Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view roundup/dist/command/build_scripts.py @ 5305:e20f472fde7d
issue2550799: provide basic support for handling html only emails
Initial implementation and testing with the dehtml html converter
done.
The use of beautifulsoup 4 is not tested. My test system breaks when
running dehtml.py using beautiful soup. I don't get the failures when
running under the test harness, but the text output is significantly
different (different line breaks, number of newlines etc.)
The tests for dehtml need to be generated for beautiful soup and the
expected output changed. Since I have a wonky install of beautiful
soup, I don't trust my output as the standard to test against. Also
since beautiful soup is optional, the test harness needs to skip the
beautifulsoup tests if import bs4 fails. Again something outside of my
expertise. I deleted the work I had done to implement that. I could
not get it working and wanted to get this feature in in some form.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Fri, 13 Oct 2017 21:46:59 -0400 |
| parents | 5e2888db6c48 |
| children | 64c4e43fbb84 |
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# # Copyright (C) 2009 Stefan Seefeld # All rights reserved. # For license terms see the file COPYING.txt. # from distutils.command.build_scripts import build_scripts as base from distutils import log import sys, os, string class build_scripts(base): """ Overload the build_scripts command and create the scripts from scratch, depending on the target platform. You have to define the name of your package in an inherited class (due to the delayed instantiation of command classes in distutils, this cannot be passed to __init__). The scripts are created in an uniform scheme: they start the run() function in the module <packagename>.scripts.<mangled_scriptname> The mangling of script names replaces '-' and '/' characters with '-' and '.', so that they are valid module paths. If the target platform is win32, create .bat files instead of *nix shell scripts. Target platform is set to "win32" if main command is 'bdist_wininst' or if the command is 'bdist' and it has the list of formats (from command line or config file) and the first item on that list is wininst. Otherwise target platform is set to current (build) platform. """ package_name = 'roundup' def initialize_options(self): base.initialize_options(self) self.script_preamble = None self.target_platform = None self.python_executable = None def finalize_options(self): base.finalize_options(self) cmdopt=self.distribution.command_options # find the target platform if self.target_platform: # TODO? allow explicit setting from command line target = self.target_platform if cmdopt.has_key("bdist_wininst"): target = "win32" elif cmdopt.get("bdist", {}).has_key("formats"): formats = cmdopt["bdist"]["formats"][1].split(",") if formats[0] == "wininst": target = "win32" else: target = sys.platform if len(formats) > 1: self.warn( "Scripts are built for %s only (requested formats: %s)" % (target, ",".join(formats))) else: # default to current platform target = sys.platform self.target_platform = target # for native builds, use current python executable path; # for cross-platform builds, use default executable name if self.python_executable: # TODO? allow command-line option pass if target == sys.platform: self.python_executable = os.path.normpath(sys.executable) else: self.python_executable = "python" # for windows builds, add ".bat" extension if target == "win32": # *nix-like scripts may be useful also on win32 (cygwin) # to build both script versions, use: #self.scripts = list(self.scripts) + [script + ".bat" # for script in self.scripts] self.scripts = [script + ".bat" for script in self.scripts] # tweak python path for installations outside main python library if cmdopt.get("install", {}).has_key("prefix"): prefix = os.path.expanduser(cmdopt['install']['prefix'][1]) version = '%d.%d'%sys.version_info[:2] self.script_preamble = """ import sys sys.path.insert(1, "%s/lib/python%s/site-packages") """%(prefix, version) else: self.script_preamble = '' def copy_scripts(self): """ Create each script listed in 'self.scripts' """ to_module = string.maketrans('-/', '_.') self.mkpath(self.build_dir) for script in self.scripts: outfile = os.path.join(self.build_dir, os.path.basename(script)) #if not self.force and not newer(script, outfile): # self.announce("not copying %s (up-to-date)" % script) # continue if self.dry_run: log.info("would create %s" % outfile) continue module = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(script))[0] module = string.translate(module, to_module) script_vars = { 'python': self.python_executable, 'package': self.package_name, 'module': module, 'prefix': self.script_preamble, } log.info("writing %s" % outfile) file = open(outfile, 'w') try: # could just check self.target_platform, # but looking at the script extension # makes it possible to build both *nix-like # and windows-like scripts on win32. # may be useful for cygwin. if os.path.splitext(outfile)[1] == ".bat": file.write('@echo off\n' 'if NOT "%%_4ver%%" == "" "%(python)s" -c "from %(package)s.scripts.%(module)s import run; run()" %%$\n' 'if "%%_4ver%%" == "" "%(python)s" -c "from %(package)s.scripts.%(module)s import run; run()" %%*\n' % script_vars) else: file.write('#! %(python)s\n%(prefix)s' 'from %(package)s.scripts.%(module)s import run\n' 'run()\n' % script_vars) finally: file.close() os.chmod(outfile, 0755)
