diff options
author | Greg Ward <gward@python.net> | 2000-03-18 15:11:50 (GMT) |
---|---|---|
committer | Greg Ward <gward@python.net> | 2000-03-18 15:11:50 (GMT) |
commit | 295765630acaacaebec1f13988b1f3277287b4fc (patch) | |
tree | b88eb54f4af481a646a4e9d8075266674aeaf162 /Doc/inst | |
parent | bae57a88a6e34fa25ba0a5812171a407dc4fc4b1 (diff) | |
download | cpython-295765630acaacaebec1f13988b1f3277287b4fc.zip cpython-295765630acaacaebec1f13988b1f3277287b4fc.tar.gz cpython-295765630acaacaebec1f13988b1f3277287b4fc.tar.bz2 |
Third attempt at documenting an installation scheme; this one feels like
it could work--reasonably short and straightforward to document, but
flexible enough that it will be able to handle more than just modules
and extensions in the future.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/inst')
-rw-r--r-- | Doc/inst/inst.tex | 493 |
1 files changed, 301 insertions, 192 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/inst/inst.tex b/Doc/inst/inst.tex index bfc1bcf..c32fb06 100644 --- a/Doc/inst/inst.tex +++ b/Doc/inst/inst.tex @@ -30,12 +30,12 @@ \newcommand{\option}[1]{\textsf{\small{#1}}} \newcommand{\filevar}[1]{{\textsl{\filenq{#1}}}} \newcommand{\homefile}[1]{\file{\tilde/#1}} -\newcommand{\comingsoon}{\emph{Coming soon$\ \ldots$}} +\newcommand{\comingsoon}{\emph{Coming soon...}} % And how about these? Very handy for writing pathnames (tilde for % Unix, backslash for DOS/Windows). \renewcommand{\tilde}{\raisebox{-0.5ex}{\symbol{126}}} -\newcommand{\bslash}{\symbol{92}} +\newcommand{\bslash}{\symbol{92}} % XXX only works in tt fonts! \begin{document} @@ -52,8 +52,6 @@ \section{Introduction} \label{sec:intro} -\comingsoon - \subsection{The new way: Distutils} \label{sec:new-way} @@ -69,9 +67,10 @@ -\section{Normal Build and Install} +\section{Standard Build and Install} \label{sec:normal-install} + % This will cover: % * setup.py install (the usual thing) % * setup.py build (if you like doing things one-at-a-time) @@ -82,229 +81,339 @@ \comingsoon -\section{Custom Extension Building} -\label{sec:custom-ext} - -% This will cover: -% * normal extension build -- stress that it doesn't matter, you -% do the same thing whether there are extensions or not -% * what you might want to customize: compiler and compiler -% flags (warn of the dangers); per-file compiler flags -% (not handled yet!) -% * when things go wrong: I don't know! (and I don't know what -% to do, either!) -\comingsoon - -\section{Custom Installation (\UNIX)} -\label{sec:custom-install-unix} - -% XXX probably should banish mentions of Windows here to the -% separate "Non-standard installation (Windows)" section. - -A \dfn{custom installation} is where you install modules to a location -that's not in Python's default module search path. There are a couple -of reasons you might want to do this; the most typical is simply that -you don't have permission to write to the standard Python library -directory. Or, even if you do have write permission to the standard -library, you might wish to install a module distribution into a -non-standard place for testing or experimentation. (This is especially -useful when upgrading an existing module distribution: you might want to -make sure that your existing scripts continue to work as before, and -only then install the upgrade ``for real.'') - -(XXX terminology: I keep saying ``standard Python library directory'' -when I really mean ``the site-packages directory under the standard -Python library directory''. Is there a better way?) - -In any event, you can easily install to non-standard locations with a -couple of options to the \command{install} command: - -\begin{tableii}{ll}{option}{Option}{Description} - \lineii {install-lib} - {install directory for modules from pure Python distributions} - \lineii {install-platlib} - {install directory for modules from distributions with extensions} - \lineii {prefix} - {override \code{sys.prefix}: - point to an alternate Python installation} - \lineii {exec-prefix} - {override \code{sys.exec_prefix}: - point to an alternate Python installation} - \lineii {install-path} - {extra sub-path to append to \option{install-lib} (for - non-package-ized distributions)} -\end{tableii} - -Of these, the most commonly used will probably be \option{install-lib} -and \option{install-platlib}: you use them to point module installation -right at a particular directory. (You'll only need -\option{install-platlib} if you maintain a multi-platform installation, -which is often done on \UNIX{} networks with different architectures and -operating systems.) The two prefix options are intended for the -somewhat arcane purpose of installing modules into a different Python -installation than the Python binary used to perform the installation. -The last, \option{install-path}, is mainly used for module developers to -ensure that their module will go into a directory of their own, but it -may occasionally be useful to you as a module installer. - - -\subsection{Directly specifying installation directories} -\label{sec:install-dirs} - -The