sapling/setup.py

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#
# This is the mercurial setup script.
#
# 'python setup.py install', or
# 'python setup.py --help' for more options
import sys, platform
if getattr(sys, 'version_info', (0, 0, 0)) < (2, 6, 0, 'final'):
raise SystemExit("Mercurial requires Python 2.6 or later.")
if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
def b(s):
'''A helper function to emulate 2.6+ bytes literals using string
literals.'''
return s.encode('latin1')
printf = eval('print')
libdir_escape = 'unicode_escape'
else:
libdir_escape = 'string_escape'
def b(s):
'''A helper function to emulate 2.6+ bytes literals using string
literals.'''
return s
def printf(*args, **kwargs):
f = kwargs.get('file', sys.stdout)
end = kwargs.get('end', '\n')
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f.write(b(' ').join(args) + end)
# Solaris Python packaging brain damage
try:
import hashlib
sha = hashlib.sha1()
except ImportError:
try:
import sha
sha.sha # silence unused import warning
except ImportError:
raise SystemExit(
"Couldn't import standard hashlib (incomplete Python install).")
try:
import zlib
zlib.compressobj # silence unused import warning
except ImportError:
raise SystemExit(
"Couldn't import standard zlib (incomplete Python install).")
# The base IronPython distribution (as of 2.7.1) doesn't support bz2
isironpython = False
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try:
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isironpython = (platform.python_implementation()
.lower().find("ironpython") != -1)
except AttributeError:
pass
if isironpython:
sys.stderr.write("warning: IronPython detected (no bz2 support)\n")
else:
try:
import bz2
bz2.BZ2Compressor # silence unused import warning
except ImportError:
raise SystemExit(
"Couldn't import standard bz2 (incomplete Python install).")
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ispypy = "PyPy" in sys.version
import os, stat, subprocess, time
import re
import shutil
import tempfile
from distutils import log
if 'FORCE_SETUPTOOLS' in os.environ:
from setuptools import setup
else:
from distutils.core import setup
from distutils.core import Command, Extension
from distutils.dist import Distribution
from distutils.command.build import build
from distutils.command.build_ext import build_ext
from distutils.command.build_py import build_py
from distutils.command.install_lib import install_lib
from distutils.command.install_scripts import install_scripts
from distutils.spawn import spawn, find_executable
from distutils import file_util
from distutils.errors import CCompilerError, DistutilsExecError
from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_inc, get_config_var
from distutils.version import StrictVersion
convert2to3 = '--c2to3' in sys.argv
if convert2to3:
try:
from distutils.command.build_py import build_py_2to3 as build_py
from lib2to3.refactor import get_fixers_from_package as getfixers
except ImportError:
if sys.version_info[0] < 3:
raise SystemExit("--c2to3 is only compatible with python3.")
raise
sys.path.append('contrib')
elif sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
raise SystemExit("setup.py with python3 needs --c2to3 (experimental)")
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scripts = ['hg']
if os.name == 'nt':
scripts.append('contrib/win32/hg.bat')
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# simplified version of distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler.has_function
# that actually removes its temporary files.
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def hasfunction(cc, funcname):
tmpdir = tempfile.mkdtemp(prefix='hg-install-')
devnull = oldstderr = None
try:
fname = os.path.join(tmpdir, 'funcname.c')
f = open(fname, 'w')
f.write('int main(void) {\n')
f.write(' %s();\n' % funcname)
f.write('}\n')
f.close()
