On Sun, Jan 6, 2013 at 2:04 AM, Ralf Gommers <ralf.gomm...@gmail.com> wrote: > > > > On Sun, Jan 6, 2013 at 3:21 AM, Ondřej Čertík <ondrej.cer...@gmail.com> > wrote: >> >> Hi, >> >> Currently the NumPy binaries are built using the pavement.py script, >> which uses the following Pythons: >> >> MPKG_PYTHON = { >> "2.5": >> ["/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.5/bin/python"], >> "2.6": >> ["/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.6/bin/python"], >> "2.7": >> ["/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.7/bin/python"], >> "3.1": >> ["/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.1/bin/python3"], >> "3.2": >> ["/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.2/bin/python3"], >> "3.3": >> ["/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.3/bin/python3"], >> } >> >> So for example I can easily create the 2.6 binary if that Python is >> pre-installed on the Mac box that I am using. >> On one of the Mac boxes that I am using, the 2.7 is missing, so are >> 3.1, 3.2 and 3.3. So I was thinking >> of updating my Fabric fab file to automatically install all Pythons >> from source and build against that, just like I do for Wine. >> >> Which exact Python do we need to use on Mac? Do we need to use the >> binary installer from python.org? > > > Yes, the one from python.org. > >> >> Or can I install it from source? Finally, for which Python versions >> should we provide binary installers for Mac? >> For reference, the 1.6.2 had installers for 2.5, 2.6 and 2.7 only for >> OS X 10.3. There is only 2.7 version for OS X 10.6. > > > The provided installers and naming scheme should match what's done for > Python itself on python.org. > > The 10.3 installers for 2.5, 2.6 and 2.7 should be compiled on OS X 10.5. > This is kind of hard to come by these days, but Vincent Davis maintains a > build machine for numpy and scipy. That's already set up correctly, so all > you have to do is connect to it via ssh, check out v.17.0 in ~/Code/numpy, > check in release.sh that the section for OS X 10.6 is disabled and for 10.5 > enabled and run it. > > OS X 10.6 broke support for previous versions in some subtle ways, so even > when using the 10.4 SDK numpy compiled on 10.6 won't run on 10.5. As long as > we're supporting 10.5 you therefore need to compile on it. > > The 10.7 --> 10.6 support hasn't been checked, but I wouldn't trust it. I > have a 10.6 machine, so I can compile those binaries if needed. > >> >> Also, what is the meaning of the following piece of code in pavement.py: >> >> def _build_mpkg(pyver): >> # account for differences between Python 2.7.1 versions from >> python.org >> if os.environ.get('MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET', None) == "10.6": >> ldflags = "-undefined dynamic_lookup -bundle -arch i386 -arch >> x86_64 -Wl,-search_paths_first" >> else: >> ldflags = "-undefined dynamic_lookup -bundle -arch i386 -arch >> ppc -Wl,-search_paths_first" >> ldflags += " -L%s" % os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), "build") > > > The 10.6 binaries support only Intel Macs, both 32-bit and 64-bit. The 10.3 > binaries support PPC Macs and 32-bit Intel. That's what the above does. Note > that we simply follow the choice made by the Python release managers here. > >> >> if pyver == "2.5": >> sh("CC=gcc-4.0 LDFLAGS='%s' %s setupegg.py bdist_mpkg" % >> (ldflags, " ".join(MPKG_PYTHON[pyver]))) >> else: >> sh("LDFLAGS='%s' %s setupegg.py bdist_mpkg" % (ldflags, " >> ".join(MPKG_PYTHON[pyver]))) > > > This is necessary because in Python 2.5, distutils asks for "gcc" instead of > "gcc-4.0", so you may get the wrong one without CC=gcc-4.0. From Python 2.6 > on this was fixed. > >> >> In particular, the last line gets executed and it then fails with: >> >> paver dmg -p 2.6 >> ---> pavement.dmg >> ---> pavement.clean >> LDFLAGS='-undefined dynamic_lookup -bundle -arch i386 -arch ppc >> -Wl,-search_paths_first -Lbuild' >> /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.6/bin/python >> setupegg.py bdist_mpkg >> Traceback (most recent call last): >> File "setupegg.py", line 17, in <module> >> from setuptools import setup >> ImportError: No module named setuptools >> >> >> The reason is (I think) that if the Python binary is called explicitly >> with /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.6/bin/python, >> then the paths are not setup properly in virtualenv, and thus >> setuptools (which is only installed in virtualenv, but not in system >> Python) fails to import. The solution is to simply apply this patch: > > > Avoid using system Python for anything. The first thing to do on any new OS > X system is install Python some other way, preferably from python.org. > >> >> diff --git a/pavement.py b/pavement.py >> index e693016..0c637f8 100644 >> --- a/pavement.py >> +++ b/pavement.py >> @@ -449,7 +449,7 @@ def _build_mpkg(pyver): >> if pyver == "2.5": >> sh("CC=gcc-4.0 LDFLAGS='%s' %s setupegg.py bdist_mpkg" % >> (ldflags, " ".join(MPKG_PYTHON[pyver]))) >> else: >> - sh("LDFLAGS='%s' %s setupegg.py bdist_mpkg" % (ldflags, " >> ".join(MPKG_PYTHON[pyver]))) >> + sh("python setupegg.py bdist_mpkg") > > > This doesn't work unless using virtualenvs, you're just throwing away the > version selection here. If you can support virtualenvs in addition to > python.org pythons, that would be useful. But being able to build binaries > when needed simply by "paver dmg -p 2.x" is quite useful.
Absolutely. I was following the release.sh in the numpy git repository, which contains: paver bootstrap source bootstrap/bin/activate python setupsconsegg.py install paver pdf paver dmg -p 2.7 So it is using the virtualenv and it works on Vincent's computer, but it doesn't work on my other computer. I wanted to make the steps somehow reproducible. I started adding the commands needed to setup the Mac (any Mac) into my Fabfile here: https://github.com/certik/numpy-vendor/blob/master/fabfile.py#L98 but I run into the issues above. Of course, I'll try to just use Vincent's computer, but I would feel much better if the numpy release process for Mac didn't depend on one particular computer, but rather could be quite easily reproduced on any Mac OS X of the right version. Ondrej _______________________________________________ NumPy-Discussion mailing list NumPy-Discussion@scipy.org http://mail.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion