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1 | """distutils.core | |
2 | ||
3 | The only module that needs to be imported to use the Distutils; provides | |
4 | the 'setup' function (which is to be called from the setup script). Also | |
5 | indirectly provides the Distribution and Command classes, although they are | |
6 | really defined in distutils.dist and distutils.cmd. | |
7 | """ | |
8 | ||
9 | # This module should be kept compatible with Python 1.5.2. | |
10 | ||
11 | __revision__ = "$Id$" | |
12 | ||
13 | import sys, os | |
14 | from types import * | |
15 | ||
16 | from distutils.debug import DEBUG | |
17 | from distutils.errors import * | |
18 | from distutils.util import grok_environment_error | |
19 | ||
20 | # Mainly import these so setup scripts can "from distutils.core import" them. | |
21 | from distutils.dist import Distribution | |
22 | from distutils.cmd import Command | |
23 | from distutils.extension import Extension | |
24 | ||
25 | # This is a barebones help message generated displayed when the user | |
26 | # runs the setup script with no arguments at all. More useful help | |
27 | # is generated with various --help options: global help, list commands, | |
28 | # and per-command help. | |
29 | USAGE = """\ | |
30 | usage: %(script)s [global_opts] cmd1 [cmd1_opts] [cmd2 [cmd2_opts] ...] | |
31 | or: %(script)s --help [cmd1 cmd2 ...] | |
32 | or: %(script)s --help-commands | |
33 | or: %(script)s cmd --help | |
34 | """ | |
35 | ||
36 | def gen_usage (script_name): | |
37 | script = os.path.basename(script_name) | |
38 | return USAGE % vars() | |
39 | ||
40 | ||
41 | # Some mild magic to control the behaviour of 'setup()' from 'run_setup()'. | |
42 | _setup_stop_after = None | |
43 | _setup_distribution = None | |
44 | ||
45 | # Legal keyword arguments for the setup() function | |
46 | setup_keywords = ('distclass', 'script_name', 'script_args', 'options', | |
47 | 'name', 'version', 'author', 'author_email', | |
48 | 'maintainer', 'maintainer_email', 'url', 'license', | |
49 | 'description', 'long_description', 'keywords', | |
50 | 'platforms', 'classifiers', 'download_url') | |
51 | ||
52 | # Legal keyword arguments for the Extension constructor | |
53 | extension_keywords = ('name', 'sources', 'include_dirs', | |
54 | 'define_macros', 'undef_macros', | |
55 | 'library_dirs', 'libraries', 'runtime_library_dirs', | |
56 | 'extra_objects', 'extra_compile_args', 'extra_link_args', | |
57 | 'export_symbols', 'depends', 'language') | |
58 | ||
59 | def setup (**attrs): | |
60 | """The gateway to the Distutils: do everything your setup script needs | |
61 | to do, in a highly flexible and user-driven way. Briefly: create a | |
62 | Distribution instance; find and parse config files; parse the command | |
63 | line; run each Distutils command found there, customized by the options | |
64 | supplied to 'setup()' (as keyword arguments), in config files, and on | |
65 | the command line. | |
66 | ||
67 | The Distribution instance might be an instance of a class supplied via | |
68 | the 'distclass' keyword argument to 'setup'; if no such class is | |
69 | supplied, then the Distribution class (in dist.py) is instantiated. | |
70 | All other arguments to 'setup' (except for 'cmdclass') are used to set | |
71 | attributes of the Distribution instance. | |
72 | ||
73 | The 'cmdclass' argument, if supplied, is a dictionary mapping command | |
74 | names to command classes. Each command encountered on the command line | |
75 | will be turned into a command class, which is in turn instantiated; any | |
76 | class found in 'cmdclass' is used in place of the default, which is | |
77 | (for command 'foo_bar') class 'foo_bar' in module | |
78 | 'distutils.command.foo_bar'. The command class must provide a | |
79 | 'user_options' attribute which is a list of option specifiers for | |
80 | 'distutils.fancy_getopt'. Any command-line options between the current | |
81 | and the next command are used to set attributes of the current command | |
82 | object. | |
83 | ||
84 | When the entire command-line has been successfully parsed, calls the | |
85 | 'run()' method on each command object in turn. This method will be | |
86 | driven entirely by the Distribution object (which each command object | |
87 | has a reference to, thanks to its constructor), and the | |
88 | command-specific options that became attributes of each command | |
89 | object. | |
90 | """ | |
91 | ||
92 | global _setup_stop_after, _setup_distribution | |
93 | ||
94 | # Determine the distribution class -- either caller-supplied or | |
95 | # our Distribution (see below). | |
96 | klass = attrs.get('distclass') | |
97 | if klass: | |
98 | del attrs['distclass'] | |
99 | else: | |
100 | klass = Distribution | |
101 | ||
102 | if not attrs.has_key('script_name'): | |
103 | attrs['script_name'] = os.path.basename(sys.argv[0]) | |
104 | if not attrs.has_key('script_args'): | |
105 | attrs['script_args'] = sys.argv[1:] | |
