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Xavier Thompson
slapos.buildout
Commits
15f4ff5e
Commit
15f4ff5e
authored
Feb 19, 2017
by
Jim Fulton
Committed by
GitHub
Feb 19, 2017
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Merge pull request #337 from buildout/getting-started
draft getting started
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doc/contents.rst
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15f4ff5e
=============================
Getting
started
with
Buildout
=============================
..
contents
::
..
note
::
In
the
Buildout
documentation
,
we
'll use the word
*buildout* to refer to:
- The Buildout software
We'
ll
capitalize
the
word
when
we
do
this
.
-
A
particular
use
of
Buildout
,
a
directory
having
a
Buildout
configuration
file
.
We
'll use lower case to refer to these.
- A ``buildout`` section in a Buildout configuration (in a
particular buildout).
We'
ll
use
a
lowercase
fixed
-
width
font
for
these
.
First
steps
===========
The
easiest
way
to
install
Buildout
is
with
pip
:
..
code
-
block
::
console
pip
install
zc
.
buildout
To
use
Buildout
,
you
need
to
provide
a
Buildout
configuration
.
Here
is
a
minimal
configuration
:
..
code
-
block
::
ini
[
buildout
]
parts
=
..
->
src
>>>
write
(
src
,
'buildout.cfg'
)
A
minimal
(
and
useless
)
Buildout
configuration
has
a
``
buildout
``
section
with
a
parts
option
.
If
we
run
Buildout
:
..
code
-
block
::
console
buildout
..
->
src
>>>
run_buildout
(
src
)
>>>
import
os
>>>
ls
=
lambda
d
=
'.'
:
os
.
listdir
(
d
)
>>>
eqs
(
ls
(),
'buildout.cfg'
,
'bin'
,
'eggs'
,
'develop-eggs'
,
'parts'
,
'out'
)
>>>
eqs
(
ls
(
'bin'
))
>>>
eqs
(
ls
(
'develop-eggs'
))
>>>
eqs
(
ls
(
'parts'
))
TODO
:
fix
upgrading
so
eggs
is
empty
>>>
nope
(
'ZEO'
in
ls
(
'eggs'
))
Four
directories
are
created
:
bin
A
directory
to
hold
executables
.
develop
-
eggs
A
directory
to
hold
develop
egg
links
.
More
about
these
later
.
eggs
A
directory
that
hold
installed
packages
in
egg
[#
egg
]
_
format
.
parts
A
directory
that
provides
a
default
location
for
installed
parts
.
Buildout
configuration
files
use
an
`
INI
syntax
<
https
://
en
.
wikipedia
.
org
/
wiki
/
INI_file
>`
_
[#
configparser
]
_
.
Configuration
is
arranged
in
sections
,
beginning
with
section
names
in
square
brackets
.
Section
options
are
names
,
followed
by
equal
signs
,
followed
by
values
.
Values
may
be
continued
over
multiple
lines
as
long
as
the
continuation
lines
start
with
whitespace
.
Buildout
is
all
about
building
things
and
the
things
to
be
built
are
specified
using
*
parts
*.
The
parts
to
be
built
are
listed
in
the
``
parts
``
option
.
For
each
part
,
there
must
be
a
section
with
the
same
name
that
specifies
the
software
to
build
the
part
and
provides
parameters
to
control
how
the
part
is
built
.
Installing
software
===================
In
this
tutorial
,
we
're going to install a simple database server.
The details of the server aren'
t
important
.
It
just
provides
a
useful
example
that
illustrates
a
number
of
ways
that
Buildout
can
make
things
easier
.
We
'll start by adding a part to install the server software. We'
ll
update
our
Buildout
configuration
to
add
a
``
zeo
``
part
:
..
code
-
block
::
ini
[
buildout
]
parts
=
zeo
[
zeo
]
recipe
=
zc
.
recipe
.
egg
eggs
=
ZEO
..
->
src
>>>
write
(
src
,
'buildout.cfg'
)
We
added
the
part
name
,
``
zeo
``
to
the
``
parts
``
option
in
the
``
buildout
``
section
.
We
also
added
a
``
zeo
``
section
with
two
options
:
recipe
The
standard
``
recipe
``
option
names
the
software
component
that
will
implement
the
part
.
The
value
is
a
Python
distribution
requirement
,
as
would
be
used
with
``
pip
``.
In
this
case
,
we
've
specified `zc.recipe.egg
<https://pypi.python.org/pypi/zc.recipe.egg>`_ which is the name of
a Python project that provides a number of recipe implementations.
eggs
A list of distribution requirements, one per
line. [#requirements-one-per-line]_ (The name of this option is
unfortunate, because the values are requirements, not egg names.)
