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Kirill Smelkov
slapos.buildout
Commits
b0e203be
Commit
b0e203be
authored
Feb 22, 2010
by
Gary Poster
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merge from gary-4
parents
98b7c55c
fc96bec3
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89 deletions
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-89
CHANGES.txt
CHANGES.txt
+10
-12
README.txt
README.txt
+7
-4
src/zc/buildout/easy_install.py
src/zc/buildout/easy_install.py
+54
-29
src/zc/buildout/easy_install.txt
src/zc/buildout/easy_install.txt
+33
-32
src/zc/buildout/tests.py
src/zc/buildout/tests.py
+6
-4
src/zc/buildout/testselectingpython.py
src/zc/buildout/testselectingpython.py
+1
-1
z3c.recipe.scripts_/src/z3c/recipe/scripts/README.txt
z3c.recipe.scripts_/src/z3c/recipe/scripts/README.txt
+3
-4
z3c.recipe.scripts_/src/z3c/recipe/scripts/scripts.py
z3c.recipe.scripts_/src/z3c/recipe/scripts/scripts.py
+2
-2
z3c.recipe.scripts_/src/z3c/recipe/scripts/tests.py
z3c.recipe.scripts_/src/z3c/recipe/scripts/tests.py
+1
-1
No files found.
CHANGES.txt
View file @
b0e203be
...
...
@@ -11,19 +11,17 @@ New Features:
than zc.recipe.egg (which is still a fully supported, and simpler, way of
generating scripts and interpreters if you are using a "clean" Python).
A hopefully slight limitation: in no cases are distributions in your
site-packages used to satisfy buildout dependencies. The
site-packages can be used in addition to the dependencies specified in
your buildout, and buildout dependencies can override code in your
site-packages, but even if your Python's site-packages has the same
exact version as specified in your buildout configuration, buildout
will still use its own copy.
- Added new function, ``zc.buildout.easy_install.generate_scripts``, to
generate scripts and interpreter. It produces a full-featured
(Note that this branch is incomplete in its implementation of this feature:
if eggs are in installed in site-packages but you do not want to use
site-packages, the eggs will drag in site-packages even if you try to
exclude it. This is addressed in subsequent branches in the series of
which this one is a part.)
- Added new function, ``zc.buildout.easy_install.sitepackage_safe_scripts``,
to generate scripts and interpreter. It produces a full-featured
interpreter (all command-line options supported) and the ability to
safely let scripts include site packages
. The ``z3c.recipe.scripts``
recipe uses this new function.
safely let scripts include site packages
, such as with a system
Python. The ``z3c.recipe.scripts``
recipe uses this new function.
- Improve bootstrap.
...
...
README.txt
View file @
b0e203be
...
...
@@ -35,12 +35,15 @@ Existing recipes include:
`zc.recipe.egg <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/zc.recipe.egg>`_
The egg recipe installes one or more eggs, with their
dependencies. It installs their console-script entry points with
the needed eggs included in their paths.
the needed eggs included in their paths. It is suitable for use with
a "clean" Python: one without packages installed in site-packages.
`z3c.recipe.scripts <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/z3c.recipe.scripts>`_
This scripts recipe builds interpreter scripts and entry point scripts
based on eggs. These scripts have more features and flexibility than the
ones offered by zc.recipe.egg.
Like zc.recipe.egg, this recipe builds interpreter scripts and entry
point scripts based on eggs. It can be used with a Python that has
packages installed in site-packages, such as a system Python. The
interpreter also has more features than the one offered by
zc.recipe.egg.
`zc.recipe.testrunner <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/zc.recipe.testrunner>`_
The testrunner egg creates a test runner script for one or
...
...
src/zc/buildout/easy_install.py
View file @
b0e203be
...
...
@@ -61,15 +61,16 @@ setuptools_loc = pkg_resources.working_set.find(
pkg_resources
.
