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Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +00001Python release 1.1
2==================
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +00003
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +00004==> This is Python version 1.1.
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +00005
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +00006==> Python 1.1 contains many improvements over 1.0.3, but is almost
7 backward compatible (though the magic number for .pyc file has
Guido van Rossumb85ae1a1994-10-06 16:15:09 +00008 changed). It is portable to many more non-UNIX platforms.
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +00009
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000010==> If you don't know yet what Python is: it's an interpreted,
11 extensible, embeddable, interactive, object-oriented programming
12 language. For a quick summary of what Python can mean for a
13 UNIX/C programmer, read Misc/BLURB.LUTZ.
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +000014
Guido van Rossumb85ae1a1994-10-06 16:15:09 +000015==> If you want to start compiling right away (on UNIX): just type
16 "./configure" in the current directory and when it finishes, type
17 "make". See the section Build Instructions below for more
18 details.
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +000019
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000020==> All documentation is in the subdirectory Doc in the form of LaTeX
21 files. In order of importance for new users: Tutorial (tut),
22 Library Reference (lib), Language Reference (ref), Extending
23 (ext). Note that especially the Library Reference is of immense
24 value since much of Python's power (including the built-in data
Guido van Rossumb85ae1a1994-10-06 16:15:09 +000025 types and functions!) is described there. [NB The ext document
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000026 has not been updated to reflect this release yet.]
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +000027
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000028==> Python is COPYRIGHTED but free to use for all. See the copyright
Guido van Rossumb85ae1a1994-10-06 16:15:09 +000029 notice at the end of this file. Moreover, the Python distribution
30 is not affected by the GNU Public Licence (GPL). There is support
31 for interfaces to some GNU code but this is entirely optional and
32 no GNU code is distributed with Python. For all these packages,
33 GPL-free public domain versions also exist.
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +000034
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +000035
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000036Build instructions
37------------------
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +000038
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000039Before you start building Python, you must first configure it. This
40entails (at least) running the script "./configure", which figures out
41your system configuration and creates several Makefiles. (This will
42take a minute or two -- please be patient!) When it is done, you are
43ready to run make. Typing "make" in the toplevel directory will
44recursively run make in each of the subdirectories Parser, Objects,
45Python and Modules, creating a library file in each one. The
46executable of the interpreter is built in the Modules subdirectory but
47moved up here when it is built. If you want or need to, you can also
48chdir into each subdirectory in turn and run make there manually
49(do the Modules subdirectory last!). If you run into trouble, first
50see the section Troubleshooting later in this file.
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +000051
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000052EXCEPTIONS: on SVR4 derived systems, you need to pass the configure
53script the option --with-svr4. See below for more options you can
54pass to the configure script.
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +000055
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000056AIX users: read the file Misc/AIX-NOTES before trying to build.
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +000057
Guido van Rossum0a516c91994-09-12 10:58:40 +000058HP-UX users: read the file Misc/HPUX-NOTES if you want to be able to
59use shared libraries for dynamically loaded modules.
60
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000061Minix users: when using ack, use "CC=cc AR=aal RANLIB=: ./configure"!
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +000062
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000063You can configure the interpreter to contain fewer or more built-in
64modules by editing the file Modules/Setup. This file is initially
65copied (when the toplevel Makefile makes Modules/Makefile for the
66first time) from Setup.in; if it does not exist yet, make a copy
67yourself. Never edit Setup.in -- always edit Setup. Read the
68comments in the file for information on what kind of edits you can
69make. When you have edited Setup, Makefile and config.c in Modules
70will automatically be rebuilt the next time you run make in the
71toplevel directory. (There are some example Setup files which you may
72copy to Setup for specific systems; have a look at Setup.*.)
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +000073
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000074If you want to change the optimization level of the build, assign to
75the OPT variable on the toplevel make command; e.g. "make OPT=-g" will
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +000076build a debugging version of Python on most platforms. The default is
77OPT=-O; a value for OPT in the environment when the configure script
78is run overrides this default (likewise for CC; and the initial value
79for LIBS is used as the base set of libraries to link with).
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +000080
81To test the interpreter that you have just built, type "make test".
82This runs the test set silently, twice (once with no compiled files,
83once with the compiled files left by the previous test run). Each
84test run should print "All tests OK." and nothing more. (The test set
85does not test the built-in modules, but will find most other problems
86with the interpreter.)
87
88To install the interpreter as /usr/local/bin/python, type "make
89install". To install the library as /usr/local/lib/python, type "make
90libinstall". To install the manual page as
91/usr/local/man/man1/python.1, type "make maninstall". To install the
92Emacs editing mode for python, manually copy the file
93Misc/python-mode.el to your local Emacs lisp directory. The directory
94/usr/local can be overridden at configuration time by passing
95--prefix=DIRECTORY to the configure script, or at make time by passing
96"prefix=DIRECTORY" to make. See below for more information on --prefix.