Listed requirements are installed, along with their dependencies. In
addition, any scripts provided by the listed requirements (but not
their dependencies) are installed in the ``bin`` directory.
If we run this [#gcc]_:
.. code-block:: console
buildout
.. -> src
>>> run_buildout(src)
Then a number of things will happen:
- ``zc.recipe.egg`` will be downloaded and installed in your ``eggs``
directory.
- ``ZEO`` and its dependencies will be downloaded and installed. (ZEO
is a small Python database server.)
After this, the eggs directory will look something like:
.. code-block:: console
$ ls -l eggs
total 0
drwxr-xr-x 4 jim staff 136 Feb 15 13:06 ZConfig-3.1.0-py3.5.egg
drwxr-xr-x 4 jim staff 136 Feb 15 13:06 ZEO-5.0.4-py3.5.egg
drwxr-xr-x 4 jim staff 136 Feb 15 13:06 ZODB-5.2.0-py3.5.egg
drwxr-xr-x 4 jim staff 136 Feb 15 13:06 persistent-4.2.2-py3.5-macosx-10.10-x86_64.egg
drwxr-xr-x 5 jim staff 170 Feb 15 13:06 six-1.10.0-py3.5.egg
drwx------ 2 jim staff 68 Feb 15 13:06 tmpd_xxokys
drwxr-xr-x 4 jim staff 136 Feb 15 13:06 transaction-2.1.0-py3.5.egg
drwxr-xr-x 4 jim staff 136 Feb 15 13:06 zc.buildout-2.8.0-py3.5.egg
drwxr-xr-x 4 jim staff 136 Feb 15 13:06 zc.lockfile-1.2.1-py3.5.egg
drwxr-xr-x 4 jim staff 136 Feb 15 13:06 zc.recipe.egg-2.0.3-py3.5.egg
drwxr-xr-x 4 jim staff 136 Feb 15 13:06 zdaemon-4.2.0-py3.5.egg
drwxr-xr-x 4 jim staff 136 Feb 15 13:06 zodbpickle-0.6.0-py3.5-macosx-10.10-x86_64.egg
drwxr-xr-x 4 jim staff 136 Feb 15 13:06 zope.interface-4.3.3-py3.5-macosx-10.10-x86_64.egg
.. ZEO in eggs:
>>> yup([n for n in ls('
eggs
') if n.startswith('
ZEO
-
4.3.1
-
')])
- A number of scripts will be installed in the ``bin`` directory:
.. code-block:: console
$ ls -l bin
total 40
-rwxr-xr-x 1 jim staff 861 Feb 15 13:07 runzeo
-rwxr-xr-x 1 jim staff 861 Feb 15 13:07 zeo-nagios
-rwxr-xr-x 1 jim staff 861 Feb 15 13:07 zeoctl
-rwxr-xr-x 1 jim staff 879 Feb 15 13:07 zeopack
One in particular, ``runzeo`` is used to run a ZEO server.
.. Really?
>>> yup('
runzeo
' in ls('
bin
'))
Generating configuration and custom scripts
===========================================
The ``runzeo`` program doesn'
t
daemonize
itself
.
Rather
,
it
's meant to
be used with a dedicated daemonizer like `zdaemon
<https://pypi.python.org/pypi/zdaemon>`_ or `supervisord
<http://supervisord.org/>`_. We'
ll
use
a
`
recipe
to
set
up
zdaemon
<
https
://
pypi
.
python
.
org
/
pypi
/
zc
.
zdaemonrecipe
>`
_
.
Our
Buildout
configuration
becomes
:
..
code
-
block
::
ini
[
buildout
]
parts
=
zeo
server
[
zeo
]
recipe
=
zc
.
recipe
.
egg
eggs
=
ZEO
[
server
]
recipe
=
zc
.
zdaemonrecipe
program
=
${
buildout
:
bin
-
directory
}/
runzeo
-
f
${
buildout
:
directory
}/
data
.
fs
-
a
127.0.0.1
:
8200
..
->
src
>>>
write
(
src
,
'buildout.cfg'
)
Here
we
've added a new ``server`` part that uses ``zc.zdaemonrecipe``.
We used a ``program`` option to define what program should be run.
There are a couple of interesting things to note about this option:
- We used :doc:`variable substitutions
<topics/variables-extending-and-substitutions>`:
``${buildout:directory}``
Expands to the full path of the buildout directory.
``${buildout:bin-directory}``
Expands to the full path of the buildout'
s
``
bin
``
directory
.
Variable
substitution
provides
a
way
to
access
Buildout
settings
and
share
information
between
parts
and
avoid
repetition
.