most common type of custom module installation is where you maintain -a personal stash of Python modules under your home directory, say in -\homefile{lib/python}. If you only care about a single platform -there, then you only need to specify the \option{install-lib} option and -can forget about \option{install-platlib}: -\begin{verbatim} -python setup.py install --install-lib=~/lib/python -\end{verbatim} -You can, of course, supply whatever directory you like in place of -\homefile{lib/python}. More importantly, you can specify this -directory permanently in your personal configuration file (XXX -filename?): +% takes eight args (four pairs): +% pure module distribution base + directory +% non-pure module distribution base + directory +% script base + directory +% data base + directory +% ...and will no doubt take more args in future! +\newcommand{\installscheme}[8] + {\begin{tableiii}{lll}{textrm} + {Type of file} + {Installation Directory} + {Override option} + \lineiii{pure module distribution} + {\filevar{#1}\filenq{#2}} + {\option{install-purelib}} + \lineiii{non-pure module distribution} + {\filevar{#3}\filenq{#4}} + {\option{install-platlib}} + \lineiii{scripts} + {\filevar{#5}\filenq{#6}} + {\option{install-scripts}} + \lineiii{data} + {\filevar{#7}\filenq{#8}} + {\option{install-data}} + \end{tableiii}} + + + + +\section{Alternate Installation} +\label{sec:alt-install} + +Often, it is necessary or desirable to install modules to a location +other than the standard location for third-party Python modules. For +example, on a Unix system you might not have permission to write to the +standard third-party module directory. Or you might wish to try out a +module before making it a standard part of your local Python +installation; this is especially true when upgrading a distribution +already present: you want to make sure your existing base of scripts +still works with the new version before actually upgrading. + +The Distutils \command{install} command is designed to make installing +module distributions to an alternate location simple and painless. The +basic idea is that you supply a base directory for the installation, and +the \command{install} command picks a set of directories (called an +\emph{installation scheme}) under this base directory in which to +install files. The details differ across platforms, so read whichever +of the following section applies to you. + + +\subsection{Alternate installation: Unix (the home scheme)} +\label{sec:alt-unix-prefix} + +Under Unix, there are two ways to perform an alternate installation. +The ``prefix scheme'' is similar to how alternate installation works +under Windows and Mac OS, but is not necessarily the most useful way to +maintain a personal Python library. Hence, we document the more +convenient and commonly useful ``home scheme'' first. + +The idea behind the ``home scheme'' is that you are building and +maintaining a personal stash of Python modules, probably under your home +directory. Installing a new module distribution is as simple as \begin{verbatim} -[install] -install-lib=~/lib/python +python setup.py install --home \end{verbatim} -Note that use of shell-style tilde and environment variable expansion is -supported both on the command line and in configuration files. (See -section~\ref{sec:config-files} for more information on configuration -files.) - -Of course, in order for this personal Python library scheme to work, you -have to ensure that \homefile{lib/python} is in \code{sys.path} when you -run Python. The easiest way to do this under \UNIX{} is to add it to -your \code{PYTHONPATH} environment variable when you login. For -example, if you use a Bourne shell derivative such as bash, zsh, or ksh, -add the following to your \homefile{.profile} (or \homefile{.bashrc}, or -\homefile{.zshenv}, depending on your shell and personal preferences): +or \begin{verbatim} -export PYTHONPATH=$HOME/lib/python +python setup.py install --home=<dir> \end{verbatim} -If you use a csh-derivative such as tcsh, add the following to your -\homefile{.cshrc}: +where you can supply any directory you like for the \option{home} +option. If you don't supply a directory (as in the first example +above), the \command{install} command uses the \code{HOME} environment +variable (or your official home directory as supplied by the password +file, if \code{HOME} is not defined). + +The \option{home} option defines the installation base directory. Files +are installed to the following directories under the installation base +as follows: +\installscheme{home}{/lib/python} + {home}{/lib/python} + {home}{/bin} + {home}{/share} + +\subsection{Alternate installation: Unix (the prefix scheme)} +\label{sec:alt-unix-home} + +The ``prefix scheme'' is useful when you wish to use one Python +installation to perform the build/install (i.e., to run the setup +script), but install modules into the third-party module directory of a +different Python installation (or something that looks like a different +Python installation). If this sounds a trifle unusual, it is---that's +why the ``home scheme'' comes first. However, there are at least two +known cases where the prefix scheme will be useful. + +First, consider that many Linux distribution put Python in \file{/usr}, +rather than the more traditional \file{/usr/local}. This is entirely +appropriate, since in those cases Python is part of ``the system'' +rather than a local add-on. However, if you are installing Python +modules from source, you probably want them to go in +\file{/usr/local/lib/python1.