> How do I get zlib available to python?
Edit Modules/Setup, and uncomment the zlib line. At your choice, also
uncomment the *shared* line (otherwise, zlib would become a builtin
module).
When you install shared libraries somewhere that also live in /usr/lib,
do use ldd to verify that it always p
In message
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I want as much built from source as I can manage so that I know what
> is and what is not on the system.
Sounds like a job for Gentoo. :)
--
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
>
> Just don't even think of passing --enable-shared to Python's configure,
> and it will all work fine, and you won't need to use ldconfig.
>
Well I've done --enable-shared so that I can compile mod_python as a
shared object within apache.
Created /etc/ld.so.conf.d/python2.5.conf on a redhat syste
> What, in your experiences, is a functionally elegant solution to
> installing 2.6 and 3 from source without breaking package dependencies
> on your favorite Linux/Unix flavor? Is compiling Python 2.6 and 3.0 on
> a *nix development machine and having it work seamlessly as simple as
> choosing a p
Hi,
I want to start using Python 2.6 and 3000. I have several questions.
What, in your experiences, is a functionally elegant solution to
installing 2.6 and 3 from source without breaking package dependencies
on your favorite Linux/Unix flavor? Is compiling Python 2.6 and 3.0 on
a *nix developmen