See
the
:
doc
:`
reference
<
reference
>`
to
see
what
buildout
settings
are
available
.
-
We
spread
the
program
over
multiple
lines
.
A
configuration
value
can
be
spread
over
multiple
lines
as
long
as
the
continuation
lines
begin
with
whitespace
.
The
interpretation
of
a
value
is
up
to
the
recipe
that
uses
it
.
The
``
zc
.
zdaemonrecipe
``
recipe
combines
the
program
value
into
a
single
line
.
If
we
run
Buildout
:
..
code
-
block
::
console
buildout
..
->
src
>>>
run_buildout
(
src
)
>>>
print
(
read
(
'bin/server'
))
#
doctest
:
+
ELLIPSIS
#
!...python...
<
BLANKLINE
>
import
sys
sys
.
path
[
0
:
0
]
=
[
'.../eggs/zdaemon...
<BLANKLINE>
import zdaemon.zdctl
<BLANKLINE>
if __name__ == '
__main__
':
sys.exit(zdaemon.zdctl.main([
'
-
C
', '
.../
parts
/
server
/
zdaemon
.
conf
',
]+sys.argv[1:]
))
<BLANKLINE>
- The ``zc.zdaemonrecipe`` recipe will be downloaded and installed in
the eggs directory.
- A ``server`` script is added to the ``bin`` directory. This script
is generated by the recipe. It can be run like:
.. code-block:: console
bin/server start
to start a server and:
.. code-block:: console
bin/server stop
to stop it. The script references a zdaemon configuration file
generated by the recipe in ``parts/server/zdaemon.conf``.
- A zdaemon configuration script is generated in
``parts/server/zdaemon.conf`` that looks something like:
.. code-block:: xml
<runner>
daemon on
directory /Users/jim/t/0214/parts/server
program /Users/jim/t/0214/bin/runzeo -f /Users/jim/t/0214/data.fs -a 127.0.0.1:8200
socket-name /Users/jim/t/0214/parts/server/zdaemon.sock
transcript /Users/jim/t/0214/parts/server/transcript.log
</runner>
<eventlog>
<logfile>
path /Users/jim/t/0214/parts/server/transcript.log
</logfile>
</eventlog>
.. -> expect
>>> expect = expect.replace('
/
Users
/
jim
/
t
/
0214
', os.getcwd()).strip()
>>> eq(expect, read('
parts
/
server
/
zdaemon
.
conf
').strip())
The **details aren'
t
important
**,
other
than
the
fact
that
the
configuration
file
reflects
part
options
and
the
actual
buildout
location
.
Version
control
===============
In
this
example
,
the
only
file
that
needs
to
be
checked
into
version
control
is
the
configuration
file
,
``
buildout
.
cfg
``.
Everything
else
is
generated
.
Someone
else
could
check
out
the
project
,
and
get
the
same
result
[#
if
-
same
-
environment
]
_
.
More
than
just
a
package
installer
==================================
The
example
shown
above
illustrates
how
Buildout
is
more
than
just
a
package
installer
,
like
``
pip
``.
Using
Buildout
recipes
,
we
can
install
custom
scripts
and
configuration
files
,
and
much
more
.
For
example
,
we
could
use
`
configure
and
make
<
https
://
pypi
.
python
.
org
/
pypi
/
zc
.
recipe
.
cmmi
>`
_
to
install
non
-
Python
software
from
source
,
we
could
run
JavaScript
builders
,
or
do
anything
else
that
can
be
automated
with
Python
.
Buildout
is
a
simple
automation
framework
.
There
are
hundreds
of
recipes
to
choose
from
[#
finding
-
hundreds
]
_
and
:
doc
:`
writing
new
recipes
is
easy
<
topics
/
writing
-
recipes
>`.
Repeatability
=============
A
major
goal
of
Buildout
is
to
provide
repeatability
.
But
what
does
this
mean
exactly
?
If
two
buildouts
with
the
same
configuration
are
built
in
the
same
environments
at
the
same
time
,
they
should
produce
the
same
result
,
regardless
of
their
build
history
.
That
definition
is
rather
dense
.
Let
's look at the pieces:
Buildout environment
--------------------
A Buildout environment includes the operating system and the Python
installation it'
s
run
with
.
The
more
a
buildout
depends
on
its
environment
,
the
more
variation
is
likely
between
builds
.
If
a
Python
installation
is
shared
,
packages
installed
by
one
application
affect
other
applications
,
including
buildouts
.
This
can
lead
to
unexpected
errors
.
This
is
why
it
's recommended to use a
`virtual environment <https://virtualenv.pypa.io/en/stable/>`_ or a
"clean python" built from source with no third-party packages
installed [#hypocritical]_.