\filevar{X}} rather than +\file{/usr/lib/python1.\filevar{X}}. This can be done with \begin{verbatim} -setenv PYTHONPATH $HOME/lib/python +/usr/bin/python setup.py install --prefix=/usr/local \end{verbatim} -If you use multiple platforms (architectures and/or operating systems) -from the same home directory, then you probably want to maintain a -multi-platform personal Python library. One possible scheme is to put -platform-neutral (pure Python) distributions in \homefile{lib/python} -and platform-specific distributions (any that containe extension -modules) in \homefile{lib/python.\filevar{plat}}: +Another possibility is a network filesystem where the name used to write +to a remote directory is different from the name used to read it: for +example, the Python interpreter accessed as \file{/usr/local/bin/python} +might search for modules in \file{/usr/local/lib/python1.\filevar{X}}, +but those modules would have to be installed to, say, +\file{/mnt/\filevar{@server}/export/lib/python1.\filevar{X}}. This +could be done with \begin{verbatim} -python setup.py install --install-lib=~/lib/python \ - --install-lib-plat=~/lib/python.plat \ +/usr/local/bin/python setup.py install --prefix=/mnt/@server/export \end{verbatim} -On the command line, of course, you can just type in the current -platform in place of \filevar{plat}: \file{linux-x86}, -\file{solaris-sparc}, \file{linux-alpha}, whatever. That's not an -option in a configuration file, though---the same file has to cover all -platforms for which you maintain a personal Python library. So the -Distutils provide a \code{PLAT} environment variable which will expand -to the current platform name: + +In either case, the \option{prefix} option defines the installation +base, and the \option{exec-prefix} option defines the platform-specific +installation base, which is used for platform-specific files. +(Currently, this just means non-pure module distributions, but could be +expanded to C libraries, binary executables, etc.) If +\option{exec-prefix} is not supplied, it defaults to \option{prefix}. +Files are installed as follows: + +\installscheme{prefix}{/lib/python1.\filevar{X}/site-packages} + {exec-prefix}{/lib/python1.\filevar{X}/site-packages} + {prefix}{/bin} + {prefix}{/share} + +There is no requirement that \option{prefix} or \option{exec-prefix} +actually point to an alternate Python installation; if the directories +listed above do not already exist, they are created at installation +time. + +Incidentally, the real reason the prefix scheme is important is simply +that a standard Unix installation uses the prefix scheme, but with +\option{prefix} and \option{exec-prefix} supplied by Python itself (as +\code{sys.prefix} and \code{sys.exec\_prefix}). Thus, you might think +you'll never use the prefix scheme, but every time you run \code{python + setup.py install} without any other options, you're using it. + +Note that installing extensions to an alternate Python installation has +no effect on how those extensions are built: in particular, the Python +header files (\file{Python.h} and friends) installed with the Python +interpreter used to run the setup script will be used in compiling +extensions. It is your responsibility to ensure that the interpreter +used to run extensions installed in this way is compatibile with the +interpreter used to build them. The best way to ensure this is that the +two interpreters are the same version of Python (possibly different +builds, or possibly copies of the same build). (Of course, if your +\option{prefix} and \option{exec-prefix} don't even point to an +alternate Python installation, this is immaterial.) + + +\subsection{Alternate installation: Windows} +\label{sec:alt-windows} + +Since Windows has no conception of a user's home directory, and since +the standard Python installation under Windows is simpler than that +under Unix, there's no point in having separate \option{prefix} and +\option{home} options. Just use the \option{prefix} option to specify +a base directory, e.g. \begin{verbatim} -[install] -install-lib=~/lib/python -install-platlib=~/lib/python.