test scripts, examples, etc.

The Distutils documentation is divided into two documents, "Installing
Python Modules", which explains how to install Python packages, and
"Distributing Python Modules", which explains how to write setup.py
files.  Both documents are part of the standard Python documentation
set, and are available from http://www.python.org/doc/current/ .

        Greg Ward (gward@python.net)

$Id$