To limit dependence on the operating system, people sometimes install
libraries or even database servers as Buildout parts.
Modern Linux container technology (e.g. `Docker
<https://www.docker.com/>`_) makes it a lot easier to control the
environment. If you develop entirely with respect to a particular
container image, you can have repeatability with respect to that
image, which is usually good enough because the environment, defined
by the image, is itself repeatable and unshared with other
applications.
Python requirement versions
---------------------------
Another potential source of variation is the versions of Python
dependencies used.
Newest versions
_______________
If you don'
t
specify
versions
,
Buildout
will
always
try
to
get
the
most
recent
version
of
everything
it
installs
.
This
is
a
major
reason
that
Buildout
can
be
slow
.
It
checks
for
new
versions
every
time
it
runs
.
It
does
this
to
satisfy
the
repeatability
requirement
above
.
If
it
didn
't do this, then an older buildout would likely have
different versions of Python packages than newer buildouts.
To speed things up, you can use the ``-N`` Buildout option to tell
Buildout to *not* check for newer versions of Python requirements:
.. code-block:: console
buildout -N
.. -> src
>>> run_buildout(src)
This relaxes repeatability, but with little risk if there was a recent
run without this option.
Pinned versions
_______________
You can also pin required versions in two ways. You can specify them
where you list them, as in:
.. code-block:: ini
[zeo]
recipe = zc.recipe.egg
eggs = ZEO <5.0
.. -> src
>>> prefix = """
... [buildout]
... parts = zeo
... """
>>> with open('
buildout
.
cfg
', '
w
') as f:
... _ = f.write(prefix)
... _ = f.write(src)
>>> import shutil
>>> shutil.rmtree('
eggs
')
>>> run_buildout('
buildout
show
-
picked
-
versions
=
true
')
>>> yup([n for n in ls('
eggs
') if n.startswith('
ZEO
-
4.3.1
-
')])
>>> yup('
ZEO
=
4.3.1
' in read('
out
'))
In this example, we'
ve
requested
a
version
of
ZEO
less
than
5.0
.
The
more
common
way
to
pin
version
is
using
a
``
versions
``
section
:
..
code
-
block
::
ini
[
buildout
]
parts
=
zeo
server
[
zeo
]
recipe
=
zc
.
recipe
.
egg
eggs
=
ZEO
[
server
]
recipe
=
zc
.
zdaemonrecipe
program
=
${
buildout
:
bin
-
directory
}/
runzeo
-
f
${
buildout
:
directory
}/
data
.
fs
-
a
127.0.0.1
:
8200
[
versions
]
ZEO
=
4.3.1
..
->
src
>>>
write
(
src
,
'buildout.cfg'
)
>>>
shutil
.
rmtree
(
'eggs'
)
>>>
run_buildout
(
'buildout show-picked-versions=true'
)
>>>
yup
([
n
for
n
in
ls
(
'eggs'
)
if
n
.
startswith
(
'ZEO-4.3.1-'
)])
>>>
nope
(
'ZEO = 4.3.1'
in
read
(
'out'
))
Larger
projects
may
need
to
pin
many
versions
,
so
it
's common to put
versions in their own file:
.. code-block:: ini
[buildout]
extends = versions.cfg
parts = zeo server
[zeo]
recipe = zc.recipe.egg
eggs = ZEO
[server]
recipe = zc.zdaemonrecipe
program =
${buildout:bin-directory}/runzeo
-f ${buildout:directory}/data.fs
-a 127.0.0.1:8200
.. -> src
>>> write(src, '
buildout
.
cfg
')
Here, we'
ve
used
the
Buildout
``
extends
``
option
to
say
that
configurations
should
be
read
from
the
named
file
(
or
files
)
and
that
configuration
in
the
current
file
should
override
configuration
in
the
extended
files
.
To
continue
the
example
,
our
``
versions
.
cfg
``
file
might
look
like
:
..
code
-
block
::
ini
[
versions
]
ZEO
=
4.3.1
..
->
versions_cfg
>>>
write
(
versions_cfg
,
'versions.cfg'
)
>>>
shutil
.
rmtree
(
'eggs'
)
>>>
run_buildout
(
'buildout show-picked-versions=true'
)
>>>
yup
([
n
for
n
in
ls
(
'eggs'
)
if
n
.
startswith
(
'ZEO-4.3.1-'
)])
>>>
nope
(
'ZEO = 4.3.1'
in
read
(
'out'
))
We
can
use
the
``
update
-
versions
-
file
``
option
to
ask
Buildout
to
maintain
our
``
versions
.
cfg
``
file
for
us
:
..
code
-
block
::
ini
[
buildout
]
extends
=
versions
.
cfg
show
-
picked
-
versions
=
true
update
-
versions
-
file
=
versions
.
cfg
parts
=
zeo
server
[
zeo
]
recipe
=
zc
.
recipe
.
egg
eggs
=
ZEO
[
server
]
recipe
=
zc
.
zdaemonrecipe
program
=
${
buildout
:
bin
-
directory
}/
runzeo
-
f
${
buildout
:
directory
}/
data
.
fs
-
a
127.0.0.1
:
8200
..