$PLAT +python setup.py install --base="\Temp\Python" \end{verbatim} -(If \code{PLAT} is already defined in your environment, the Distutils -won't override it: that way you can maintain consistency with other -applications that look for a \code{PLAT} variable; this is especially -useful when you refer to \code{PLAT} in your login scripts, as explained -below.) - -(XXX danger danger! this environment-variable-in-config-file thing is -frighteningly make-like: is there any way to avoid it?) - -Again, you have to make sure that your personal Python library appears -in \code{sys.path}, and again the easiest way to do this is to set -\code{PYTHONPATH} in your login scripts. This time, though, you have to -be sure to set \emph{both} directories (platform-neutral and the current -platform-specific directory). For Bourne-shell derivatives: +to install modules to the \file{\bslash{}Temp} directory on the current +drive. + +The installation base is defined by the \option{prefix} option; the +\option{exec-prefix} option is not supported under Windows. Files are +installed as follows: +\installscheme{prefix}{} + {prefix}{} + {prefix}{\bslash{}Scripts} + {prefix}{\bslash{}Data} + + +\subsection{Alternate installation: Mac OS} +\label{sec:alt-macos} + +Like Windows, Mac OS has no notion of home directories (or even of +users), and a fairly simple standard Python installation. Thus, only a +\option{prefix} option is needed. It defines the installation base, and +files are installed under it as follows: + +XXX how do MacPython users run the interpreter with command-line args? + +\installscheme{prefix}{:Lib} + {prefix}{:Mac:PlugIns} + {prefix}{} + {prefix}{} + +XXX Corran Webster says: ``Modules are found in either \file{:Lib} or +\file{:Mac:Lib}, while extensions usually go in +\file{:Mac:PlugIns}''---does this mean that non-pure distributions should +be divided between \file{:Mac:PlugIns} and \file{:Mac:Lib}? If so, that +changes the granularity at which we care about modules: instead of +``modules from pure distributions'' and ``modules from non-pure +distributions'', it becomes ``modules from pure distributions'', +``Python modules from non-pure distributions'', and ``extensions from +non-pure distributions''. Is this necessary?!? + + +\section{Custom Installation} +\label{sec:custom-install} + +Sometimes, the alternate installation schemes described in +section~\ref{sec:alt-install} just don't do what you want. You might +want to tweak just one or two directories while keeping everything under +the same base directory, or you might want to completely redefine the +installation scheme. In either case, you're creating a \emph{custom + installation scheme}. + +You probably noticed the column of ``override options'' in the tables +describing the alternate installation schemes above. Those options are +how you define a custom installation scheme. These override options can +be relative, absolute, or explicitly defined in terms of one of the +installation base directories. (There are two installation base +directories, and they are normally the same---they only differ when you +use the Unix ``prefix scheme'' and supply different \option{prefix} and +\option{exec-prefix} options.) + +For example, say you're installing a module distribution to your home +directory under Unix---but you want scripts to go in +\file{\tilde/scripts} rather than \file{\tilde/bin}. As you might +expect, you can override this directory with the +\option{install-scripts} option; in this case, it makes most sense to +supply a relative path, which will be interpreted relative to the +installation base directory (your home directory, in this case): \begin{verbatim} -export PYTHONPATH=$HOME/lib/python:$HOME/lib/python.$PLAT +python setup.py install --home --install-scripts=scripts \end{verbatim} -and for csh-derivatives: + +Another Unix example: suppose your Python installation was built and +installed with a prefix of \file{/usr/local/python}, so under a standard +installation scripts will wind up in \file{/usr/local/python/bin}. If +you want them in \file{/usr/local/bin} instead, you would supply this +absolute directory for the \option{install-scripts} option: \begin{verbatim} -setenv PYTHONPATH $HOME/lib/python:$HOME/lib/python.$PLAT +python setup.py install --install-scripts=/usr/local/bin \end{verbatim} -Note that it is your responsibility to set the \code{PATH} environment -variable (unless your system administrator has kindly taken care of it -in the system-wide login scripts, which is a wise thing to do on -multi-platform networks). One way to do this is with the \code{uname} -command: +(This performs an installation using the ``prefix scheme,'' where the +prefix is whatever your Python interpreter was installed with--- +\file{/usr/local/python} in this case.) + +If you maintain Python on Windows, you might want third-party modules to +live in a subdirectory of \filevar{prefix}, rather than right in +\filevar{prefix} itself. This is almost as easy as customizing the +script installation directory---you just have to remember that there are +two types of modules to worry about, pure modules and non-pure modules +(i.e., modules from a non-pure distribution). For example: \begin{verbatim} -export PLAT=`uname -sm | tr 'A-Z ' 'a-z-'` +python setup.py install --install-purelib=Site --install-platlib=Site \end{verbatim} -(XXX check that this works well on other Unices: on Linux, \code{-m} -becomes eg. \code{i586}, which is not the \emph{machine} but the -\emph{processor}. Arggh!) - -Of course, there are more reasons to do custom installation than -maintaining a personal Python library. Even if you have write access to -the system-wide directories for third-party modules -(\file{\filevar{prefix}/lib/python1.