Requirement
.
parse
(
'setuptools'
)
).
location
# Include buildout and setuptools eggs in paths
buildout_and_setuptools_path
=
[
setuptools_loc
,
pkg_resources
.
working_set
.
find
(
pkg_resources
.
Requirement
.
parse
(
'zc.buildout'
)).
location
,
]
# Include buildout and setuptools eggs in paths. We prevent dupes just to
# keep from duplicating any log messages about them.
buildout_loc
=
pkg_resources
.
working_set
.
find
(
pkg_resources
.
Requirement
.
parse
(
'zc.buildout'
)).
location
buildout_and_setuptools_path
=
[
setuptools_loc
]
if
os
.
path
.
normpath
(
setuptools_loc
)
!=
os
.
path
.
normpath
(
buildout_loc
):
buildout_and_setuptools_path
.
append
(
buildout_loc
)
def
_get_system_paths
(
executable
):
"""
r
eturn lists of standard lib and site paths for executable.
"""
R
eturn lists of standard lib and site paths for executable.
"""
# We want to get a list of the site packages, which is not easy.
# The canonical way to do this is to use
...
...
@@ -227,24 +228,47 @@ else:
#
# The namespace packages installed in site-packages with
# --single-version-externally-managed use a mechanism that cause them to
# be processed when site.py is imported. Simply starting Python with -S
# addresses the problem in Python 2.4 and 2.5, but Python 2.6's distutils
# imports a value from the site module, so we unfortunately have to do more
# drastic surgery in the _easy_install_cmd code below. The changes to
# sys.modules specifically try to only remove namespace modules installed by
# the --single-version-externally-managed code.
# be processed when site.py is imported (see
# http://mail.python.org/pipermail/distutils-sig/2009-May/011730.html
# for another description of the problem). Simply starting Python with
# -S addresses the problem in Python 2.4 and 2.5, but Python 2.6's
# distutils imports a value from the site module, so we unfortunately
# have to do more drastic surgery in the _easy_install_cmd code below.
#
# Here's an example of the .pth files created by setuptools when using that
# flag:
#
# import sys,new,os;
# p = os.path.join(sys._getframe(1).f_locals['sitedir'], *('<NAMESPACE>',));
# ie = os.path.exists(os.path.join(p,'__init__.py'));
# m = not ie and sys.modules.setdefault('<NAMESPACE>',new.module('<NAMESPACE>'));
# mp = (m or []) and m.__dict__.setdefault('__path__',[]);
# (p not in mp) and mp.append(p)
#
# The code, below, then, runs under -S, indicating that site.py should
# not be loaded initially. It gets the initial sys.path under these
# circumstances, and then imports site (because Python 2.6's distutils
# will want it, as mentioned above). It then reinstates the old sys.path
# value. Then it removes namespace packages (created by the setuptools
# code above) from sys.modules. It identifies namespace packages by
# iterating over every loaded module. It first looks if there is a
# __path__, so it is a package; and then it sees if that __path__ does
# not have an __init__.py. (Note that PEP 382,
# http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0382, makes it possible to have a
# namespace package that has an __init__.py, but also should make it
# unnecessary for site.py to preprocess these packages, so it should be
# fine, as far as can be guessed as of this writing.) Finally, it
# imports easy_install and runs it.
_easy_install_cmd
=
_safe_arg
(
'''
\
import sys;
\
p = sys.path[:];
\
m = sys.modules.keys();
\
import site;
\
sys.path[:] = p;
\
m_attrs = set(('__builtins__', '__file__', '__package__', '__path__'));
\
match = set(('__path__',));
\
import sys,os;
\
p = sys.path[:];
\
import site;
\
sys.path[:] = p;
\
[sys.modules.pop(k) for k, v in sys.modules.items()
\
if k not in m and v and m_attrs.intersection(dir(v)) == match];
\
from setuptools.command.easy_install import main;
\
if hasattr(v, '__path__') and len(v.__path__)==1 and
\
not os.path.exists(os.path.join(v.__path__[0],'__init__.py'))];
\
from setuptools.command.easy_install import main;
\
main()'''
)
...