97
98If you plan to do development of extension modules or to embed Python
99in another application and don't want to reference the original source
100tree, you can type "make inclinstall" and "make libainstall" to
101install the include files and lib*.a files, respectively, as
102/usr/local/include/Py/*.h and /usr/local/lib/python/lib/lib*.a. The
103make libainstall target also installs copies of several other files
104used or produced during the build process which are needed to build
105extensions or to generate their Makefiles.
106
107To print the documentation, cd into the Doc subdirectory, type "make"
108(let's hope you have LaTeX installed!), and send the four resulting
109PostScript files (tut.ps, lib.ps, ref.ps, and ext.ps) to the printer.
110See the README file there; you can also build a texinfo version of the
111library manual and from that construct an Emacs info version (the
112hypertext format used by the Emacs "info" command) and an HTML version
113(the hypertext format used by the World Wide Web distributed
114information initiative). You don't need to have LaTeX installed for
115this. Note that the Python archive sites also carry the resulting
116PostScript files, in case you have a PostScript printer but not LaTeX.
117
118Some special cases are handled by passing environment variables or
119options to the configure script:
120
121- The configure script uses gcc (the GNU C compiler) if it finds it.
122If you don't want this, or if this compiler is installed but broken on
123your platform, pass "CC=cc" (or whatever the name of the proper C
124compiler is) in the environment.
125
126- On System V, Release 4 derived systems (e.g. SOLARIS 2, but not
127IRIX 5) you need to call the configure script with the option
128--with-svr4. This is needed so the libraries -lnsl and -lsocket are
129found. (On some other systems, e.g. IRIX 5, these libraries exist but
130are incompatible with other system libraries such as X11 and GL.)
131
132- If you want to install the binaries and the Python library somewhere
133else than in /usr/local/{bin,lib}, you can pass the option
134--prefix=DIRECTORY; the interpreter binary will be installed as
135DIRECTORY/bin/python and the library files as DIRECTORY/lib/python/*.
136If you pass --exec-prefix=DIRECTORY (as well) this overrides the
137installation prefix for architecture-dependent files (like the
138interpreter binary). Note that --prefix=DIRECTORY also affects the
139default module search path (sys.path), when Modules/config.c is
140compiled. Passing make the option prefix=DIRECTORY (and/or
141exec_prefix=DIRECTORY) overrides the prefix set at configuration time;
142this may be more convenient than re-running the configure script if
143you change your mind about the install prefix...
144
Guido van Rossum03d8f741994-08-12 12:45:02 +0000145- You can use the GNU readline library to improve the interactive user
146interface: this gives you line editing and command history when
147calling python interactively. You need to configure build the GNU
148readline library before running the configure script. Its sources are
Guido van Rossumb85ae1a1994-10-06 16:15:09 +0000149not distributed with Python; you can ftp them from any GNU mirror
150site, or from its home site:
Guido van Rossum03d8f741994-08-12 12:45:02 +0000151ftp://slc2.ins.cwru.edu/pub/dist/readline-2.0.tar.gz (or a higher
Guido van Rossumb85ae1a1994-10-06 16:15:09 +0000152version number -- using version 1.x is not recommended).
153
154A GPL-free version was posted to comp.sources.misc in volume 31 and is
155widely available from FTP archive sites. One URL for it is:
156ftp://gatekeeper.dec.com/.b/usenet/comp.sources.misc/volume31/editline/part01.Z
157
158Pass the Python configure script the option --with-readline=DIRECTORY
159where DIRECTORY is the absolute pathname of the directory where you've
160built the readline library. Some hints on building and using the
161readline library:
Guido van Rossum03d8f741994-08-12 12:45:02 +0000162
163 - On SGI IRIX 5, you may have to add the following
164 to rldefs.h:
165
166 #ifndef sigmask
167 #define sigmask(sig) (1L << ((sig)-1))
168 #endif
169
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +0000170 - On most systems, you will have to add #include "rldefs.h" to the
171 top of several source files, and if you use the VPATH feature, you
172 will have to add dependencies of the form foo.o: foo.c to the
173 Makefile for several values of foo.
174
Guido van Rossum03d8f741994-08-12 12:45:02 +0000175 - The readline library requires use of the termcap library. A
176 known problem with this is that it contains entry points which
177 cause conflicts with the STDWIN and SGI GL libraries. The stdwin
178 conflict can be solved (and will be, in the next release of
179 stdwin) by adding a line saying '#define werase w_erase' to the
180 stdwin.h file (in the stdwin distribution, subdirectory H). The
181 GL conflict has been solved in the Python configure script by a
182 hack that forces use of the static version of the termcap library.