# Redirect stderr to /dev/null to hide any error messages
# from the compiler.
# This will have to be changed if we ever have to check
# for a function on Windows.
devnull = open('/dev/null', 'w')
oldstderr = os.dup(sys.stderr.fileno())
os.dup2(devnull.fileno(), sys.stderr.fileno())
objects = cc.compile([fname], output_dir=tmpdir)
cc.link_executable(objects, os.path.join(tmpdir, "a.out"))
return True
except Exception:
return False
finally:
if oldstderr is not None:
os.dup2(oldstderr, sys.stderr.fileno())
if devnull is not None:
devnull.close()
shutil.rmtree(tmpdir)
# py2exe needs to be installed to work
try:
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import py2exe
py2exe.Distribution # silence unused import warning
py2exeloaded = True
# import py2exe's patched Distribution class
from distutils.core import Distribution
except ImportError:
py2exeloaded = False
def runcmd(cmd, env):
if (sys.platform == 'plan9'
and (sys.version_info[0] == 2 and sys.version_info[1] < 7)):
# subprocess kludge to work around issues in half-baked Python
# ports, notably bichued/python:
_, out, err = os.popen3(cmd)
return str(out), str(err)
else:
p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE, env=env)
out, err = p.communicate()
return out, err
def runhg(cmd, env):
out, err = runcmd(cmd, env)
setup: refactor the version string to a subset of tag+tagdist-hash+date Here is an array summarizing the mercurial version string: [A] [B] [C] [D] [1] clone tag clean => tag [2] clone hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash [3] clone tag dirty => tag+date [4] clone hash dirty => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash+date [5] archive tag clean => tag [6] archive hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash Column [A]: Mercurial built from an hg *archive* or hg *clone* working directory Column [B]: revision built has a *tag* or else default to the SHA1 *hash* Column [C]: working tree *clean* or *dirty* Column [D]: Mercurial version string Over the previous version: - row [5] did return just the node hash, now it returns the tag - prepend the latest tag and the distance to it to rows [2][4][6] - append also the date to row [3]; previously, it was just the tag - the version string is with an empty string to avoid possible TypeError exceptions during string manipulations - factorize the function to run hg commands; remove the error message as it is no more specific to the function. This scheme enables to have first part of the version strings that can be compared, whether it has been built from a tagged or untagged revision. The second part of the version adds a hash for untagged revisions and today's date if the working tree has local modifications. As the version string does not contain spaces or special characters, it should not break script parsing the 'hg version' command and should be usable for use in file names. The new code also ensure that the version string has exactly the same version string, whether it has been built from an archive or from a clone.
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# If root is executing setup.py, but the repository is owned by
# another user (as in "sudo python setup.py install") we will get
# trust warnings since the .hg/hgrc file is untrusted. That is
# fine, we don't want to load it anyway. Python may warn about
# a missing __init__.py in mercurial/locale, we also ignore that.
setup: refactor the version string to a subset of tag+tagdist-hash+date Here is an array summarizing the mercurial version string: [A] [B] [C] [D] [1] clone tag clean => tag [2] clone hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash [3] clone tag dirty => tag+date [4] clone hash dirty => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash+date [5] archive tag clean => tag [6] archive hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash Column [A]: Mercurial built from an hg *archive* or hg *clone* working directory Column [B]: revision built has a *tag* or else default to the SHA1 *hash* Column [C]: working tree *clean* or *dirty* Column [D]: Mercurial version string Over the previous version: - row [5] did return just the node hash, now it returns the tag - prepend the latest tag and the distance to it to rows [2][4][6] - append also the date to row [3]; previously, it was just the tag - the version string is with an empty string to avoid possible TypeError exceptions during string manipulations - factorize the function to run hg commands; remove the error message as it is no more specific to the function. This scheme enables to have first part of the version strings that can be compared, whether it has been built from a tagged or untagged revision. The second part of the version adds a hash for untagged revisions and today's date if the working tree has local modifications. As the version string does not contain spaces or special characters, it should not break script parsing the 'hg version' command and should be usable for use in file names. The new code also ensure that the version string has exactly the same version string, whether it has been built from an archive or from a clone.
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err = [e for e in err.splitlines()
if not e.startswith(b('not trusting file')) \
and not e.startswith(b('warning: Not importing')) \
and not e.startswith(b('obsolete feature not enabled'))]
setup: refactor the version string to a subset of tag+tagdist-hash+date Here is an array summarizing the mercurial version string: [A] [B] [C] [D] [1] clone tag clean => tag [2] clone hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash [3] clone tag dirty => tag+date [4] clone hash dirty => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash+date [5] archive tag clean => tag [6] archive hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash Column [A]: Mercurial built from an hg *archive* or hg *clone* working directory Column [B]: revision built has a *tag* or else default to the SHA1 *hash* Column [C]: working tree *clean* or *dirty* Column [D]: Mercurial version string Over the previous version: - row [5] did return just the node hash, now it returns the tag - prepend the latest tag and the distance to it to rows [2][4][6] - append also the date to row [3]; previously, it was just the tag - the version string is with an empty string to avoid possible TypeError exceptions during string manipulations - factorize the function to run hg commands; remove the error message as it is no more specific to the function. This scheme enables to have first part of the version strings that can be compared, whether it has been built from a tagged or untagged revision. The second part of the version adds a hash for untagged revisions and today's date if the working tree has local modifications. As the version string does not contain spaces or special characters, it should not break script parsing the 'hg version' command and should be usable for use in file names. The new code also ensure that the version string has exactly the same version string, whether it has been built from an archive or from a clone.
