I was thinking of an actual .deb file, which will put everything in the right place, hook up menus and whatnot, like the Windows installer does. I thought I'd try that after I finally manage to create a .NET 2.0 build which works. [I re-built my Ubuntu box last weekend so that I can start over. My earlier efforts resulted in killing my old Ubuntu installation, and the openSUSE I replaced it with was an interesting experiment, but not something I can use on a day-by-day basis.] I want the next guy to have less trouble than me. I was thinking of using fepy to perhaps collect lots of optional modules -- like the db-api modules which are already there -- in one place so they are easy to find and load. PyPi has lots of modules, but how many of them will run on IronPython? The only one I am sure about is the one I support myself. I think a modest core of extra (non-standard-library) modules would be nice. I definitely do want to have the packaging tools working, too, but I would like to not have to go hunting and experimenting. My first thought was to package everything EXCEPT the Python installer, just use the distro installer (on Linux) or the .msi installer, and then add the extras from fepy. But I started to change my mind at the announcement that there would not be a .NET 2.0 release of IPy 2.7. Perhaps not having a 2.7 which runs on my distro is making me a bit crazy? -- Vernon
On Wed, Apr 6, 2011 at 11:20 AM, Jeff Hardy <jdha...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Wed, Apr 6, 2011 at 11:07 AM, Vernon Cole <vernondc...@gmail.com> wrote: >> I have sent several emails to Seo asking him about the status of fepy, >> and received no response. I think this would be a great place to >> build a "fatter" distribution of IronPython, with more modules >> attached, and a set of Linux binaries. (Besides, I hate having my >> name associated with a dead project - Mike Foord and Jeff too, I would >> suppose.) > > Linux-specific binaries shouldn't be needed anymore - they should work > out of the box on Mono (although if you want to maintain the .NET > 2.0/IronPython 2.7 builds, that might be useful). As for libraries, I > would like to see the packaging tools like pip working on IronPython > so you could just do `ipip install fepy` and get the bonus modules. > > - Jeff > _______________________________________________ Users mailing list Users@lists.ironpython.com http://lists.ironpython.com/listinfo.cgi/users-ironpython.com