On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 6:06 PM, Subhodip Biswas
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Senthil,
>
> Thanks for the information.
>
> On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 5:29 PM, Senthil Kumaran <[email protected]> wrote:
>> On Tue, Aug 30, 2011 at 03:20:58PM +0530, Subhodip Biswas wrote:
>>> What I did is : easy_install someModule.
>>> So now in my eclipse install I can see these modules and use them 
>>> accordingly.
>>> If i am trying to build the same from a different machine. I need
>>> these to be configured right in a way that normal jython mymodule.py
>>> works.
>>
>> Well, if you can carry those modules along to new server that would
>> resolve your dependencies.  The other option is to create a
>> virtualenv. I believe there is an option to create a virtualevn for
>> jython interpreter too and in which case all your dependencies are
>> installed within that environment.
>>
>> On anymachine that you want to execute, you have to create that setup.
>>
>>> In java we generally attach the libs in the classpath and build using
>>> ant. What do i do in case of jython? write an ant file doing the
>>> same(pyanttasks) or is there another way to do so?
>>
>> Yes, you can write an Ant task to build your project for Jython.

Can you point me to some docs regarding this. I tried to write a build
xml using pyanttasks but even after a lot of headbang the build.xml
failed to compile.

An ant -v says it cannot find my python executable. Is there a way I
can point it to my jython executable.

>> Even this seems interesting:
>> https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/Jython+Plugin
>>
>>> Can you point me to the some docs where i can look for the same? my
>>> google search does not provide me any good results. My current hudson
>>> successfully located the file but is unable to show me any reports
>>> based the junit type xml files.
>>
>> Look at how pytest is being tested.
>>
>> http://hudson.testrun.org/view/pytest/job/pytest/
>>
>> They are running py.test and with xdist plugin. py.test has an option
>> to generate junit.xml style output. Once that is generated,
>> jenkins/hudson is pointed to the xml and it can generate the report
>> automatically.
>>
>> I am not sure why you went with Jython in the first place, but if it
>> was just for interfacing with Hudson, then the above pytest example
>> should convey a message that jython is NOT a requirement for
>> building software/running tests and generating reports.
>> If you would like to start small, then I would suggest you to write
>> py.test test, execute it and get the junit xml output and then point
>> it to your jenkins/hudson and see the report. If this works, then you
>> can go ahead try for your task.
>>
> My main app is in java. I wrote few code in java but somehow I felt
> python is better (lots of good libs). since there were few java
> dependencies I finally settled for jython(best of both worlds).
>
> Everything were good until it came to produce some trending reports. I
> thought of buildbot but system already has Hudson/Jenkins in place. So
> I have to integrate the whole system to hudson and this is where I got
> stuck.
>
> I will look into the information you gave and in case of any problem I
> will bug the list even more :-)
>
> Thanks again for the information.
>
>> Thanks,
>> Senthil
>> _______________________________________________
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>> http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/bangpypers
>>
>
>

-------------
Regards
Subhodip Biswas


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