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if err:
printf("stderr from '%s':" % (' '.join(cmd)), file=sys.stderr)
printf(b('\n').join([b(' ') + e for e in err]), file=sys.stderr)
setup: refactor the version string to a subset of tag+tagdist-hash+date Here is an array summarizing the mercurial version string: [A] [B] [C] [D] [1] clone tag clean => tag [2] clone hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash [3] clone tag dirty => tag+date [4] clone hash dirty => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash+date [5] archive tag clean => tag [6] archive hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash Column [A]: Mercurial built from an hg *archive* or hg *clone* working directory Column [B]: revision built has a *tag* or else default to the SHA1 *hash* Column [C]: working tree *clean* or *dirty* Column [D]: Mercurial version string Over the previous version: - row [5] did return just the node hash, now it returns the tag - prepend the latest tag and the distance to it to rows [2][4][6] - append also the date to row [3]; previously, it was just the tag - the version string is with an empty string to avoid possible TypeError exceptions during string manipulations - factorize the function to run hg commands; remove the error message as it is no more specific to the function. This scheme enables to have first part of the version strings that can be compared, whether it has been built from a tagged or untagged revision. The second part of the version adds a hash for untagged revisions and today's date if the working tree has local modifications. As the version string does not contain spaces or special characters, it should not break script parsing the 'hg version' command and should be usable for use in file names. The new code also ensure that the version string has exactly the same version string, whether it has been built from an archive or from a clone.
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return ''
return out
version = ''
mercurial: implement import hook for handling C/Python modules There are a handful of modules that have both pure Python and C extension implementations. Currently, setup.py copies files from mercurial/pure/*.py to mercurial/ during the install process if C extensions are not available. This way, "import mercurial.X" will work whether C extensions are available or not. This approach has a few drawbacks. First, there aren't run-time checks verifying the C extensions are loaded when they should be. This could lead to accidental use of the slower pure Python modules. Second, the C extensions aren't compatible with PyPy and running Mercurial with PyPy requires installing Mercurial - you can't run ./hg from a source checkout. This makes developing while running PyPy somewhat difficult. This patch implements a PEP-302 import hook for finding and loading the modules with both C and Python implementations. When a module with dual implementations is requested for import, its import is handled by our import hook. The importer has a mechanism that controls what types of modules we allow to load. We call this loading behavior the "module load policy." There are 3 settings: * Only load C extensions * Only load pure Python * Try to load C and fall back to Python An environment variable allows overriding this policy at run time. This is mainly useful for developers and for performing actions against the source checkout (such as installing), which require overriding the default (strict) policy about requiring C extensions. The default mode for now is to allow both. This isn't proper and is technically backwards incompatible. However, it is necessary to implement a sane patch series that doesn't break the world during future bisections. The behavior will be corrected in future patch. We choose the main mercurial/__init__.py module for this code out of necessity: in a future world, if the custom module importer isn't registered, we'll fail to find/import certain modules when running from a pure installation. Without the magical import-time side-effects, *any* importer of mercurial.* modules would be required to call a function to register our importer. I'm not a fan of import time side effects and I initially attempted to do this. However, I was foiled by our own test harness, which has numerous `python` invoked scripts that "import mercurial" and fail because the importer isn't registered. Realizing this problem is probably present in random Python scripts that have been written over the years, I decided that sacrificing purity for backwards compatibility is necessary. Plus, if you are programming Python, "import" should probably "just work." It's worth noting that now that we have a custom module loader, it would be possible to hook up demand module proxies at this level instead of replacing __import__. We leave this work for another time, if it's even desired. This patch breaks importing in environments where Mercurial modules are loaded from a zip file (such as py2exe distributions). This will be addressed in a subsequent patch.
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# Execute hg out of this directory with a custom environment which takes care
# to not use any hgrc files and do no localization.
env = {'HGMODULEPOLICY': 'py',
'HGRCPATH': '',
'LANGUAGE': 'C'}
if 'LD_LIBRARY_PATH' in os.environ:
env['LD_LIBRARY_PATH'] = os.environ['LD_LIBRARY_PATH']
if 'SystemRoot' in os.environ:
# Copy SystemRoot into the custom environment for Python 2.6
# under Windows. Otherwise, the subprocess will fail with
# error 0xc0150004. See: http://bugs.python.org/issue3440
env['SystemRoot'] = os.environ['SystemRoot']
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if os.path.isdir('.hg'):
cmd = [sys.executable, 'hg', 'log', '-r', '.', '--template', '{tags}\n']
numerictags = [t for t in runhg(cmd, env).split() if t[0].isdigit()]
hgid = runhg([sys.executable, 'hg', 'id', '-i'], env).strip()
if numerictags: # tag(s) found
version = numerictags[-1]
if hgid.endswith('+'): # propagate the dirty status to the tag
setup: refactor the version string to a subset of tag+tagdist-hash+date Here is an array summarizing the mercurial version string: [A] [B] [C] [D] [1] clone tag clean => tag [2] clone hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash [3] clone tag dirty => tag+date [4] clone hash dirty => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash+date [5] archive tag clean => tag [6] archive hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash Column [A]: Mercurial built from an hg *archive* or hg *clone* working directory Column [B]: revision built has a *tag* or else default to the SHA1 *hash* Column [C]: working tree *clean* or *dirty* Column [D]: Mercurial version string Over the previous version: - row [5] did return just the node hash, now it returns the tag - prepend the latest tag and the distance to it to rows [2][4][6] - append also the date to row [3]; previously, it was just the tag - the version string is with an empty string to avoid possible TypeError exceptions during string manipulations - factorize the function to run hg commands; remove the error message as it is no more specific to the function. This scheme enables to have first part of the version strings that can be compared, whether it has been built from a tagged or untagged revision. The second part of the version adds a hash for untagged revisions and today's date if the working tree has local modifications. As the version string does not contain spaces or special characters, it should not break script parsing the 'hg version' command and should be usable for use in file names. The new code also ensure that the version string has exactly the same version string, whether it has been built from an archive or from a clone.