...
@@ -1126,8 +1150,9 @@ def scripts(reqs, working_set, executable, dest,
):
"""Generate scripts and/or an interpreter.
See generate_scripts for a newer version with more options and a
different approach.
See sitepackage_safe_scripts for a version that can be used with a Python
that can be used with a Python that has code installed in site-packages.
It has more options and a different approach.
"""
path
=
_get_path
(
working_set
,
extra_paths
)
if
initialization
:
...
...
@@ -1142,12 +1167,12 @@ def scripts(reqs, working_set, executable, dest,
_pyscript
(
spath
,
sname
,
executable
,
rpsetup
))
return
generated
def
generat
e_scripts
(
def
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts
(
dest
,
working_set
,
executable
,
site_py_dest
,
reqs
=
(),
scripts
=
None
,
interpreter
=
None
,
extra_paths
=
(),
initialization
=
''
,
add_site_packages
=
False
,
exec_sitecustomize
=
False
,
relative_paths
=
False
,
script_arguments
=
''
,
script_initialization
=
''
):
"""Generate scripts and/or an interpreter.
"""Generate scripts and/or an interpreter
from a system Python
.
This accomplishes the same job as the ``scripts`` function, above,
but it does so in an alternative way that allows safely including
...
...
@@ -1161,7 +1186,7 @@ def generate_scripts(
site_py_dest
,
working_set
,
executable
,
extra_paths
,
add_site_packages
,
relative_paths
))
script_initialization
=
(
'
\
n
import site # imports custom build
bo
t-generated site.py
\
n
%s'
%
(
'
\
n
import site # imports custom build
ou
t-generated site.py
\
n
%s'
%
(
script_initialization
,))
if
not
script_initialization
.
endswith
(
'
\
n
'
):
script_initialization
+=
'
\
n
'
...
...
@@ -1175,7 +1200,7 @@ def generate_scripts(
# Utilities for the script generation functions.
# These are shared by both ``scripts`` and ``
generat
e_scripts``
# These are shared by both ``scripts`` and ``
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts``
def
_get_path
(
working_set
,
extra_paths
=
()):
"""Given working set and extra paths, return a normalized path list."""
...
...
@@ -1442,7 +1467,7 @@ if _interactive:
__import__("code").interact(banner="", local=globals())
'''
# These are used only by the newer ``
generat
e_scripts`` function.
# These are used only by the newer ``
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts`` function.
def
_get_module_file
(
executable
,
name
):
"""Return a module's file path.
...
...
src/zc/buildout/easy_install.txt
View file @
b0e203be
...
...
@@ -595,7 +595,7 @@ The easy_install module provides support for creating scripts from eggs.
It provides two competing functions. One, ``scripts``, is a
well-established approach to generating reliable scripts with a "clean"
Python--e.g., one that does not have any packages in its site-packages.
The other, ``
generat
e_scripts``, is newer, a bit trickier, and is
The other, ``
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts``, is newer, a bit trickier, and is
designed to work with a Python that has code in its site-packages, such
as a system Python.
...
...
@@ -607,10 +607,10 @@ baking a script's path into the script. This has two advantages:
- The script doesn't have to import pkg_resources because the logic that
pkg_resources would execute at run time is executed at script-creation
time. (There is an exception in ``
generate_scripts`` if you want to
have your Python's site packages available, as discussed below, but
even in that case pkg_resources is only partially activated, which can
be a significant time savings.)
time. (There is an exception in ``
sitepackage_safe_scripts`` if you
want to have your Python's site packages available, as discussed
below, but even in that case pkg_resources is only partially
activated, which can
be a significant time savings.)
The ``scripts`` function
...
...
@@ -994,22 +994,23 @@ We specified an interpreter and its paths are adjusted too:
del _interactive
__import__("code").interact(banner="", local=globals())
The ``
generat
e_scripts`` function
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The ``
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts`` function
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~
The newer function for creating scripts is ``generate_scripts``. It has the
same basic functionality as the ``scripts`` function: it can create scripts
to run arbitrary entry points, and to run a Python interpreter. The
following are the differences from a user's perspective.
