On Tue, 16 Apr 2013 17:22:55 +0300, Anssi Saari a...@sci.fi wrote:
In any case, cross compiling Python shouldn't be that hard. I
just recently built 2.7.3 for my OpenWRT router since the packaged
Python didn't have readline support (some long standing linking issue
with readline and ncurses and
Gilles nos...@nospam.com writes:
I see Python mentioned in /usr/lib and /usr/share, and was wondering
if all it'd take to solve this issue, is just to cross-compile the
interpreter and the rest is just CPU-agnostic Python scripts.
I suppose. In any case, cross compiling Python shouldn't be
Hello
I tried running uWSGI on an ARM-based appliance, but it fails.
Apparently, it could be due to the official Python 2.6.6 interpreter
in the depot not being compiled the way uWSGI expects it to be:
./configure --enable-shared; make; make install;
On 4/15/2013 11:20 AM, Gilles wrote:
Hello
I tried running uWSGI on an ARM-based appliance, but it fails.
Apparently, it could be due to the official Python 2.6.6 interpreter
in the depot not being compiled the way uWSGI expects it to be:
./configure --enable-shared; make; make install;
In message 4c911670$0$41115$e4fe5...@news.xs4all.nl, Hans Mulder wrote:
The most popular way to get the latter problem is to write the script
on a Windows box and then upload it to Unix box using FTP in binary
mode (or some other transport that doesn't adjust the line endings).
I always
Thomas Jollans wrote:
On Tuesday 14 September 2010, it occurred to Neil Benn to exclaim:
#
./python
-sh: ./python: not found
I'm guessing either there is no file ./python, or /bin/sh is fundamentally
broken.
or ./python is a symlink to a file that does not exist, or ./python
is a
Hello,
I've been working on an embedded ARM system which boots up quick (a
beagleboard running a skinnied down version of Angstrom). For this I need
to compile a lot of libraries from scratch. One of the things I need is
Python; I've cross compiled Python and it works OK when I try to
On Tuesday 14 September 2010, it occurred to Neil Benn to exclaim:
#
./python
-sh: ./python: not found
I'm guessing either there is no file ./python, or /bin/sh is fundamentally
broken.
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
On Tuesday 14 September 2010 21:19, Thomas Jollans wrote:
On Tuesday 14 September 2010, it occurred to Neil Benn to exclaim:
#
./python
-sh: ./python: not found
I'm guessing either there is no file ./python, or /bin/sh is fundamentally
broken.
Yes, it may be instructive to use the