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version += '+'
else: # no tag found
ltagcmd = [sys.executable, 'hg', 'parents', '--template',
'{latesttag}']
ltag = runhg(ltagcmd, env)
changessincecmd = [sys.executable, 'hg', 'log', '-T', 'x\n', '-r',
"only(.,'%s')" % ltag]
changessince = len(runhg(changessincecmd, env).splitlines())
version = '%s+%s-%s' % (ltag, changessince, hgid)
setup: refactor the version string to a subset of tag+tagdist-hash+date Here is an array summarizing the mercurial version string: [A] [B] [C] [D] [1] clone tag clean => tag [2] clone hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash [3] clone tag dirty => tag+date [4] clone hash dirty => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash+date [5] archive tag clean => tag [6] archive hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash Column [A]: Mercurial built from an hg *archive* or hg *clone* working directory Column [B]: revision built has a *tag* or else default to the SHA1 *hash* Column [C]: working tree *clean* or *dirty* Column [D]: Mercurial version string Over the previous version: - row [5] did return just the node hash, now it returns the tag - prepend the latest tag and the distance to it to rows [2][4][6] - append also the date to row [3]; previously, it was just the tag - the version string is with an empty string to avoid possible TypeError exceptions during string manipulations - factorize the function to run hg commands; remove the error message as it is no more specific to the function. This scheme enables to have first part of the version strings that can be compared, whether it has been built from a tagged or untagged revision. The second part of the version adds a hash for untagged revisions and today's date if the working tree has local modifications. As the version string does not contain spaces or special characters, it should not break script parsing the 'hg version' command and should be usable for use in file names. The new code also ensure that the version string has exactly the same version string, whether it has been built from an archive or from a clone.
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if version.endswith('+'):
version += time.strftime('%Y%m%d')
elif os.path.exists('.hg_archival.txt'):
kw = dict([[t.strip() for t in l.split(':', 1)]
for l in open('.hg_archival.txt')])
setup: refactor the version string to a subset of tag+tagdist-hash+date Here is an array summarizing the mercurial version string: [A] [B] [C] [D] [1] clone tag clean => tag [2] clone hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash [3] clone tag dirty => tag+date [4] clone hash dirty => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash+date [5] archive tag clean => tag [6] archive hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash Column [A]: Mercurial built from an hg *archive* or hg *clone* working directory Column [B]: revision built has a *tag* or else default to the SHA1 *hash* Column [C]: working tree *clean* or *dirty* Column [D]: Mercurial version string Over the previous version: - row [5] did return just the node hash, now it returns the tag - prepend the latest tag and the distance to it to rows [2][4][6] - append also the date to row [3]; previously, it was just the tag - the version string is with an empty string to avoid possible TypeError exceptions during string manipulations - factorize the function to run hg commands; remove the error message as it is no more specific to the function. This scheme enables to have first part of the version strings that can be compared, whether it has been built from a tagged or untagged revision. The second part of the version adds a hash for untagged revisions and today's date if the working tree has local modifications. As the version string does not contain spaces or special characters, it should not break script parsing the 'hg version' command and should be usable for use in file names. The new code also ensure that the version string has exactly the same version string, whether it has been built from an archive or from a clone.