The newer function for creating scripts is ``sitepackage_safe_scripts``.
It has the same basic functionality as the ``scripts`` function: it can
create scripts to run arbitrary entry points, and to run a Python
interpreter. The following are the differences from a user's
perspective.
- It can be used safely with a Python that has packages installed itself,
such as a system-installed Python.
- In contrast to the interpreter generated by the ``scripts`` method, which
supports only a small subset of the usual Python executable's options,
the interpreter generated by ``
generate_scripts`` supports all of them.
This makes it possible to use as full Python replacement for scripts that
need the distributions specified in your buildout.
the interpreter generated by ``
sitepackage_safe_scripts`` supports all
of them. This makes it possible to use as full Python replacement for
scripts that
need the distributions specified in your buildout.
- Both the interpreter and the entry point scripts allow you to include the
site packages, and/or the sitecustomize, of the Python executable, if
...
...
@@ -1033,7 +1034,7 @@ Here's the simplest example, building an interpreter script.
>>> ws = zc.buildout.easy_install.install(
... ['demo'], join(interpreter_dir, 'eggs'), links=[link_server],
... index=link_server+'index/')
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
generat
e_scripts(
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts(
... interpreter_bin_dir, ws, sys.executable, interpreter_parts_dir,
... interpreter='py')
...
...
@@ -1135,7 +1136,7 @@ If you provide initialization, it goes in sitecustomize.py.
>>> initialization_string = """\
... import os
... os.environ['FOO'] = 'bar baz bing shazam'"""
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
generat
e_scripts(
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts(
... interpreter_bin_dir, ws, sys.executable, interpreter_parts_dir,
... interpreter='py', initialization=initialization_string)
>>> cat(sitecustomize_path)
...
...
@@ -1150,7 +1151,7 @@ again the UNIX version; the Windows version uses subprocess instead of
os.execve.)
>>> reset_interpreter()
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
generat
e_scripts(
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts(
... interpreter_bin_dir, ws, sys.executable, interpreter_parts_dir,
... interpreter='py', relative_paths=interpreter_dir)
>>> cat(py_path)
...
...
@@ -1206,7 +1207,7 @@ The ``extra_paths`` argument affects the path in site.py. Notice that
>>> reset_interpreter()
>>> mkdir(interpreter_dir, 'other')
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
generat
e_scripts(
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts(
... interpreter_bin_dir, ws, sys.executable, interpreter_parts_dir,
... interpreter='py', extra_paths=[join(interpreter_dir, 'other')])
>>> sys.stdout.write('#\n'); cat(site_path) # doctest: +ELLIPSIS
...
...
@@ -1232,15 +1233,15 @@ The ``extra_paths`` argument affects the path in site.py. Notice that
'/interpreter/other']
<BLANKLINE>
The ``
generat
e_scripts`` function: using site-packages
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The ``
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts`` function: using site-packages
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~
The ``
generate_scripts`` function supports including site packages. This has
some advantages and some serious dangers.
The ``
sitepackage_safe_scripts`` function supports including site
packages. This has
some advantages and some serious dangers.
A typical reason to include site-packages is that it is easier to
install one or more dependencies in your Python than it is with
build
bo
t. Some packages, such as lxml or Python PostgreSQL integration,
build
ou
t. Some packages, such as lxml or Python PostgreSQL integration,
have dependencies that can be much easier to build and/or install using
other mechanisms, such as your operating system's package manager. By
installing some core packages into your Python's site-packages, this can
...
...
@@ -1264,7 +1265,7 @@ That explained, let's see how it works. If you don't use namespace packages,
this is very straightforward.
>>> reset_interpreter()
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
generat
e_scripts(
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts(
... interpreter_bin_dir, ws, sys.executable, interpreter_parts_dir,
... interpreter='py', add_site_packages=True)
>>> sys.stdout.write('#\n'); cat(site_path)
...
