| # -*- makefile -*- |
| # The file Setup is used by the makesetup script to construct the files |
| # Makefile and config.c, from Makefile.pre and config.c.in, |
| # respectively. The file Setup itself is initially copied from |
| # Setup.dist; once it exists it will not be overwritten, so you can edit |
| # Setup to your heart's content. Note that Makefile.pre is created |
| # from Makefile.pre.in by the toplevel configure script. |
| |
| # (VPATH notes: Setup and Makefile.pre are in the build directory, as |
| # are Makefile and config.c; the *.in and *.dist files are in the source |
| # directory.) |
| |
| # Each line in this file describes one or more optional modules. |
| # Modules enabled here will not be compiled by the setup.py script, |
| # so the file can be used to override setup.py's behavior. |
| |
| # Lines have the following structure: |
| # |
| # <module> ... [<sourcefile> ...] [<cpparg> ...] [<library> ...] |
| # |
| # <sourcefile> is anything ending in .c (.C, .cc, .c++ are C++ files) |
| # <cpparg> is anything starting with -I, -D, -U or -C |
| # <library> is anything ending in .a or beginning with -l or -L |
| # <module> is anything else but should be a valid Python |
| # identifier (letters, digits, underscores, beginning with non-digit) |
| # |
| # (As the makesetup script changes, it may recognize some other |
| # arguments as well, e.g. *.so and *.sl as libraries. See the big |
| # case statement in the makesetup script.) |
| # |
| # Lines can also have the form |
| # |
| # <name> = <value> |
| # |
| # which defines a Make variable definition inserted into Makefile.in |
| # |
| # Finally, if a line contains just the word "*shared*" (without the |
| # quotes but with the stars), then the following modules will not be |
| # built statically. The build process works like this: |
| # |
| # 1. Build all modules that are declared as static in Modules/Setup, |
| # combine them into libpythonxy.a, combine that into python. |
| # 2. Build all modules that are listed as shared in Modules/Setup. |
| # 3. Invoke setup.py. That builds all modules that |
| # a) are not builtin, and |
| # b) are not listed in Modules/Setup, and |
| # c) can be build on the target |
| # |
| # Therefore, modules declared to be shared will not be |
| # included in the config.c file, nor in the list of objects to be |
| # added to the library archive, and their linker options won't be |
| # added to the linker options. Rules to create their .o files and |
| # their shared libraries will still be added to the Makefile, and |
| # their names will be collected in the Make variable SHAREDMODS. This |
| # is used to build modules as shared libraries. (They can be |
| # installed using "make sharedinstall", which is implied by the |
| # toplevel "make install" target.) (For compatibility, |
| # *noconfig* has the same effect as *shared*.) |
| # |
| # In addition, *static* explicitly declares the following modules to |
| # be static. Lines containing "*static*" and "*shared*" may thus |
| # alternate throughout this file. |
| |
| # NOTE: As a standard policy, as many modules as can be supported by a |
| # platform should be present. The distribution comes with all modules |
| # enabled that are supported by most platforms and don't require you |
| # to ftp sources from elsewhere. |
| |
| |
| # Some special rules to define PYTHONPATH. |
| # Edit the definitions below to indicate which options you are using. |
| # Don't add any whitespace or comments! |
| |
| # Directories where library files get installed. |
| # DESTLIB is for Python modules; MACHDESTLIB for shared libraries. |
| DESTLIB=$(LIBDEST) |
| MACHDESTLIB=$(BINLIBDEST) |
| |
| # NOTE: all the paths are now relative to the prefix that is computed |
| # at run time! |
| |
| # Standard path -- don't edit. |
| # No leading colon since this is the first entry. |
| # Empty since this is now just the runtime prefix. |
| DESTPATH= |
| |
| # Site specific path components -- should begin with : if non-empty |
| SITEPATH= |
| |
| # Standard path components for test modules |
| TESTPATH= |
| |
| # Path components for machine- or system-dependent modules and shared libraries |
| MACHDEPPATH=:plat-$(MACHDEP) |
| EXTRAMACHDEPPATH= |
| |
| COREPYTHONPATH=$(DESTPATH)$(SITEPATH)$(TESTPATH)$(MACHDEPPATH)$(EXTRAMACHDEPPATH) |
| PYTHONPATH=$(COREPYTHONPATH) |
| |
| |
| # The modules listed here can't be built as shared libraries for |
| # various reasons; therefore they are listed here instead of in the |
| # normal order. |
| |
| # This only contains the minimal set of modules required to run the |
| # setup.py script in the root of the Python source tree. |
| |
| posix posixmodule.c # posix (UNIX) system calls |