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if 'tag' in kw:
version = kw['tag']
elif 'latesttag' in kw:
if 'changessincelatesttag' in kw:
version = '%(latesttag)s+%(changessincelatesttag)s-%(node).12s' % kw
else:
version = '%(latesttag)s+%(latesttagdistance)s-%(node).12s' % kw
setup: refactor the version string to a subset of tag+tagdist-hash+date Here is an array summarizing the mercurial version string: [A] [B] [C] [D] [1] clone tag clean => tag [2] clone hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash [3] clone tag dirty => tag+date [4] clone hash dirty => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash+date [5] archive tag clean => tag [6] archive hash clean => latesttag+latesttagdistance-hash Column [A]: Mercurial built from an hg *archive* or hg *clone* working directory Column [B]: revision built has a *tag* or else default to the SHA1 *hash* Column [C]: working tree *clean* or *dirty* Column [D]: Mercurial version string Over the previous version: - row [5] did return just the node hash, now it returns the tag - prepend the latest tag and the distance to it to rows [2][4][6] - append also the date to row [3]; previously, it was just the tag - the version string is with an empty string to avoid possible TypeError exceptions during string manipulations - factorize the function to run hg commands; remove the error message as it is no more specific to the function. This scheme enables to have first part of the version strings that can be compared, whether it has been built from a tagged or untagged revision. The second part of the version adds a hash for untagged revisions and today's date if the working tree has local modifications. As the version string does not contain spaces or special characters, it should not break script parsing the 'hg version' command and should be usable for use in file names. The new code also ensure that the version string has exactly the same version string, whether it has been built from an archive or from a clone.
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else:
version = kw.get('node', '')[:12]
if version:
f = open("mercurial/__version__.py", "w")
f.write('# this file is autogenerated by setup.py\n')
f.write('version = "%s"\n' % version)
f.close()
try:
from mercurial import __version__
version = __version__.version
except ImportError:
version = 'unknown'
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class hgbuild(build):
# Insert hgbuildmo first so that files in mercurial/locale/ are found
# when build_py is run next.
sub_commands = [('build_mo', None),
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# We also need build_ext before build_py. Otherwise, when 2to3 is
# called (in build_py), it will not find osutil & friends,
# thinking that those modules are global and, consequently, making
# a mess, now that all module imports are global.
('build_ext', build.has_ext_modules),
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] + build.sub_commands
class hgbuildmo(build):
description = "build translations (.mo files)"
def run(self):
if not find_executable('msgfmt'):
self.warn("could not find msgfmt executable, no translations "
"will be built")
return
podir = 'i18n'
if not os.path.isdir(podir):
self.warn("could not find %s/ directory" % podir)
return
join = os.path.join
for po in os.listdir(podir):
if not po.endswith('.po'):
continue
pofile = join(podir, po)
modir = join('locale', po[:-3], 'LC_MESSAGES')
mofile = join(modir, 'hg.mo')
mobuildfile = join('mercurial', mofile)
cmd = ['msgfmt', '-v', '-o', mobuildfile, pofile]
if sys.platform != 'sunos5':
# msgfmt on Solaris does not know about -c
cmd.append('-c')
self.mkpath(join('mercurial', modir))
self.make_file([pofile], mobuildfile, spawn, (cmd,))
class hgdist(Distribution):
pure = ispypy
global_options = Distribution.global_options + \
[('pure', None, "use pure (slow) Python "
"code instead of C extensions"),
('c2to3', None, "(experimental!) convert "
"code with 2to3"),
]
def has_ext_modules(self):
# self.ext_modules is emptied in hgbuildpy.finalize_options which is
# too late for some cases
return not self.pure and Distribution.has_ext_modules(self)
class hgbuildext(build_ext):
def build_extension(self, ext):
try:
build_ext.build_extension(self, ext)
except CCompilerError:
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if not getattr(ext, 'optional', False):
raise
log.warn("Failed to build optional extension '%s' (skipping)",
ext.name)
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class hgbuildpy(build_py):
if convert2to3:
fixer_names = sorted(set(getfixers("lib2to3.fixes") +
getfixers("hgfixes")))
def finalize_options(self):
build_py.finalize_options(self)
if self.distribution.pure:
if self.py_modules is None:
self.py_modules = []
for ext in self.distribution.ext_modules:
if ext.name.startswith("mercurial."):
self.py_modules.append("mercurial.pure.%s" % ext.name[10:])
self.distribution.ext_modules = []
else:
h = os.path.join(get_python_inc(), 'Python.h')
if not os.path.exists(h):
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raise SystemExit('Python headers are required to build '
'Mercurial but weren\'t found in %s' % h)
def find_modules(self):
modules = build_py.find_modules(self)