->
src
>>>
write
(
src
,
'buildout.cfg'
)
>>>
eq
(
versions_cfg
,
read
(
'versions.cfg'
))
>>>
run_buildout
(
'buildout show-picked-versions=true'
)
>>>
yup
([
n
for
n
in
ls
(
'eggs'
)
if
n
.
startswith
(
'ZEO-4.3.1-'
)])
>>>
yup
(
'ZODB = '
in
read
(
'versions.cfg'
))
With
``
update
-
versions
-
file
``,
whenever
Buildout
gets
the
newest
version
for
a
requirement
(
subject
to
requirement
constraints
),
it
appends
the
version
to
the
named
file
,
along
with
a
comment
saying
when
and
why
the
requirement
is
installed
.
If
you
later
want
to
upgrade
a
dependency
,
just
edit
this
file
with
the
new
version
,
or
to
remove
the
entry
altogether
and
Buildout
will
add
a
new
entry
the
next
time
it
runs
.
We
also
used
the
``
show
-
picked
-
versions
``
to
tell
Buildout
to
tell
us
when
it
got
(
picked
)
the
newest
version
of
a
requirement
.
When
versions
are
pinned
,
Buildout
doesn
't look for new versions of
the requirements, which can speed buildouts quite a bit. In fact, The
``-N`` option doesn'
t
provide
any
speedup
for
projects
whose
requirement
versions
are
all
pinned
.
When
should
you
pin
versions
?
_____________________________
The
rule
of
thumb
is
that
you
should
pin
versions
for
a
whole
system
,
such
as
an
application
or
service
.
You
do
this
because
after
integration
tests
,
you
want
to
be
sure
that
you
can
reproduce
the
tested
configuration
.
You
shouldn
't pin versions for a component, such as a library, because
doing so inhibits the ability for users of your component to integrate it
with their dependencies, which may overlap with yours. If you know
that your component only works a range of versions of some dependency,
the express the range in your project requirements. Don'
t
require
specific
versions
.
Buildout
versions
and
automatic
upgrade
---------------------------------------
In
the
interest
of
repeatability
,
Buildout
can
upgrade
itself
or
its
dependencies
to
use
the
newest
versions
or
downgrade
to
respect
pinned
versions
.
This
only
happens
if
you
run
Buildout
from
a
buildout
's own
``bin`` directory.
We can use Buildout'
s
``
bootstrap
``
command
to
install
a
local
buildout
script
:
..
code
-
block
::
console
buildout
bootstrap
..
->
src
>>>
nope
(
'buildout'
in
ls
(
'bin'
))
>>>
run_buildout
(
src
)
>>>
yup
(
'buildout'
in
ls
(
'bin'
))
Then
,
if
the
installed
script
is
used
:
..
code
-
block
::
console
bin
/
buildout
..
->
src
>>>
yup
(
os
.
path
.
exists
(
src
.
strip
()))
Then
Buildout
will
upgrade
or
downgrade
to
be
consistent
with
version
requirements
.
See
the
:
doc
:`
bootstrapping
topic
<
topics
/
bootstrapping
>`
to
learn
more
about
bootstrapping
.
Python
development
projects
===========================
A
very
common
Buildout
use
case
is
to
manage
the
development
of
a
library
or
main
part
of
an
application
written
in
Python
.
Buildout
facilitates
this
with
the
``
develop
``
option
:
..
code
-
block
::
ini
[
buildout
]
develop
=
.
...
..
->
develop_snippet
The
``
develop
``
option
takes
one
more
more
paths
to
project
`
setup
.
py
<
https
://
docs
.
python
.
org
/
3.6
/
distutils
/
setupscript
.
html
>`
_
files
or
,
more
commonly
,
directories
containing
them
.
Buildout
then
creates
"develop eggs"
[#
develop
-
eggs
]
_
for
the
corresponding
projects
.
With
develop
eggs
,
you
can
modify
the
sources
and
the
modified
sources
are
reflected
in
future
Python
runs
(
or
after
`
reloads
<
https
://
docs
.
python
.
org
/
3
/
library
/
importlib
.
html
#
importlib
.
reload
>`
_
).