| errno errnomodule.c # posix (UNIX) errno values |
| pwd pwdmodule.c # this is needed to find out the user's home dir |
| # if $HOME is not set |
| _sre _sre.c # Fredrik Lundh's new regular expressions |
| _codecs _codecsmodule.c # access to the builtin codecs and codec registry |
| _fileio _fileio.c # Standard I/O baseline |
| _weakref _weakref.c # weak references |
| |
| # The zipimport module is always imported at startup. Having it as a |
| # builtin module avoids some bootstrapping problems and reduces overhead. |
| zipimport zipimport.c |
| |
| # The rest of the modules listed in this file are all commented out by |
| # default. Usually they can be detected and built as dynamically |
| # loaded modules by the new setup.py script added in Python 2.1. If |
| # you're on a platform that doesn't support dynamic loading, want to |
| # compile modules statically into the Python binary, or need to |
| # specify some odd set of compiler switches, you can uncomment the |
| # appropriate lines below. |
| |
| # ====================================================================== |
| |
| # The Python symtable module depends on .h files that setup.py doesn't track |
| _symtable symtablemodule.c |
| |
| # Uncommenting the following line tells makesetup that all following |
| # modules are to be built as shared libraries (see above for more |
| # detail; also note that *static* reverses this effect): |
| |
| #*shared* |
| |
| # GNU readline. Unlike previous Python incarnations, GNU readline is |
| # now incorporated in an optional module, configured in the Setup file |
| # instead of by a configure script switch. You may have to insert a |
| # -L option pointing to the directory where libreadline.* lives, |
| # and you may have to change -ltermcap to -ltermlib or perhaps remove |
| # it, depending on your system -- see the GNU readline instructions. |
| # It's okay for this to be a shared library, too. |
| |
| #readline readline.c -lreadline -ltermcap |
| |
| |
| # Modules that should always be present (non UNIX dependent): |
| |
| #array arraymodule.c # array objects |
| #cmath cmathmodule.c # -lm # complex math library functions |
| #math mathmodule.c # -lm # math library functions, e.g. sin() |
| #_struct _struct.c # binary structure packing/unpacking |
| #time timemodule.c # -lm # time operations and variables |
| #operator operator.c # operator.add() and similar goodies |
| #_weakref _weakref.c # basic weak reference support |
| #_testcapi _testcapimodule.c # Python C API test module |
| #_random _randommodule.c # Random number generator |
| #collections collectionsmodule.c # Container types |
| #itertools itertoolsmodule.c # Functions creating iterators for efficient looping |
| #atexit atexitmodule.c # Register functions to be run at interpreter-shutdown |
| |
| #unicodedata unicodedata.c # static Unicode character database |
| |
| # access to ISO C locale support |
| #_locale _localemodule.c # -lintl |
| |
| |
| # Modules with some UNIX dependencies -- on by default: |
| # (If you have a really backward UNIX, select and socket may not be |
| # supported...) |
| |
| #fcntl fcntlmodule.c # fcntl(2) and ioctl(2) |
| #spwd spwdmodule.c # spwd(3) |
| #grp grpmodule.c # grp(3) |
| #select selectmodule.c # select(2); not on ancient System V |
| |
| # Memory-mapped files (also works on Win32). |
| #mmap mmapmodule.c |
| |
| # CSV file helper |
| #_csv _csv.c |
| |
| # Socket module helper for socket(2) |
| #_socket socketmodule.c |
| |
| # Socket module helper for SSL support; you must comment out the other |
| # socket line above, and possibly edit the SSL variable: |
| #SSL=/usr/local/ssl |
| #_ssl _ssl.c \ |
| # -DUSE_SSL -I$(SSL)/include -I$(SSL)/include/openssl \ |
| # -L$(SSL)/lib -lssl -lcrypto |
| |
| # The crypt module is now disabled by default because it breaks builds |
| # on many systems (where -lcrypt is needed), e.g. Linux (I believe). |
| # |
| # First, look at Setup.config; configure may have set this for you. |
| |
| #crypt cryptmodule.c # -lcrypt # crypt(3); needs -lcrypt on some systems |
| |
| |
| # Some more UNIX dependent modules -- off by default, since these |
| # are not supported by all UNIX systems: |
| |
| #nis nismodule.c -lnsl # Sun yellow pages -- not everywhere |
| #termios termios.c # Steen Lumholt's termios module |
| #resource resource.c # Jeremy Hylton's rlimit interface |
| |
| |
| # Multimedia modules -- off by default. |
| # These don't work for 64-bit platforms!!! |
| # #993173 says audioop works on 64-bit platforms, though. |
| # These represent audio samples or images as strings: |
| |
| #audioop audioop.c # Operations on audio samples |
| |
| |
| # Note that the _md5 and _sha modules are normally only built if the |