for module in modules:
if module[0] == "mercurial.pure":
if module[1] != "__init__":
yield ("mercurial", module[1], module[2])
else:
yield module
class buildhgextindex(Command):
description = 'generate prebuilt index of hgext (for frozen package)'
user_options = []
_indexfilename = 'hgext/__index__.py'
def initialize_options(self):
pass
def finalize_options(self):
pass
def run(self):
if os.path.exists(self._indexfilename):
f = open(self._indexfilename, 'w')
f.write('# empty\n')
f.close()
# here no extension enabled, disabled() lists up everything
code = ('import pprint; from mercurial import extensions; '
'pprint.pprint(extensions.disabled())')
out, err = runcmd([sys.executable, '-c', code], env)
if err:
raise DistutilsExecError(err)
f = open(self._indexfilename, 'w')
f.write('# this file is autogenerated by setup.py\n')
f.write('docs = ')
f.write(out)
f.close()
class buildhgexe(build_ext):
description = 'compile hg.exe from mercurial/exewrapper.c'
def build_extensions(self):
if os.name != 'nt':
return
if isinstance(self.compiler, HackedMingw32CCompiler):
self.compiler.compiler_so = self.compiler.compiler # no -mdll
self.compiler.dll_libraries = [] # no -lmsrvc90
exewrapper: adapt for legacy HackableMercurial We give up using CPython's PythonXX.lib import libraries (and Python.h), and now "manually" call the LoadLibrary() / GetProcAddress() Windows API's instead. If there is a "hg-python" subdirectory (the canonical directory name for HackableMercurial's private Python copy) next to the hg.exe, we load the pythonXX.dll from there (feeding an absolute path to LoadLibrary) and we set Py_SetPythonHome() to that directory, so that the Python libraries are used from there as well. If there is no "hg-python" subdir found next to the hg.exe, we do not feed an absolute path to LoadLibrary. This continues to allow to find a globally installed Python DLL, as before this change - that is, without having to edit, delete, rename, or configure anything. Note that the hg.exe built is still bound to a *specific* major version of the pythonXX.dll (e.g. python27.dll). What version it is, is inferred from the version of the python interpreter that was used when calling setup.py. For example C:\python27_x86\python.exe setup.py build_hgexe -i --compiler=mingw32 builds a hg.exe (using the mingw32 tool chain) bound to (x86) Python 2.7. And C:\python27_x86\python.exe setup.py build_hgexe -i builds the same using the Microsoft C compiler/linker. (Note that the Microsoft toolchain combined with x64 CPython can be used to build an x64 hg.exe.) setup.py is changed to write the name of the pythonlib into the generated header file "mercurial/hgpythonlib.h", which is #included by exewrapper.c. For a Python 2.7 build, it for example contains: #define HGPYTHONLIB "python27" exewrapper.c then uses HGPYTHONLIB for the name of the Python dll to load. We don't want to track mercurial/hgpythonlib.h, so we add it to .hgignore.
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hv = sys.hexversion
pythonlib = 'python%d%d' % (hv >> 24, (hv >> 16) & 0xff)
f = open('mercurial/hgpythonlib.h', 'wb')
f.write('/* this file is autogenerated by setup.py */\n')
f.write('#define HGPYTHONLIB "%s"\n' % pythonlib)
f.close()
objects = self.compiler.compile(['mercurial/exewrapper.c'],
output_dir=self.build_temp)
dir = os.path.dirname(self.get_ext_fullpath('dummy'))
target = os.path.join(dir, 'hg')
self.compiler.link_executable(objects, target,
exewrapper: adapt for legacy HackableMercurial We give up using CPython's PythonXX.lib import libraries (and Python.h), and now "manually" call the LoadLibrary() / GetProcAddress() Windows API's instead. If there is a "hg-python" subdirectory (the canonical directory name for HackableMercurial's private Python copy) next to the hg.exe, we load the pythonXX.dll from there (feeding an absolute path to LoadLibrary) and we set Py_SetPythonHome() to that directory, so that the Python libraries are used from there as well. If there is no "hg-python" subdir found next to the hg.exe, we do not feed an absolute path to LoadLibrary. This continues to allow to find a globally installed Python DLL, as before this change - that is, without having to edit, delete, rename, or configure anything. Note that the hg.exe built is still bound to a *specific* major version of the pythonXX.dll (e.g. python27.dll). What version it is, is inferred from the version of the python interpreter that was used when calling setup.py. For example C:\python27_x86\python.exe setup.py build_hgexe -i --compiler=mingw32 builds a hg.exe (using the mingw32 tool chain) bound to (x86) Python 2.7. And C:\python27_x86\python.exe setup.py build_hgexe -i builds the same using the Microsoft C compiler/linker. (Note that the Microsoft toolchain combined with x64 CPython can be used to build an x64 hg.exe.) setup.py is changed to write the name of the pythonlib into the generated header file "mercurial/hgpythonlib.h", which is #included by exewrapper.c. For a Python 2.7 build, it for example contains: #define HGPYTHONLIB "python27" exewrapper.c then uses HGPYTHONLIB for the name of the Python dll to load. We don't want to track mercurial/hgpythonlib.h, so we add it to .hgignore.