For
libraries
that
you
plan
to
distribute
using
the
Python
packaging
infrastructure
,
You
'll need to write a setup file, because it'
s
needed
to
generate
a
distribution
.
If
you
're writing an application that won'
t
be
distributed
as
a
separate
Python
distribution
,
writing
a
setup
script
can
feel
like
overkill
,
but
it
's useful for:
- naming your project, so you can refer to it like any Python
requirement in your Buildout configuration, and for
- specifying the requirements your application code uses, separate
from requirements your buildout might have.
Fortunately, an application setup script can be minimal. Here'
s
an
example
::
from
setuptools
import
setup
setup
(
name
=
'main'
,
install_requires
=
[
'ZODB'
,
'six'
])
..
->
src
>>>
write
(
src
,
'setup.py'
)
We
suggest
copying
and
modifying
the
example
above
,
using
it
as
boilerplate
.
As
is
probably
clear
,
the
setup
arguments
used
:
name
The
name
of
your
application
.
This
is
the
name
you
'll use in
Buildout configuration where you want to refer to application
code.
install_requires
A list of requirement strings for Python distributions your
application depends on directly.
A *minimal* [#typical-dev-project]_ development Buildout configuration
for a project with a setup script like the one above might look
something like this:
.. code-block:: ini
[buildout]
develop = .
parts = py
[py]
recipe = zc.recipe.egg
eggs = main
interpreter = py
.. -> src
>>> eq(src.strip().split('
\
n
')[:2], develop_snippet.strip().split('
\
n
')[:2])
>>> write(src, '
buildout
.
cfg
')
>>> run_buildout()
>>> yup('
Develop
:
' in read('
out
'))
>>> eq(os.getcwd(), read('
develop
-
eggs
/
main
.
egg
-
link
').split()[0])
There'
s
a
new
option
,
``
interpreter
``,
which
names
an
*
interpreter
*
script
to
be
generated
.
An
interpreter
script
[#
interpreter
-
script
]
_
mimics
a
Python
interpreter
with
its
path
set
to
include
the
requirements
specified
in
the
eggs
option
and
their
(
transitive
)
dependencies
.
We
can
run
the
interpreter
:
..
code
-
block
::
console
bin
/
py
..
->
path
>>>
yup
(
os
.
getcwd
()
in
read
(
path
.
strip
()))
To
get
an
interactive
Python
prompt
,
or
you
can
run
a
script
with
it
:
..
code
-
block
::
console
bin
/
py
somescript
.
py
..
->
path
>>>
yup
(
os
.
path
.
exists
(
path
.
split
()[
0
]))
If
you
need
to
work
on
multiple
interdependent
projects
at
the
same
time
,
you
can
name
multiple
directories
in
the
``
develop
``
option
,
typically
pointing
to
multiple
check
outs
.
A
popular
Buildout
extension
,
`
mr
.
developer
<
https
://
pypi
.
python
.
org
/
pypi
/
mr
.
developer
>`
_
,
automates
this
process
.
Where
to
go
from
here
?
======================
This
depends
on
what
you
want
to
do
.
We
suggest
perusing
the
:
doc
:`
topics
<
topics
/
index
>`
based
on
your
needs
and
interest
.
The
:
doc
:`
reference
<
reference
>`
section
can
give
you
important
details
,
as
well
as
let
you
know
about
features
not
touched
on
here
.
..
[#
egg
]
You
may
have
heard
bad
things
about
eggs
.
This
stems
in
part
from
the
way
that
eggs
were
applied
to
regular
Python
installs
.
We
think
eggs
,
which
were
inspired
by
`
jar
<
https
://
en
.
wikipedia
.
org
/
wiki
/
JAR_
(
file_format
)>`
_
,
when
used
as
an
installation
format
,
are
a
good
fit
for
Buildout
's goals. Learn
more in the topic on :doc:`Buildout and packaging
<topics/buildout-and-packaging>`.
.. [#configparser] Buildout uses a variation (fork) of standard
``ConfigParser`` module and follows (mostly) the same parsing
rules.
.. [#requirements-one-per-line] Requirements can have whitespace
characters as in ``ZEO <=5``, so they'
re
separated
by
newlines
.
..
[#
gcc
]
Currently
,
this
example
requires
the
ability
to
build
Python
extensions
and
requires
access
to
development
tools
.
..
[#
if
-
same
-
environment
]
This
assumes
the
same
environment
and
that
dependencies
haven
't changed. We'
ll
explain
further
in
the
section
on
repeatability
.
..