\filevar{x}/site-packages} and -\file{\filevar{exec-prefix}/lib/python1.\filevar{x}/site-packages}), you -might want to install new module distributions---especially upgrades of -modules that are crucial to your local infrastructure---to a temporary -location, in order to test them before installing them ``for real.'' -This is fundamentally no different from installing to your home -directory, except that you probably won't bother to set -\code{PYTHONPATH} permanently. For example, to install a module -distribution to \file{/tmp/pylib}: +The specified installation directories are relative to \filevar{prefix}. +Of course, you also have to ensure that these directories are in +Python's module search path, e.g. by putting a \file{.pth} file in +\filevar{prefix} (XXX should have a section describing .pth files and +cross-ref it here). + +If you want to define an entire installation scheme, you just have to +supply all of the installation directory options. The recommended way +to do this is to supply relative paths; for example, if want to maintain +all Python module-related files under \file{python} in your home +directory, and you want a separate directory for each platform that you +use your home directory from, you might define the following +installation scheme: \begin{verbatim} -python setup.py install --install-lib=/tmp/pylib +python setup.py install --home \ + --install-purelib=python/lib \ + --install-platlib=python/lib.$PLAT \ + --install-scripts=python/scripts + --install-data=python/data \end{verbatim} -Then, of course, you'll want to run some script that depends on these -modules to make sure that they still work with your installed base of -code: +or, equivalently, \begin{verbatim} -env PYTHONPATH=/tmp/pylib python /usr/local/bin/crucial_script ... +python setup.py install --home=~/python \ + --install-purelib=lib \ + --install-platlib=lib.$PLAT \ + --install-scripts=scripts + --install-data=data \end{verbatim} - -Of course, you can do this temporary installation with separate -\option{install-lib} and \option{install-platlib} options. If you're -doing this to a network-wide directory, not \file{/tmp}, this might be -essential. As you might have guessed, it's not too hard: +\code{\$PLAT} is not (necessarily) an environment variable---it will be +expanded by the Distutils as it parses your command line options (just +as it does when parsing your configuration file(s)). + +Obviously, specifying the entire installation scheme every time you +install a new module distribution would be very tedious. Thus, you can +put these options into your Distutils config file (see +section~\ref{sec:config-files}): \begin{verbatim} -python setup.py install --install-lib=/scratch/pylib \ - --install-platlib=/scratch/pylib.plat +[install] +install-base=$HOME +install-purelib=python/lib +install-platlib=python/lib.$PLAT +install-scripts=python/scripts +install-data=python/data \end{verbatim} -and then, testing your crucial scripts on multiple platforms: +or, equivalently, \begin{verbatim} -env PYTHONPATH=/scratch/pylib:/scratch/pylib.plat \ - python /usr/local/bin/crucial_script ... +[install] +install-base=$HOME/python +install-purelib=lib +install-platlib=lib.$PLAT +install-scripts=scripts +install-data=data \end{verbatim} - -However you do the testing, once you're satisfied that the new version -doesn't break anything, you can install it to the system-wide -third-party module directory as usual: +Note that these two are \emph{not} equivalent if you supply a different +installation base directory when you run the setup script. For example, \begin{verbatim} -python setup.py install +python setup.py --install-base=/tmp \end{verbatim} +would install pure modules to \filevar{/tmp/python/lib} in the first +case, and to \filevar{/tmp/lib} in the second case. (For the second +case, you probably want to supply an installation base of +\file{/tmp/python}.) +You probably noticed the use of \code{\$HOME} and \code{\$PLAT} in the +sample configuration file input. These are Distutils configuration +variables, which bear a strong resemblance to environment variables. In +fact, you can use environment variables in config files, but the +Distutils additionally define a few extra variables that may not be in +your environment, such as \code{\$PATH}. See +section~\ref{sec:config-files} for details. -\subsection{Indirect specification: prefix directories} -\label{sec:prefix-dirs} - -Occasionally, you may want to install a module distribution +XXX need some Windows and Mac OS examples---when would custom +installation schemes be needed on those platforms? -\section{Custom Installation (Windows)} -\label{sec:custom-install-windows} - -\comingsoon - \section{Configuration Files} \label{sec:config-files} \comingsoon - - \end{document} |