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libraries=[],
output_dir=self.build_temp)
class hginstalllib(install_lib):
'''
This is a specialization of install_lib that replaces the copy_file used
there so that it supports setting the mode of files after copying them,
instead of just preserving the mode that the files originally had. If your
system has a umask of something like 027, preserving the permissions when
copying will lead to a broken install.
Note that just passing keep_permissions=False to copy_file would be
insufficient, as it might still be applying a umask.
'''
def run(self):
realcopyfile = file_util.copy_file
def copyfileandsetmode(*args, **kwargs):
src, dst = args[0], args[1]
dst, copied = realcopyfile(*args, **kwargs)
if copied:
st = os.stat(src)
# Persist executable bit (apply it to group and other if user
# has it)
if st[stat.ST_MODE] & stat.S_IXUSR:
setmode = int('0755', 8)
else:
setmode = int('0644', 8)
m = stat.S_IMODE(st[stat.ST_MODE])
m = (m & ~int('0777', 8)) | setmode
os.chmod(dst, m)
file_util.copy_file = copyfileandsetmode
try:
install_lib.run(self)
finally:
file_util.copy_file = realcopyfile
class hginstallscripts(install_scripts):
'''
This is a specialization of install_scripts that replaces the @LIBDIR@ with
the configured directory for modules. If possible, the path is made relative
to the directory for scripts.
'''
def initialize_options(self):
install_scripts.initialize_options(self)
self.install_lib = None
def finalize_options(self):
install_scripts.finalize_options(self)
self.set_undefined_options('install',
('install_lib', 'install_lib'))
def run(self):
install_scripts.run(self)
if (os.path.splitdrive(self.install_dir)[0] !=
os.path.splitdrive(self.install_lib)[0]):
# can't make relative paths from one drive to another, so use an
# absolute path instead
libdir = self.install_lib
else:
common = os.path.commonprefix((self.install_dir, self.install_lib))
rest = self.install_dir[len(common):]
uplevel = len([n for n in os.path.split(rest) if n])
libdir = uplevel * ('..' + os.sep) + self.install_lib[len(common):]
for outfile in self.outfiles:
fp = open(outfile, 'rb')
data = fp.read()
fp.close()
# skip binary files
if b('\0') in data:
continue
data = data.replace(b('@LIBDIR@'), libdir.encode(libdir_escape))
fp = open(outfile, 'wb')
fp.write(data)
fp.close()
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cmdclass = {'build': hgbuild,
'build_mo': hgbuildmo,
'build_ext': hgbuildext,
'build_py': hgbuildpy,
'build_hgextindex': buildhgextindex,
'install_lib': hginstalllib,
'install_scripts': hginstallscripts,
'build_hgexe': buildhgexe,
}
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packages = ['mercurial', 'mercurial.hgweb', 'mercurial.httpclient',
'hgext', 'hgext.convert', 'hgext.highlight', 'hgext.zeroconf',
'hgext.largefiles']
common_depends = ['mercurial/util.h']
osutil_ldflags = []
if sys.platform == 'darwin':
osutil_ldflags += ['-framework', 'ApplicationServices']
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extmodules = [
Extension('mercurial.base85', ['mercurial/base85.c'],
depends=common_depends),
Extension('mercurial.bdiff', ['mercurial/bdiff.c'],
depends=common_depends),
Extension('mercurial.diffhelpers', ['mercurial/diffhelpers.c'],
depends=common_depends),
Extension('mercurial.mpatch', ['mercurial/mpatch.c'],
depends=common_depends),
Extension('mercurial.parsers', ['mercurial/dirs.c',
'mercurial/manifest.c',
'mercurial/parsers.c',
'mercurial/pathencode.c'],
depends=common_depends),
Extension('mercurial.osutil', ['mercurial/osutil.c'],
extra_link_args=osutil_ldflags,
depends=common_depends),
]
try:
from distutils import cygwinccompiler
# the -mno-cygwin option has been deprecated for years
compiler = cygwinccompiler.Mingw32CCompiler
class HackedMingw32CCompiler(cygwinccompiler.Mingw32CCompiler):
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
compiler.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs)
for i in 'compiler compiler_so linker_exe linker_so'.split():
try:
getattr(self, i).remove('-mno-cygwin')
except ValueError:
pass
cygwinccompiler.Mingw32CCompiler = HackedMingw32CCompiler
except ImportError:
# the cygwinccompiler package is not available on some Python
# distributions like the ones from the optware project for Synology
# DiskStation boxes
class HackedMingw32CCompiler(object):