[#
finding
-
hundreds
]
You
can
list
Buildout
-
related
software
,
consisting
mostly
of
Buildout
recipes
,
using
the
`
Framework
::
Buildout
<
https
://
pypi
.
python
.
org
/
pypi
?:
action
=
browse
&
show
=
all
&
c
=
512
>`
_
classifier
search
.
These
results
miss
recipes
that
don
't provide
classifier meta data. Generally you can find a recipe for a task by
searching the name of the task and the "recipe" in the `package
index <https://pypi.python.org/pypi>`_.
.. [#hypocritical] It'
s
a
little
hypocritical
to
recommend
installing
Buildout
into
an
otherwise
clean
environment
,
which
is
why
Buildout
provides
a
:
doc
:`
bootstrapping
mechanism
<
topics
/
bootstrapping
>`
which
allows
setting
up
a
buildout
without
having
to
contaminate
a
virtual
environment
or
clean
Python
install
.)
..
[#
develop
-
eggs
]
pip
calls
these
`
"editable"
installs
<
https
://
pip
.
pypa
.
io
/
en
/
stable
/
reference
/
pip_install
/#
editable
-
installs
>`
_
.
..
[#
typical
-
dev
-
project
]
A
more
typical
development
buildout
will
include
at
least
a
part
to
specify
a
test
runner
.
A
development
buildout
might
define
other
support
parts
,
like
JavaScript
builders
,
database
servers
,
development
web
-
servers
and
so
on
.
..
[#
interpreter
-
script
]
An
interpreter
script
is
similar
to
the
``
bin
/
python
``
program
included
in
a
virtual
environment
,
except
that
it
's lighter weight and has exactly the packages
listed in the ``eggs`` option and their dependencies, plus whatever
comes from the Python environment.
doc/topics/index.rst
View file @
15f4ff5e
...
@@ -6,3 +6,8 @@ Buildout Topics
...
@@ -6,3 +6,8 @@ Buildout Topics
:maxdepth: 2
:maxdepth: 2
.. todo:
.. todo:
variables-extending-and-substitutions
writing-recipes
bootstrapping
buildout-and-packaging
setup.py
View file @
15f4ff5e
...
@@ -92,7 +92,8 @@ setup(
...
@@ -92,7 +92,8 @@ setup(
],
],
include_package_data
=
True
,
include_package_data
=
True
,
entry_points
=
entry_points
,
entry_points
=
entry_points
,
extras_require
=
dict
(
test
=
[
'zope.testing'
,
'manuel'
]),
extras_require
=
dict
(
test
=
[
'zope.testing'
,
'manuel'
,
'ZEO ==4.3.1'
,
'zc.zdaemonrecipe'
]),
zip_safe
=
False
,
zip_safe
=
False
,
classifiers
=
[
classifiers
=
[
'Intended Audience :: Developers'
,
'Intended Audience :: Developers'
,
...
...
src/zc/buildout/testing.py
View file @
15f4ff5e
...
@@ -212,6 +212,9 @@ def buildoutSetUp(test):
...
@@ -212,6 +212,9 @@ def buildoutSetUp(test):
root_logger
.
removeHandler
(
handler
)
root_logger
.
removeHandler
(
handler
)
for
handler
in
handlers_before_set_up
:
for
handler
in
handlers_before_set_up
:
root_logger
.
addHandler
(
handler
)
root_logger
.
addHandler
(
handler
)
bo_logger
=
logging
.
getLogger
(
'zc.buildout'
)
for
handler
in
bo_logger
.
handlers
[:]:
bo_logger
.
removeHandler
(
handler
)
register_teardown
(
restore_root_logger_handlers
)
register_teardown
(
restore_root_logger_handlers
)
base
=
tempfile
.
mkdtemp
(
'buildoutSetUp'
)
base
=
tempfile
.
mkdtemp
(
'buildoutSetUp'
)
...
...
src/zc/buildout/tests.py
View file @
15f4ff5e
...
@@ -13,12 +13,13 @@
...
@@ -13,12 +13,13 @@
#
#
##############################################################################
##############################################################################
from
zc.buildout.buildout
import
print_
from
zc.buildout.buildout
import
print_
from
zope.testing
import
renormalizing
from
zope.testing
import
renormalizing
,
setupstack
import
doctest
import
doctest
import
manuel.capture
import
manuel.capture
import
manuel.doctest
import
manuel.doctest
import
manuel.testing
import
manuel.testing
from
multiprocessing
import
Process
import
os
import
os
import
pkg_resources
import
pkg_resources
import
re
import
re
...
@@ -3422,10 +3423,14 @@ def updateSetup(test):
...
