"""distutils.command.install Implements the Distutils 'install' command.""" # created 1999/03/13, Greg Ward __rcsid__ = "$Id$" import sys, os, string from distutils import sysconfig from distutils.core import Command class Install (Command): options = [('prefix=', None, "installation prefix"), ('execprefix=', None, "prefix for platform-specific files"), # Build directories: where to install from ('build-base=', None, "base build directory"), ('build-lib=', None, "build directory for non-platform-specific library files"), ('build-platlib=', None, "build directory for platform-specific library files"), # Installation directories: where to put modules and packages ('install-lib=', None, "base Python library directory"), ('install-platlib=', None, "platform-specific Python library directory"), ('install-site-lib=', None, "directory for site-specific packages and modules"), ('install-site-platlib=', None, "platform-specific site directory"), ('install-scheme=', None, "install to 'system' or 'site' library directory?"), # Where to install documentation (eventually!) ('doc-format=', None, "format of documentation to generate"), ('install-man=', None, "directory for Unix man pages"), ('install-html=', None, "directory for HTML documentation"), ('install-info=', None, "directory for GNU info files"), # Flags for 'build_py' ('compile-py', None, "compile .py to .pyc"), ('optimize-py', None, "compile .py to .pyo (optimized)"), ] def set_default_options (self): self.build_base = None self.build_lib = None self.build_platlib = None # Don't define 'prefix' or 'exec_prefix' so we can know when the # command is run whether the user supplied values self.prefix = None self.exec_prefix = None # These two, we can supply real values for! (because they're # not directories, and don't have a confusing multitude of # possible derivations) #self.install_scheme = 'site' self.doc_format = None # The actual installation directories are determined only at # run-time, so the user can supply just prefix (and exec_prefix?) # as a base for everything else self.install_lib = None self.install_platlib = None self.install_site_lib = None self.install_site_platlib = None self.install_man = None self.install_html = None self.install_info = None self.compile_py = 1 self.optimize_py = 1 def set_final_options (self): # XXX this method is where the default installation directories # for modules and extension modules are determined. (Someday, # the default installation directories for scripts, # documentation, and whatever else the Distutils can build and # install will also be determined here.) Thus, this is a pretty # important place to fiddle with for anyone interested in # installation schemes for the Python library. Issues that # are not yet resolved to my satisfaction: # * how much platform dependence should be here, and # how much can be pushed off to sysconfig (or, better, the # Makefiles parsed by sysconfig)? # * how independent of Python version should this be -- ie. # should we have special cases to handle Python 1.5 and # older, and then do it "the right way" for 1.6? Or should # we install a site.py along with Distutils under pre-1.6 # Python to take care of the current deficiencies in # Python's library installation scheme? # # Currently, this method has hacks to distinguish POSIX from # non-POSIX systems (for installation of site-local modules), # and assumes the Python 1.5 installation tree with no site.py # to fix things. # Figure out the build directories, ie. where to install from self.set_peer_option ('build', 'basedir', self.build_base) self.set_undefined_options ('build', ('basedir', 'build_base'), ('libdir', 'build_lib'), ('platdir', 'build_platlib')) # Figure out actual installation directories; the basic principle # is: if the user supplied nothing, then use the directories that # Python was built and installed with (ie. the compiled-in prefix # and exec_prefix, and the actual installation directories gleaned # by sysconfig). If the user supplied a prefix (and possibly # exec_prefix), then we generate our own installation directories, # following any pattern gleaned from sysconfig's findings. If no # such pattern can be gleaned, then we'll just make do and try to # ape the behaviour of Python's configure script. if self.prefix is None: # user didn't override self.prefix = sys.prefix if self.exec_prefix is None: self.exec_prefix = sys.exec_prefix if self.install_lib is None: self.install_lib = \ self.replace_sys_prefix ('LIBDEST', ('lib','python1.5')) if self.install_platlib is None: # XXX this should probably be DESTSHARED -- but why is there no # equivalent to DESTSHARED for the "site-packages" dir"? self.install_platlib = \ self.replace_sys_prefix ('BINLIBDEST', ('lib','python1.5'), 1) # Here is where we decide where to install most library files: on # POSIX systems, they go to 'site-packages' under the install_lib # (determined above -- typically /usr/local/lib/python1.x). Note # that on POSIX systems, platform-specific files belong in # 'site-packages' under install_platlib. (The actual rule is that # a module distribution that includes *any* platform-specific files # -- ie. extension modules -- goes under install_platlib. This # solves the "can't find extension module in a package" problem.) # On non-POSIX systems, install_lib and install_platlib are the # same (eg. "C:\Program Files\Python\Lib" on Windows), as are # install_site_lib and install_site_platlib (eg. # "C:\Program Files\Python" on Windows) -- everything will be dumped # right into one of the install_site directories. (It doesn't # really matter *which* one, of course, but I'll observe decorum # and do it properly.) if self.install_site_lib is None: if os.name == 'posix': self.install_site_lib = \ os.path.join (self.install_lib, 'site-packages') else: self.install_site_lib = self.prefix if self.install_site_platlib is None: if os.name == 'posix': self.install_site_platlib = \ os.path.join (self.install_platlib, 'site-packages') else: self.install_site_platlib = self.exec_prefix #if self.install_scheme == 'site': # install_lib = self.install_site_lib # install_platlib = self.install_site_platlib #elif self.install_scheme == 'system': # install_lib = self.install_lib # install_platlib = self.install_platlib #else: # # XXX new exception for this kind of misbehaviour? # raise DistutilsArgError, \ # "invalid install scheme '%s'" % self.install_scheme # Punt on doc directories for now -- after all, we're punting on # documentation completely! # set_final_options () def replace_sys_prefix (self, config_attr, fallback_postfix, use_exec=0): """Attempts to glean a simple pattern from an installation directory available as a 'sysconfig' attribute: if the directory name starts with the "system prefix" (the one hard-coded in the Makefile and compiled into Python), then replace it with the current installation prefix and return the "relocated" installation directory.""" if use_exec: sys_prefix = sys.exec_prefix my_prefix = self.exec_prefix else: sys_prefix = sys.prefix my_prefix = self.prefix val = getattr (sysconfig, config_attr) if string.find (val, sys_prefix) == 0: # If the sysconfig directory starts with the system prefix, # then we can "relocate" it to the user-supplied prefix -- # assuming, of course, it is different from the system prefix. if sys_prefix == my_prefix: return val else: return my_prefix + val[len(sys_prefix):] else: # Otherwise, just tack the "fallback postfix" onto the # user-specified prefix. return apply (os.path.join, (my_prefix,) + fallback_postfix) # replace_sys_prefix () def run (self): self.set_final_options () # Obviously have to build before we can install self.run_peer ('build') # Install modules in two steps: "platform-shared" files (ie. pure # python modules) and platform-specific files (compiled C # extensions). Note that 'install_py' is smart enough to install # pure Python modules in the "platlib" directory if we built any # extensions. self.run_peer ('install_py') self.run_peer ('install_ext') # run () # class Install