On 30 Jan 2017 5:57 pm, "Leonardo Bianconi" <leonardo.bianconi@eldorado. org.br> wrote:
So, based on that, initially my plans to make it work is: 1. How to build wheel files? Building the wheel files for ppc64le will follow basically the same process that is done for x86_64/i686: - The binary executable and compiled code must link only with the same library list specified for x86_64/i686. - Must use the versions of GLIBC, CXXABI_, GLIBCXX_ and GCC provided with the Ubuntu 14.04 (The first distro for ppc64le). 2. How will pip decide if the system is eligible to install the wheel file? Detecting if the system is eligible to install the wheel file will follow the same rules from the module "_manylinux", but with the following change proposal: - Add the platform "ppc64le" in the platform list as a compatible one. - Remove the hard-coded glibc version on "return have_compatible_glibc(2, 5) ", and provide a json or configuration file to handle it for each architecture, which will be read to obtain the version value. 3. Compiling and testing wheel files. In order to compile the wheel files without a ppc64le machine, a virtualized environment will be necessary. So we can provide the following items: - Ubuntu 14.04 ppc64le ISO. - Wiki with instructions to install the required software and versions. - Create a docker file to configure the environment automatically (Not sure if this is a good solution, as the docker would run in a virtualized system). Any questions about the ABI? If not, may I move this discussion to the distutils-sig? Sorry for the delayed reply (I've been travelling for the past few weeks and hence only intermittently polling various mailing lists). While your approach seems basically sound to me, the main challenge I see here is that it means the ppc64le manylinux1 build environment will be starkly different from that for other architectures. That's not necessarily an insurmountable problem, but it does mean that the main folks you need agreement from are the https://github.com/pypa/manylinux/ maintainers. If they're OK with the practical publishing aspects of the proposal, then it should be pretty easy to get distutils-sig to sign off on a PEP officially formalising things and defining any necessary updates to PyPI clients. Cheers, Nick.
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