106 | ||
107 | # Create the Distribution instance, using the remaining arguments | |
108 | # (ie. everything except distclass) to initialize it | |
109 | try: | |
110 | _setup_distribution = dist = klass(attrs) | |
111 | except DistutilsSetupError, msg: | |
112 | if attrs.has_key('name'): | |
113 | raise SystemExit, "error in %s setup command: %s" % \ | |
114 | (attrs['name'], msg) | |
115 | else: | |
116 | raise SystemExit, "error in setup command: %s" % msg | |
117 | ||
118 | if _setup_stop_after == "init": | |
119 | return dist | |
120 | ||
121 | # Find and parse the config file(s): they will override options from | |
122 | # the setup script, but be overridden by the command line. | |
123 | dist.parse_config_files() | |
124 | ||
125 | if DEBUG: | |
126 | print "options (after parsing config files):" | |
127 | dist.dump_option_dicts() | |
128 | ||
129 | if _setup_stop_after == "config": | |
130 | return dist | |
131 | ||
132 | # Parse the command line; any command-line errors are the end user's | |
133 | # fault, so turn them into SystemExit to suppress tracebacks. | |
134 | try: | |
135 | ok = dist.parse_command_line() | |
136 | except DistutilsArgError, msg: | |
137 | raise SystemExit, gen_usage(dist.script_name) + "\nerror: %s" % msg | |
138 | ||
139 | if DEBUG: | |
140 | print "options (after parsing command line):" | |
141 | dist.dump_option_dicts() | |
142 | ||
143 | if _setup_stop_after == "commandline": | |
144 | return dist | |
145 | ||
146 | # And finally, run all the commands found on the command line. | |
147 | if ok: | |
148 | try: | |
149 | dist.run_commands() | |
150 | except KeyboardInterrupt: | |
151 | raise SystemExit, "interrupted" | |
152 | except (IOError, os.error), exc: | |
153 | error = grok_environment_error(exc) | |
154 | ||
155 | if DEBUG: | |
156 | sys.stderr.write(error + "\n") | |
157 | raise | |
158 | else: | |
159 | raise SystemExit, error | |
160 | ||
161 | except (DistutilsError, | |
162 | CCompilerError), msg: | |
163 | if DEBUG: | |
164 | raise | |
165 | else: | |
166 | raise SystemExit, "error: " + str(msg) | |
167 | ||
168 | return dist | |
169 | ||
170 | # setup () | |
171 | ||
172 | ||
173 | def run_setup (script_name, script_args=None, stop_after="run"): | |
174 | """Run a setup script in a somewhat controlled environment, and | |
175 | return the Distribution instance that drives things. This is useful | |
176 | if you need to find out the distribution meta-data (passed as | |
177 | keyword args from 'script' to 'setup()', or the contents of the | |
178 | config files or command-line. | |
179 | ||
180 | 'script_name' is a file that will be run with 'execfile()'; | |
181 | 'sys.argv[0]' will be replaced with 'script' for the duration of the | |
182 | call. 'script_args' is a list of strings; if supplied, | |
183 | 'sys.argv[1:]' will be replaced by 'script_args' for the duration of | |
184 | the call. | |
185 | ||
186 | 'stop_after' tells 'setup()' when to stop processing; possible | |
187 | values: | |
188 | init | |
189 | stop after the Distribution instance has been created and | |
190 | populated with the keyword arguments to 'setup()' | |
191 | config | |
192 | stop after config files have been parsed (and their data | |
193 | stored in the Distribution instance) | |
194 | commandline | |
195 | stop after the command-line ('sys.argv[1:]' or 'script_args') | |
196 | have been parsed (and the data stored in the Distribution) | |
197 | run [default] | |
198 | stop after all commands have been run (the same as if 'setup()' | |
199 | had been called in the usual way | |
200 | ||
201 | Returns the Distribution instance, which provides all information | |
202 | used to drive the Distutils. | |
203 | """ | |
204 | if stop_after not in ('init', 'config', 'commandline', 'run'): | |
205 | raise ValueError, "invalid value for 'stop_after': %s" % `stop_after` | |
206 | ||
207 | global _setup_stop_after, _setup_distribution | |
208 | _setup_stop_after = stop_after | |
209 | ||
210 | save_argv = sys.argv | |
211 | g = {} | |
212 | l = {} | |
213 | try: | |
214 | try: | |
215 | sys.argv[0] = script_name | |
216 | if script_args is not None: | |
217 | sys.argv[1:] = script_args | |
218 | execfile(script_name, g, l) | |
219 | finally: | |
220 | sys.argv = save_argv | |
221 | _setup_stop_after = None | |
222 | except SystemExit: | |
223 | # Hmm, should we do something if exiting with a non-zero code | |
224 | # (ie. error)? | |
225 | pass | |
226 | except: | |
227 | raise | |
228 | ||
229 | if _setup_distribution is None: | |
230 | raise RuntimeError, \ | |
231 | ("'distutils.core.setup()' was never called -- " | |
232 | "perhaps '%s' is not a Distutils setup script?") % \ | |
233 | script_name | |
234 | ||
235 | # I wonder if the setup script's namespace -- g and l -- would be of | |
236 | # any interest to callers? | |
237 | #print "_setup_distribution:", _setup_distribution | |
238 | return _setup_distribution | |
239 | ||
240 | # run_setup () | |
241 |