@@ -3422,10 +3423,14 @@ def updateSetup(test):
makeNewRelease
(
dist
.
key
,
ws
,
new_releases
)
makeNewRelease
(
dist
.
key
,
ws
,
new_releases
)
os
.
mkdir
(
os
.
path
.
join
(
new_releases
,
dist
.
key
))
os
.
mkdir
(
os
.
path
.
join
(
new_releases
,
dist
.
key
))
bootstrap_py
=
os
.
path
.
join
(
def
ancestor
(
path
,
level
):
os
.
path
.
dirname
(
os
.
path
.
dirname
(
os
.
path
.
dirname
(
while
level
>
0
:
os
.
path
.
dirname
(
__file__
)))),
path
=
os
.
path
.
dirname
(
path
)
'bootstrap'
,
'bootstrap.py'
)
level
-=
1
return
path
bootstrap_py
=
os
.
path
.
join
(
ancestor
(
__file__
,
4
),
'bootstrap'
,
'bootstrap.py'
)
def
bootstrapSetup
(
test
):
def
bootstrapSetup
(
test
):
buildout_txt_setup
(
test
)
buildout_txt_setup
(
test
)
...
@@ -3449,6 +3454,15 @@ normalize_S = (
...
@@ -3449,6 +3454,15 @@ normalize_S = (
'#!/usr/local/bin/python2.7'
,
'#!/usr/local/bin/python2.7'
,
)
)
def
run_buildout
(
command
):
os
.
environ
[
'HOME'
]
=
os
.
getcwd
()
# Make sure we don't get .buildout
args
=
command
.
strip
().
split
()
import
pkg_resources
buildout
=
pkg_resources
.
load_entry_point
(
'zc.buildout'
,
'console_scripts'
,
args
[
0
])
sys
.
stdout
=
sys
.
stderr
=
open
(
'out'
,
'w'
)
buildout
(
args
[
1
:])
def
test_suite
():
def
test_suite
():
test_suite
=
[
test_suite
=
[
manuel
.
testing
.
TestSuite
(
manuel
.
testing
.
TestSuite
(
...
@@ -3710,6 +3724,56 @@ def test_suite():
...
@@ -3710,6 +3724,56 @@ def test_suite():
unittest.makeSuite(UnitTests),
unittest.makeSuite(UnitTests),
]
]
docdir = os.path.join(ancestor(__file__, 4), '
doc
')
if os.path.exists(docdir) and not sys.platform.startswith('
win
'):
# Note that the purpose of the documentation tests are mainly
# to test the documentation, not to test buildout.
def docSetUp(test):
extra_options = (
" use-dependency-links=false"
# Leaving this here so we can uncomment to see what'
s
going
on
.
#" log-format=%(asctime)s____%(levelname)s_%(message)s -vvv"
" index="
+
os
.
path
.
join
(
ancestor
(
__file__
,
4
),
'doc'
)
)
def
run_buildout_in_process
(
command
=
'buildout'
):
process
=
Process
(
target
=
run_buildout
,
args
=
(
command
+
extra_options
,
),
)
process
.
daemon
=
True
process
.
start
()
process
.
join
(
99
)
if
process
.
is_alive
()
or
process
.
exitcode
:
print
(
read
())
def
read
(
path
=
'out'
):
with
open
(
path
)
as
f
:
return
f
.
read
()
def
write
(
text
,
path
):
with
open
(
path
,
'w'
)
as
f
:
f
.
write
(
text
)
test
.
globs
.
update
(
run_buildout
=
run_buildout_in_process
,
yup
=
lambda
cond
,
orelse
=
'Nope'
:
None
if
cond
else
orelse
,
nope
=
lambda
cond
,
orelse
=
'Nope'
:
orelse
if
cond
else
None
,
eq
=
lambda
a
,
b
:
None
if
a
==
b
else
(
a
,
b
),
eqs
=
lambda
a
,
*
b
:
None
if
set
(
a
)
==
set
(
b
)
else
(
a
,
b
),
read
=
read
,
write
=
write
,
)
setupstack
.
setUpDirectory
(
test
)
test_suite
.
append
(
manuel
.
testing
.
TestSuite
(
manuel
.
doctest
.
Manuel
()
+
manuel
.
capture
.
Manuel
(),
os
.
path
.
join
(
docdir
,
'getting-started.rst'
),
setUp
=
docSetUp
,
tearDown
=
setupstack
.
tearDown
))
# adding bootstrap.txt doctest to the suite
# adding bootstrap.txt doctest to the suite
# only if bootstrap.py is present
# only if bootstrap.py is present
if
os
.
path
.
exists
(
bootstrap_py
):
if
os
.
path
.
exists
(
bootstrap_py
):
...
...
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