Arnaud Delobelle wrote: > Hi fellow python enthusiasts. > > Having recently acquired a MacBook Pro (Intel Core 2 Duo) which comes > with python2.5, I have been installing some modules that I need (PIL, > psycopg2, PyXML ...). > > The problem is that [$python setup.py build] compiles all the binaries > to universal files for i386 and ppc32, but not x86_64 or ppc64. It > does not appear to be a problem when running scripts from the shell > (as python seems to run as a 32 bits problems), but it is a problem > from apache2/mod_python as the included apache2 runs as 64 bits > processes. > > This means the modules need to be compiles for at least both i386 and > x86_64 in my case. I have been looking at the setup.py files of > various modules but I cannot see a suitable way to indicate what > architectures I want them compiled for. So far, I have managed by > adding the following lines in setup.py just after the Extension class > is imported: > > OrigExtension = Extension > def Extension(*args, **kwargs): > extra_args = ['-arch', 'ppc', '-arch', 'ppc64', > '-arch', 'i386', '-arch', 'x86_64 '] > kwargs['extra_compile_args'] = extra_args + > kwargs.get('extra_compile_args', []) > kwargs['extra_link_args'] = extra_args + > kwargs.get('extra_link_args', []) > return OrigExtension(*args, **kwargs) > > > Obviously this is a dirty hack, and I would like to know how to do > this the right way. How can this be done better? > > -- > Arnaud > You may want to post this on the MacPython list--there are plenty of experts there on building Python mudles for OS X.
-- Kevin Walzer Code by Kevin http://www.codebykevin.com -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list