pass
packagedata = {'mercurial': ['locale/*/LC_MESSAGES/hg.mo',
'help/*.txt',
'default.d/*.rc',
'dummycert.pem']}
def ordinarypath(p):
return p and p[0] != '.' and p[-1] != '~'
2010-01-25 09:05:27 +03:00
for root in ('templates',):
for curdir, dirs, files in os.walk(os.path.join('mercurial', root)):
curdir = curdir.split(os.sep, 1)[1]
dirs[:] = filter(ordinarypath, dirs)
for f in filter(ordinarypath, files):
f = os.path.join(curdir, f)
packagedata['mercurial'].append(f)
datafiles = []
setupversion = version
extra = {}
if py2exeloaded:
extra['console'] = [
{'script':'hg',
'copyright':'Copyright (C) 2005-2015 Matt Mackall and others',
'product_version':version}]
# sub command of 'build' because 'py2exe' does not handle sub_commands
build.sub_commands.insert(0, ('build_hgextindex', None))
# put dlls in sub directory so that they won't pollute PATH
extra['zipfile'] = 'lib/library.zip'
if os.name == 'nt':
# Windows binary file versions for exe/dll files must have the
# form W.X.Y.Z, where W,X,Y,Z are numbers in the range 0..65535
setupversion = version.split('+', 1)[0]
if sys.platform == 'darwin' and os.path.exists('/usr/bin/xcodebuild'):
version = runcmd(['/usr/bin/xcodebuild', '-version'], {})[0].splitlines()
if version:
version = version[0]
if sys.version_info[0] == 3:
version = version.decode('utf-8')
xcode4 = (version.startswith('Xcode') and
StrictVersion(version.split()[1]) >= StrictVersion('4.0'))
xcode51 = re.match(r'^Xcode\s+5\.1', version) is not None
else:
# xcodebuild returns empty on OS X Lion with XCode 4.3 not
# installed, but instead with only command-line tools. Assume
# that only happens on >= Lion, thus no PPC support.
xcode4 = True
xcode51 = False
# XCode 4.0 dropped support for ppc architecture, which is hardcoded in
# distutils.sysconfig
if xcode4:
os.environ['ARCHFLAGS'] = ''
# XCode 5.1 changes clang such that it now fails to compile if the
# -mno-fused-madd flag is passed, but the version of Python shipped with
# OS X 10.9 Mavericks includes this flag. This causes problems in all
# C extension modules, and a bug has been filed upstream at
# http://bugs.python.org/issue21244. We also need to patch this here
# so Mercurial can continue to compile in the meantime.
if xcode51:
cflags = get_config_var('CFLAGS')
if cflags and re.search(r'-mno-fused-madd\b', cflags) is not None:
os.environ['CFLAGS'] = (
os.environ.get('CFLAGS', '') + ' -Qunused-arguments')
setup(name='mercurial',
version=setupversion,
author='Matt Mackall and many others',
author_email='mercurial@selenic.com',
2015-09-30 23:43:49 +03:00
url='https://mercurial-scm.org/',
download_url='https://mercurial-scm.org/release/',
description=('Fast scalable distributed SCM (revision control, version '
'control) system'),
long_description=('Mercurial is a distributed SCM tool written in Python.'
' It is used by a number of large projects that require'
' fast, reliable distributed revision control, such as '
'Mozilla.'),
license='GNU GPLv2 or any later version',
classifiers=[
'Development Status :: 6 - Mature',
'Environment :: Console',
'Intended Audience :: Developers',
'Intended Audience :: System Administrators',
'License :: OSI Approved :: GNU General Public License (GPL)',
'Natural Language :: Danish',
'Natural Language :: English',
'Natural Language :: German',
'Natural Language :: Italian',
'Natural Language :: Japanese',
'Natural Language :: Portuguese (Brazilian)',
'Operating System :: Microsoft :: Windows',
'Operating System :: OS Independent',
'Operating System :: POSIX',
'Programming Language :: C',
'Programming Language :: Python',
'Topic :: Software Development :: Version Control',
],
2008-04-11 01:07:54 +04:00
scripts=scripts,
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packages=packages,
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ext_modules=extmodules,
data_files=datafiles,
package_data=packagedata,
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cmdclass=cmdclass,
distclass=hgdist,
options={'py2exe': {'packages': ['hgext', 'email']},
'bdist_mpkg': {'zipdist': False,
'license': 'COPYING',
'readme': 'contrib/macosx/Readme.html',
'welcome': 'contrib/macosx/Welcome.html',
},
},
2006-12-15 10:17:04 +03:00
**extra)