183
184 - Check the newsgroup gnu.bash.bugs for specific problems with the
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +0000185 readline library (I don't get this group here but I've been told
186 that it is the place for readline bugs.)
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000187
188- On SGI IRIX, and on Sun SOLARIS 2, you can use multiple threads. To
189enable this, pass --with-thread. In the Modules/Setup file, enable
190the thread module. (Threads aren't enabled automatically because
191there are run-time penalties when support for them is compiled in even
192if you don't use them.)
193
194- On SGI IRIX, there are modules that interface to many SGI specific
195system libraries, e.g. the GL library and the audio hardware. To
196enable these modules, you must edit the Modules/Setup file (or copy the
197Setup.irix4 file to it).
198
199- On SGI IRIX 4, dynamic loading of extension modules is supported by
200the "dl" library by Jack Jansen, which is ftp'able from
201ftp://ftp.cwi.nl/pub/dynload/dl-1.6.tar.Z. This is enabled (after
202you've ftp'ed and compiled the dl library!) by passing
203--with-sgi-dl=DIRECTORY where DIRECTORY is the absolute pathname of
204the dl library. (Don't bother on IRIX 5, it already has dynamic
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +0000205linking using SunOS style shared libraries.) Support for this feature
206is deprecated.
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000207
208- Dynamic loading of modules is rumoured to be supported on some other
209systems: VAX (Ultrix), Sun3 (SunOS 3.4), Sequent Symmetry (Dynix), and
210Atari ST. This is done using a combination of the GNU dynamic loading
211package (ftp://ftp.cwi.nl/pub/dynload/dl-dld-1.1.tar.Z) and an
212emulation of the SGI dl library mentioned above (the emulation can be
213found at ftp://ftp.cwi.nl/pub/dynload/dld-3.2.3.tar.Z). To enable
214this, ftp and compile both libraries, then call the configure passing
215it the option --with-dl-dld=DL_DIRECTORY,DLD_DIRECTORY where
216DL_DIRECTORY is the absolute pathname of the dl emulation library and
217DLD_DIRECTORY is the absolute pathname of the GNU dld library. (Don't
218bother on SunOS 4 or 5, they already have dynamic linking using shared
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +0000219libraries.) Support for this feature is deprecated.
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000220
221- It is possible to specify alternative versions for the Math library
222(default -lm) and the C library (default the empty string) using the
223options --with-libm=STRING and --with-libc=STRING, respectively. E.g.
224if your system requires that you pass -lc_s to the C compiler to use
225the shared C library, you can pass --with-libc=-lc_s. These libraries
226are passed after all other libraries, the C library last.
227
228You can also build an "extended" interpreter, using modules that are
229not contained in the Modules directory. Extensions are distributed as
230a separate tar file (currently extensions.tar.Z). See the README file
231there.
232
233
234Building for multiple architectures (using the VPATH feature)
235-------------------------------------------------------------
236
237If your file system is shared between multiple architectures, it
238usually is not necessary to make copies of the sources for each
239architecture you want to support. If the make program supports the
240VPATH feature, you can create an empty build directory for each
241architecture, and in each directory run the configure script (on the
242appropriate machine with the appropriate options). This creates the
243necessary subdirectories and the Makefiles therein. The Makefiles
244contain a line VPATH=... which points to directory containing the
245actual sources.
246
247For example, the following is all you need to build a minimal Python
248in /usr/tmp/python (assuming ~guido/src/python is the toplevel
249directory and you want to build in /usr/tmp/python):
250
251 $ mkdir /usr/tmp/python
252 $ cd /usr/tmp/python
253 $ ~guido/src/python/configure
254 [...]
255 $ make
256 [...]
257 $
258
259To use the readline library in this case, you will have to create a
260subdirectory of your build directory called readline, copy
261readline/Makefile into it, edit the Makefile to contain a proper VPATH
262line (and possibly edit the compiler flags set in the Makefile), and
263pass the configure script a --with-readline=DIRECTORY option giving it
264the absolute (!) pathname of the readline build directory.
265
266Note that Modules/Makefile copies the original Setup file to the build
267directory if it finds no Setup file there. This means that you can
268edit the Setup file for each architecture independently. For this
269reason, subsequent changes to the original Setup file are not tracked
270automatically, as they might overwrite local changes. To force a copy
271of a changed original Setup file, delete the target Setup file. (The
272makesetup script supports multiple input files, so if you want to be
273fancy you can change the rules to create an empty Setup.local if it
274doesn't exist and run it with arguments $(srcdir)/Setup Setup.local;
275however this assumes that you only need to add modules.)
276
277
278Troubleshooting
279---------------
280
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +0000281See section 3 of the FAQ (in subdirectory Misc of the distribution)
282for hints on what can go wrong, and how to fix it.
