New batch of patches by Jeff Rush; moved his readme.txt portion here.

This commit is contained in:
Guido van Rossum 1997-12-05 22:07:14 +00:00
parent cee1dca4e7
commit a34c31352b
5 changed files with 148 additions and 13 deletions

View file

@ -63,6 +63,7 @@ extern void inittime();
extern void initthread();
extern void initcStringIO();
extern void initcPickle();
extern void initpcre();
#ifdef WIN32
extern void initmsvcrt();
#endif
@ -113,6 +114,7 @@ struct _inittab _PyImport_Inittab[] = {
#endif
{"cStringIO", initcStringIO},
{"cPickle", initcPickle},
{"pcre", initpcre},
#ifdef WIN32
{"msvcrt", initmsvcrt},
#endif

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@ -74,11 +74,6 @@
/* Configuration Options for Finding Modules */
#define PREFIX ""
#define EXEC_PREFIX ""
//#define VPATH "."
//#define PYTHONPATH PREFIX "/lib/python" VERSION DELIM \
// PREFIX "/lib/python" VERSION "/test" DELIM \
// EXEC_PREFIX "/lib/python" VERSION "/sharedmodules"
/***************************************************/
/* 32-Bit IBM VisualAge C/C++ v3.0 for OS/2 */
@ -91,7 +86,7 @@
#define PYCC_VACPP /* Define Indicator of C Compiler */
/* Platform Filesystem */
#define PYTHONPATH ".;.\\lib;.\\lib\\plat-os2;.\\lib\\dos_8x3;.\\lib\\lib-tk"
#define PYTHONPATH ".;.\\lib;.\\lib\\plat-win;.\\lib\\dos-8x3;.\\lib\\lib-tk"
#define DOSFILESYS /* OS/2 Uses the DOS File Naming Conventions */
/* #define IMPORT_8x3_NAMES */
@ -483,7 +478,7 @@
/* #define WITH_READLINE 1 */
/* Define if you have clock. */
/* #define HAVE_CLOCK */
#define HAVE_CLOCK
/* Define if you have ftime. */
#define HAVE_FTIME
@ -540,7 +535,7 @@
/* #undef HAVE_TCSETPGRP */
/* Define if you have times. */
/* #undef HAVE_TIMES */
#define HAVE_TIMES
/* Define if you have uname. */
/* #undef HAVE_UNAME */

View file

@ -50,7 +50,11 @@ extern BOOL PyWin_IsWin32s();
/* Search in some common locations for the associated Python libraries.
*
* This version always returns "" for both prefix and exec_prefix.
* Two directories must be found, the platform independent directory
* (prefix), containing the common .py and .pyc files, and the platform
* dependent directory (exec_prefix), containing the shared library
* modules. Note that prefix and exec_prefix can be the same directory,
* but for some installations, they are different.
*
* Py_GetPath() tries to return a sensible Python module search path.
*
@ -75,6 +79,7 @@ extern BOOL PyWin_IsWin32s();
#endif
static char prefix[MAXPATHLEN+1];
static char exec_prefix[MAXPATHLEN+1];
static char progpath[MAXPATHLEN+1];
static char *module_search_path = NULL;
@ -345,9 +350,21 @@ calculate_path()
else
pythonhome = NULL;
}
else
else {
char *delim;
strcpy(prefix, pythonhome);
/* Extract Any Optional Trailing EXEC_PREFIX */
/* e.g. PYTHONHOME=<prefix>:<exec_prefix> */
delim = strchr(prefix, DELIM);
if (delim) {
*delim = '\0';
strcpy(exec_prefix, delim+1);
} else
strcpy(exec_prefix, EXEC_PREFIX);
}
if (envpath && *envpath == '\0')
envpath = NULL;
@ -475,7 +492,10 @@ Py_GetPrefix()
char *
Py_GetExecPrefix()
{
return Py_GetPrefix();
if (!module_search_path)
calculate_path();
return exec_prefix;
}
char *

View file

@ -165,6 +165,9 @@ MODULES = \
$(PATHOBJ)\MD5Module.obj \
$(PATHOBJ)\NewModule.obj \
$(PATHOBJ)\Operator.obj \
$(PATHOBJ)\PCREModule.obj \
$(PATHOBJ)\PyPCRE.obj \
$(PATHOBJ)\RotorModule.obj \
$(PATHOBJ)\PosixModule.obj \
$(PATHOBJ)\RegexModule.obj \
$(PATHOBJ)\RegExpr.obj \
@ -197,7 +200,7 @@ _BASE = /Q /W2 /I$(PROJINCLUDE)
# /Q = Omit IBM Copyright
# /W2 = Show Warnings/Errors Only
_GEN = /G4 /Gm /Gd
_GEN = /G4 /Gm /Gd-
# /G4 = Generate Code for 486 (Use 386 for Debugger)
# /Gm = Use Multithread Runtime
# /Gd = Dynamically Load Runtime
@ -208,7 +211,8 @@ _OPT = /O /Gl
# /Gu = Advise Linker All Ext Data is ID'd
# /Gl = Have Linker Remove Unused Fns
_DBG = /DHAVE_CONFIG_H /DUSE_SOCKET
_DBG = /Wpro- /Ti- /DHAVE_CONFIG_H /DUSE_SOCKET
# /Wpro= Generate Compiler Warnings re Missing Prototypes
# /Ti = Embed Debugger/Analyzer Recs
# /Tm = Enable Debug Memory Fns
# /Tx = Request Full Dump Upon Exception

