Jeff Younker wrote:
I have to say, as a developer, and a system administrator, I like
setuptools. It does
what I need. Could it be better? Sure. For what I use python for on
a day-to-day
basis it makes my life a thousand times better than it was before
setuptools. Nothing
ruins your day more than spending *hours* tracing down package
dependencies
just to get the *one* package you need to allow you to perform some
crucial task.
It's even worse when you have to do it on multiple architectures.
Perl's package location and installation system (CPAN) is one of the
primary facts
contributing to its success. Perl is a pig. It's a charming pig
that can do lots of tricks,
but a pig none the less. What makes it shine is CPAN. And here's the
catch: CPAN
isn't really any better than setuptools. It's got warts and nuts all
over the place, but
it works.
And CPAN has some HUGE advantages over setuptools: it is designed as a
repository, and it is replicated. Which means it is dependable.
Anyone who suffered through the multiple outages of PyPI (which in not
replicated) over the past year or so, or the ongoing outages of the many
repositories across the web to which PyPI directs users/processes, can
understand why this is important.
- rick
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