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000283
284
285Building on non-UNIX systems
286----------------------------
287
288On non-UNIX systems, you will have to fake the effect of running the
289configure script manually. A good start is to copy the file
290config.h.in to config.h and edit the latter to reflect the actual
291configuration of your system. Most symbols must simply be defined as
2921 only if the corresponding feature is present and can be left alone
293otherwise; however RETSIGTYPE must always be defined, either as int or
294as void, and the *_t type symbols must be defined as some variant of
295int if they need to be defined at all. Then arrange that the symbol
296HAVE_CONFIG_H is defined during compilation (usually by passing an
297argument of the form `-DHAVE_CONFIG_H' to the compiler, but this is
298necessarily system-dependent).
299
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +0000300I have tried to collect instructions, Makefiles and additional sources
301for various platforms in this release. The following directories
302exist:
303
304Mac/ Apple Macintosh, using THINK C 6.0 or MPW 3.2.
305Dos/ MS-DOS and Windows 3.1, using Microsoft C.
306Nt/ Windows NT, using Microsoft Visual C/C++.
307Os2/ OS/2.
308
309Most of these instructions were last tested with a previous Python
310release, so you may still experience occasional problems. If you have
311fixes or suggestions, please let me know and I'll try to incorporate
312them in the next release.
313
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000314
315Distribution structure
316----------------------
317
318Most subdirectories have their own README file. Most files have
319comments.
320
321ChangeLog A raw list of changes since the first 1.0.0 BETA release
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000322Demo/ Demonstration scripts, modules and programs
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000323Doc/ Documentation (in LaTeX)
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +0000324Extensions/ Extension modules (distributed separately)
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000325Grammar/ Input for the parser generator
326Include/ Public header files
327Lib/ Python library modules
328Makefile Rules for building the distribution
329Misc/ Miscellaneous files
330Modules/ Implementation of most built-in modules
331Objects/ Implementation of most built-in object types
332Parser/ The parser and tokenizer and their input handling
333Python/ The "compiler" and interpreter
334README The file you're reading now
335acconfig.h Additional input for the autoheader program
336config.h Configuration header (generated)
337config.h.in Source from which config.status creates config.h
338config.status status from last run of configure script (generated)
339configure Configuration shell script (GNU autoconf output)
340configure.in Configuration specification (GNU autoconf input)
341tags, TAGS Tags files for vi and Emacs (generated)
342python The executable interpreter (generated)
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000343
344
345Ftp access
346----------
347
Guido van Rossum03d8f741994-08-12 12:45:02 +0000348The latest Python source distribution can be ftp'ed from
349ftp://ftp.cwi.nl/pub/python/python<version>.tar.gz. You can also find
350PostScript of the main Python documentation there, Macintosh and PC
351binaries, and the latest STDWIN source distribution (in directory
352/pub/stdwin). oFr mirror sites, see the list in the FAQ (Misc/FAQ
353this directory).
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000354
355
Guido van Rossum03d8f741994-08-12 12:45:02 +0000356Mailing list and Newsgroup
357--------------------------
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000358
Guido van Rossum03d8f741994-08-12 12:45:02 +0000359There are a mailing list and a newsgroup devoted to Python
360programming, design and bugs. The newsgroup, comp.lang.python,
361contains exactly the same messages as the mailing list. To subscribe
362to the mailing list, send mail containing your real name and e-mail
363address in Internet form to "python-list-request@cwi.nl".
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000364
365
366Author
367------
368
369Guido van Rossum
370CWI, dept. CST
371P.O. Box 94079
3721090 GB Amsterdam
373The Netherlands
374
375E-mail: Guido.van.Rossum@cwi.nl
376
377
378Copyright Notice
379----------------
380
381The Python source is copyrighted, but you can freely use and copy it
382as long as you don't change or remove the copyright:
383
384Copyright 1991, 1992, 1993, 1994 by Stichting Mathematisch Centrum,
385Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
386
387 All Rights Reserved
388
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +0000389Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its
390documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted,
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000391provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +0000392both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in
Guido van Rossum433c8ad1994-08-01 12:07:07 +0000393supporting documentation, and that the names of Stichting Mathematisch
394Centrum or CWI not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to
395distribution of the software without specific, written prior permission.
396
397STICHTING MATHEMATISCH CENTRUM DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO
398THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND
399FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL STICHTING MATHEMATISCH CENTRUM BE LIABLE
400FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES
401WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN
402ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT
403OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
404
405
406Signature
407---------
Guido van Rossum627b2d71993-12-24 10:39:16 +0000408
409--Guido van Rossum, CWI, Amsterdam <Guido.van.Rossum@cwi.nl>
Guido van Rossumc561e5d1994-08-23 13:52:46 +0000410<URL:http://www.cwi.nl/cwi/people/Guido.van.Rossum.html>