114
PC/os2vacpp/readme.txt Normal file
View file

@ -0,0 +1,114 @@
IBM VisualAge C/C++ for OS/2
============================
To build Python for OS/2, change into ./os2vacpp and issue an 'NMAKE'
command. This will build a PYTHON15.DLL containing the set of Python
modules listed in config.c and a small PYTHON.EXE to start the
interpreter.
By changing the C compiler flag /Gd- in the makefile to /Gd+, you can
reduce the size of these by causing Python to dynamically link to the
C runtime DLLs instead of including their bulk in your binaries.
However, this means that any system on which you run Python must have
the VAC++ compiler installed in order to have those DLLs available.
During the build process you may see a couple of harmless warnings:
From the C Compiler, "No function prototype given for XXX", which
comes from the use of K&R parameters within Python for portability.
From the ILIB librarian, "Module Not Found (XXX)", which comes
from its attempt to perform the (-+) operation, which removes and
then adds a .OBJ to the library. The first time a build is done,
it obviously cannot remove what is not yet built.
This build includes support for most Python functionality as well as
TCP/IP sockets. It omits the Posix ability to 'fork' a process but
supports threads using OS/2 native capabilities. I have tried to
support everything possible but here are a few usage notes.
-- os.popen() Usage Warnings
With respect to my implementation of popen() under OS/2:
import os
fd = os.popen("pkzip.exe -@ junk.zip", 'wb')
fd.write("file1.txt\n")
fd.write("file2.txt\n")
fd.write("file3.txt\n")
fd.write("\x1a") # Should Not Be Necessary But Is
fd.close()
There is a bug, either in the VAC++ compiler or OS/2 itself, where the
simple closure of the write-side of a pipe -to- a process does not
send an EOF to that process. I find I must explicitly write a
control-Z (EOF) before closing the pipe. This is not a problem when
using popen() in read mode.
One other slight difference with my popen() is that I return None
from the close(), instead of the Unix convention of the return code
of the spawned program. I could find no easy way to do this under
OS/2.
-- BEGINLIBPATH/ENDLIBPATH
With respect to environment variables, this OS/2 port supports the
special-to-OS/2 magic names of 'BEGINLIBPATH' and 'ENDLIBPATH' to
control where to load conventional DLLs from. Those names are
intercepted and converted to calls on the OS/2 kernel APIs and
are inherited by child processes, whether Python-based or not.
A few new attributes have been added to the os module:
os.meminstalled # Count of Bytes of RAM Installed on Machine
os.memkernel # Count of Bytes of RAM Reserved (Non-Swappable)
os.memvirtual # Count of Bytes of Virtual RAM Possible
os.timeslice # Duration of Scheduler Timeslice, in Milliseconds
os.maxpathlen # Maximum Length of a Path Specification, in chars
os.maxnamelen # Maximum Length of a Single Dir/File Name, in chars
os.version # Version of OS/2 Being Run e.g. "4.00"
os.revision # Revision of OS/2 Being Run (usually zero)
os.bootdrive # Drive that System Booted From e.g. "C:"
# (useful to find the CONFIG.SYS used to boot with)
-- Using Python as the Default OS/2 Batch Language
Note that OS/2 supports the Unix technique of putting the special
comment line at the time of scripts e.g. "#!/usr/bin/python" in
a different syntactic form. To do this, put your script into a file
with a .CMD extension and added 'extproc' to the top as follows:
extproc C:\Python\Python.exe -x
import os
print "Hello from Python"
The '-x' option tells Python to skip the first line of the file
while processing the rest as normal Python source.
-- Suggested Environment Variable Setup
With respect to the environment variables for Python, I use the
following setup:
Set PYTHONHOME=E:\Tau\Projects\Python;D:\DLLs
Set PYTHONPATH=.;E:\Tau\Projects\Python\Lib; \
E:\Tau\Projects\Python\Lib\plat-win
The EXEC_PREFIX (optional second pathspec on PYTHONHOME) is where
you put any Python extension DLLs you may create/obtain. There
are none provided with this release.
-- Contact Info
If you have questions, suggestions or problems specifically with
the OS/2 VAC++ port of Python, please contact me at:
Jeff Rush <jrush@summit-research.com>.
I support no other platform but OS/2 (and eventually AmigaDOS).