...
@@ -1333,7 +1334,7 @@ call to another text fixture to create.
>>> ws = zc.buildout.easy_install.install(
... ['demo', 'tellmy.fortune'], join(interpreter_dir, 'eggs'),
... links=[link_server, namespace_eggs], index=link_server+'index/')
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
generat
e_scripts(
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts(
... interpreter_bin_dir, ws, sys.executable, interpreter_parts_dir,
... interpreter='py', add_site_packages=True)
>>> sys.stdout.write('#\n'); cat(site_path)
...
...
@@ -1391,7 +1392,7 @@ include site-packages, and use relative paths. For completeness, we'll look
at that result.
>>> reset_interpreter()
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
generat
e_scripts(
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts(
... interpreter_bin_dir, ws, sys.executable, interpreter_parts_dir,
... interpreter='py', add_site_packages=True,
... relative_paths=interpreter_dir)
...
...
@@ -1448,8 +1449,8 @@ sitecustomize module in the underlying Python if you set the argument to
True. The z3c.recipe.scripts package sets up the full environment necessary
to demonstrate this piece.
The ``
generat
e_scripts`` function: writing scripts for entry points
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The ``
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts`` function: writing scripts for entry points
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~~~~~
All of the examples so far for this function have been creating
interpreters. The function can also write scripts for entry
...
...
@@ -1463,7 +1464,7 @@ see a simple example.
>>> ws = zc.buildout.easy_install.install(
... ['demo'], join(interpreter_dir, 'eggs'), links=[link_server],
... index=link_server+'index/')
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
generat
e_scripts(
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts(
... interpreter_bin_dir, ws, sys.executable, interpreter_parts_dir,
... reqs=['demo'])
...
...
@@ -1497,7 +1498,7 @@ The demo script runs the entry point defined in the demo egg:
]
<BLANKLINE>
<BLANKLINE>
import site # imports custom build
bo
t-generated site.py
import site # imports custom build
ou
t-generated site.py
<BLANKLINE>
import eggrecipedemo
<BLANKLINE>
...
...
@@ -1524,7 +1525,7 @@ pertinent to the entry point scripts, you can use the
Let's see ``script_arguments`` and ``script_initialization`` in action.
>>> reset_interpreter()
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
generat
e_scripts(
>>> generated = zc.buildout.easy_install.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts(
... interpreter_bin_dir, ws, sys.executable, interpreter_parts_dir,
... reqs=['demo'], script_arguments='1, 2',
... script_initialization='import os\nos.chdir("foo")')
...
...
@@ -1536,7 +1537,7 @@ Let's see ``script_arguments`` and ``script_initialization`` in action.
'/interpreter/parts/interpreter',
]
<BLANKLINE>
import site # imports custom build
bo
t-generated site.py
import site # imports custom build
ou
t-generated site.py
import os
os.chdir("foo")
<BLANKLINE>
...
...
src/zc/buildout/tests.py
View file @
b0e203be
...
...
@@ -1881,8 +1881,9 @@ def handle_namespace_package_in_both_site_packages_and_buildout_eggs():
r"""
If you have the same namespace package in both site-packages and in
buildout, we need to be very careful that faux-Python-executables and
scripts generated by easy_install.generate_scripts correctly combine the two.
We show this with the local recipe that uses the function, z3c.recipe.scripts.
scripts generated by easy_install.sitepackage_safe_scripts correctly
combine the two. We show this with the local recipe that uses the
function, z3c.recipe.scripts.
To demonstrate this, we will create three packages: tellmy.version 1.0,
tellmy.version 1.1, and tellmy.fortune 1.0. tellmy.version 1.1 is installed.
...
...
@@ -2049,8 +2050,9 @@ Before the bugfix, running this buildout would generate this error:
We already have: tellmy.version 1.0
<BLANKLINE>
The bugfix was simply to add Python's "-S" option when calling
easyinstall (see zc.buildout.easy_install.Installer._call_easy_install).
