On Fri, Jun 20, 2008 at 02:01:52PM +0200, Martijn Faassen wrote:
> Hi there,
>
> Brian Sutherland wrote:
> [snip]
>> Also for this problem:
>>
>> # XXX what happens if EngineFactory were to be evicted from the ZODB
>> # cache?
>> def getCached(self):
>> return getattr(self, '_v_
Martin Aspeli wrote:
- if you really are installing zope2, then I wonder why it's trying to
download zope.proxy. This is possibly a case of egg dependencies gone
wrong, and you may want to look at plone.recipe.zope2install and its
"fake eggs" optoin
Hmmm :-S Can you explain this more?
- yo
Hey Sidnei,
Sidnei da Silva wrote:
Depending on how 'plone-ish' your buildout is, you can start from the
newly-created, experimental buildout-based Plone Installer for
Windows:
https://launchpad.net/plone/3.1/3.1.2/
So how does this work?
Where's the buildout.cfg that gets used and what reci
Philipp von Weitershausen wrote:
This isn't a matter of a binary zope.proxy egg. If you look at the
'zope2' part of your buildout.cfg, you'll see it's actually trying to
compile Zope 2 itself (which happens to contain the zope.proxy package
as part of the Zope 3 libraries that it ships with).
Summary of messages to the zope-tests list.
Period Fri Jun 20 11:00:00 2008 UTC to Sat Jun 21 11:00:00 2008 UTC.
There were 5 messages: 5 from Zope Tests.
Tests passed OK
---
Subject: OK : Zope-2.8 Python-2.3.6 : Linux
From: Zope Tests
Date: Fri Jun 20 21:00:30 EDT 2008
URL: http://m