cpython/BeOS
Guido van Rossum 7a5f420e67 Chris Herborth's first pass at making config and install
for BeOS better.
1999-01-12 20:30:23 +00:00
..
README Chris Herborth's first pass at making config and install 1999-01-12 20:30:23 +00:00
README.readline-2.2
ar-fake Chris Herborth writes: 1999-01-04 16:49:09 +00:00
dl_export.h Chris Herborth's first pass at making config and install 1999-01-12 20:30:23 +00:00
linkcc Chris Herborth writes: 1999-01-04 16:49:09 +00:00
linkmodule

README

Python 1.5.x (x > 1) for BeOS

This directory contains several useful things to help you build your own
version of Python for BeOS.

What's Here?

ar-fake - A shell script used by the build process to emulate a "real"
          POSIX ar command; helps to build the Python shared library.

dl_export.h - A header defining the evil magic declaration decorations
              required for dynamic loading.

linkcc - A shell script used by the build process to build the Python
         shared library.

linkmodule - A shell script used by the build process to build the
             shared library versions of the standard modules; you'll
             probably need this if you want to build dynamically loaded
             modules from the Python archives.

README - This file (obviously!).

README.readline-2.2 - Instructions for compiling/installing GNU readline 2.2.
                      You'll have to grab the GNU readline source code from 
                      prep.ai.mit.edu:/pub/GNU or any other GNU mirror.

                      The Python interpreter is much nicer to work with
                      interactively if you've got readline installed.  Highly
                      recommended.

Compiling Your Own Version

To compile your own version of Python 1.5.x for BeOS (with any luck,
Python 1.5.2 and later will compile "out of the box" on BeOS), try this:

1) Get the latest Python source code from ftp.python.org.

2) Configure with:

   ./configure --verbose --prefix=/boot/home/config --with-thread

3) Copy Modules/Setup.in to Modules/Setup.

4) Edit Modules/Setup to turn on all the modules you want built.

   Make sure you use _socket instead of socket for the name of the
   socketmodule on BeOS.

   If you want the modules to be built as shared libraries, instead of as
   part of the Python shared library, be sure to uncomment the #*shared*
   line.

   I've tried the following modules:

   regex pcre posix signal readline array cmath math strop struct time
   operator _locale fcntl pwd grp select _socket errno crypt termios
   audioop imageop rgbimg md5 timing rotor syslog curses new gdbm soundex
   binascii parser cStringIO cPickle zlib
   
   Note that some of these (readline, curses, gdbm, and zlib) require extra
   libraries that aren't supplied with Python.  If you don't have the extra
   libs (you can probably get them from GeekGadgets), don't try to use
   these modules; they won't compile.

5) Make:

   make

6) Test:

   make test

   Expect the following errors:

   test_grp crashed -- exceptions.KeyError : getgrnam(): name not found
   test_pwd failed -- Writing: 'fakename', expected: 'caught e'
   test_socket crashed -- exceptions.AttributeError : SOCK_RAW

   These are all due to either partial support for certain things (like
   sockets), or valid differences between systems.

   NOTE: On R4/x86, the pause() function is broken; expect the signal
         module test to crash Python!

7) Install:

   make install

8) Enjoy!

- Chris Herborth (chrish@beoscentral.com)
  January 12, 1999