You can see the copiously commented fix for this in easy_install.py (see
zc.buildout.easy_install.Installer._call_easy_install and particularly
the comment leading up to zc.buildout.easy_install._easy_install_cmd).
Now the install works correctly, as seen here.
>>> print system(buildout)
...
...
src/zc/buildout/testselectingpython.py
View file @
b0e203be
...
...
@@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ def multi_python(test):
[
'setuptools'
],
executable_dir
,
index
=
'http://www.python.org/pypi/'
,
always_unzip
=
True
,
executable
=
other_executable
)
zc
.
buildout
.
easy_install
.
generat
e_scripts
(
zc
.
buildout
.
easy_install
.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts
(
executable_dir
,
ws
,
other_executable
,
executable_parts
,
reqs
=
[
'setuptools'
],
interpreter
=
'py'
)
original_executable
=
other_executable
...
...
z3c.recipe.scripts_/src/z3c/recipe/scripts/README.txt
View file @
b0e203be
...
...
@@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ extends
exec-sitecustomize
Normally the Python's real sitecustomize module is not processed.
If you want it to be processed, set this value to 'true'. This will
be honored irrespective of the setting for
include-site-path
s.
be honored irrespective of the setting for
add-site-package
s.
script-initialization
The standard initialization code affects both an interpreter and scripts.
...
...
@@ -181,7 +181,7 @@ some advantages and some serious dangers.
A typical reason to include site-packages is that it is easier to
install one or more dependencies in your Python than it is with
build
bo
t. Some packages, such as lxml or Python PostgreSQL integration,
build
ou
t. Some packages, such as lxml or Python PostgreSQL integration,
have dependencies that can be much easier to build and/or install using
other mechanisms, such as your operating system's package manager. By
installing some core packages into your Python's site-packages, this can
...
...
@@ -399,5 +399,4 @@ interpreter, so that you are not forced to use the name of the section.
42
<BLANKLINE>
The other options all identical to the zc.recipe.egg script. Here are some
quick demos and discussions.
The other options all identical to zc.recipe.egg.
z3c.recipe.scripts_/src/z3c/recipe/scripts/scripts.py
View file @
b0e203be
...
...
@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ class Interpreter(Base):
if
not
os
.
path
.
exists
(
options
[
'parts-directory'
]):
os
.
mkdir
(
options
[
'parts-directory'
])
generated
.
append
(
options
[
'parts-directory'
])
generated
.
extend
(
zc
.
buildout
.
easy_install
.
generat
e_scripts
(
generated
.
extend
(
zc
.
buildout
.
easy_install
.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts
(
options
[
'bin-directory'
],
ws
,
options
[
'executable'
],
options
[
'parts-directory'
],
interpreter
=
options
[
'name'
],
...
...
@@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ class Scripts(Base):
if
not
os
.
path
.
exists
(
options
[
'parts-directory'
]):
os
.
mkdir
(
options
[
'parts-directory'
])
generated
.
append
(
options
[
'parts-directory'
])
generated
.
extend
(
zc
.
buildout
.
easy_install
.
generat
e_scripts
(
generated
.
extend
(
zc
.
buildout
.
easy_install
.
sitepackage_saf
e_scripts
(
options
[
'bin-directory'
],
ws
,
options
[
'executable'
],
options
[
'parts-directory'
],
reqs
=
reqs
,
scripts
=
scripts
,
interpreter
=
options
.
get
(
'interpreter'
),
...
...
z3c.recipe.scripts_/src/z3c/recipe/scripts/tests.py
View file @
b0e203be
...
...
@@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ from zope.testing import doctest, renormalizing
# all of the examples. The README tests ``extends``,
# ``include-site-customization`` and ``name``. That leaves ``python``,
# ``extra-paths``, ``initialization``, ``relative-paths``, and
# ``
include
-site-packages``.
# ``
add
-site-packages``.
def
supports_python_option
():
"""
...
...
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