| # system does not have the OpenSSL libs containing an optimized version. |
| |
| # The _md5 module implements the RSA Data Security, Inc. MD5 |
| # Message-Digest Algorithm, described in RFC 1321. The necessary files |
| # md5.c and md5.h are included here. |
| |
| #_md5 md5module.c md5.c |
| |
| |
| # The _sha module implements the SHA checksum algorithms. |
| # (NIST's Secure Hash Algorithms.) |
| #_sha shamodule.c |
| #_sha256 sha256module.c |
| #_sha512 sha512module.c |
| |
| |
| # The _tkinter module. |
| # |
| # The command for _tkinter is long and site specific. Please |
| # uncomment and/or edit those parts as indicated. If you don't have a |
| # specific extension (e.g. Tix or BLT), leave the corresponding line |
| # commented out. (Leave the trailing backslashes in! If you |
| # experience strange errors, you may want to join all uncommented |
| # lines and remove the backslashes -- the backslash interpretation is |
| # done by the shell's "read" command and it may not be implemented on |
| # every system. |
| |
| # *** Always uncomment this (leave the leading underscore in!): |
| # _tkinter _tkinter.c tkappinit.c -DWITH_APPINIT \ |
| # *** Uncomment and edit to reflect where your Tcl/Tk libraries are: |
| # -L/usr/local/lib \ |
| # *** Uncomment and edit to reflect where your Tcl/Tk headers are: |
| # -I/usr/local/include \ |
| # *** Uncomment and edit to reflect where your X11 header files are: |
| # -I/usr/X11R6/include \ |
| # *** Or uncomment this for Solaris: |
| # -I/usr/openwin/include \ |
| # *** Uncomment and edit for Tix extension only: |
| # -DWITH_TIX -ltix8.1.8.2 \ |
| # *** Uncomment and edit for BLT extension only: |
| # -DWITH_BLT -I/usr/local/blt/blt8.0-unoff/include -lBLT8.0 \ |
| # *** Uncomment and edit for PIL (TkImaging) extension only: |
| # (See http://www.pythonware.com/products/pil/ for more info) |
| # -DWITH_PIL -I../Extensions/Imaging/libImaging tkImaging.c \ |
| # *** Uncomment and edit for TOGL extension only: |
| # -DWITH_TOGL togl.c \ |
| # *** Uncomment and edit to reflect your Tcl/Tk versions: |
| # -ltk8.2 -ltcl8.2 \ |
| # *** Uncomment and edit to reflect where your X11 libraries are: |
| # -L/usr/X11R6/lib \ |
| # *** Or uncomment this for Solaris: |
| # -L/usr/openwin/lib \ |
| # *** Uncomment these for TOGL extension only: |
| # -lGL -lGLU -lXext -lXmu \ |
| # *** Uncomment for AIX: |
| # -lld \ |
| # *** Always uncomment this; X11 libraries to link with: |
| # -lX11 |
| |
| # Lance Ellinghaus's syslog module |
| #syslog syslogmodule.c # syslog daemon interface |
| |
| |
| # Curses support, requring the System V version of curses, often |
| # provided by the ncurses library. e.g. on Linux, link with -lncurses |
| # instead of -lcurses). |
| # |
| # First, look at Setup.config; configure may have set this for you. |
| |
| #_curses _cursesmodule.c -lcurses -ltermcap |
| # Wrapper for the panel library that's part of ncurses and SYSV curses. |
| #_curses_panel _curses_panel.c -lpanel -lncurses |
| |
| |
| # Modules that provide persistent dictionary-like semantics. You will |
| # probably want to arrange for at least one of them to be available on |
| # your machine, though none are defined by default because of library |
| # dependencies. The Python module dbm/__init__.py provides an |
| # implementation independent wrapper for these; dbm/dumb.py provides |
| # similar functionality (but slower of course) implemented in Python. |
| |
| # The standard Unix dbm module has been moved to Setup.config so that |
| # it will be compiled as a shared library by default. Compiling it as |
| # a built-in module causes conflicts with the pybsddb3 module since it |
| # creates a static dependency on an out-of-date version of db.so. |
| # |
| # First, look at Setup.config; configure may have set this for you. |
| |
| #_dbm _dbmmodule.c # dbm(3) may require -lndbm or similar |
| |
| # Anthony Baxter's gdbm module. GNU dbm(3) will require -lgdbm: |
| # |
| # First, look at Setup.config; configure may have set this for you. |
| |
| #_gdbm _gdbmmodule.c -I/usr/local/include -L/usr/local/lib -lgdbm |
| |
| |
| # Sleepycat Berkeley DB interface. |
| # |
| # This requires the Sleepycat DB code, see http://www.sleepycat.com/ |
| # The earliest supported version of that library is 3.0, the latest |
| # supported version is 4.0 (4.1 is specifically not supported, as that |
| # changes the semantics of transactional databases). A list of available |
| # releases can be found at |
| # |
| # http://www.sleepycat.com/update/index.html |
| # |
| # Edit the variables DB and DBLIBVERto point to the db top directory |
| # and the subdirectory of PORT where you built it. |
| #DB=/usr/local/BerkeleyDB.4.0 |
| #DBLIBVER=4.0 |
| #DBINC=$(DB)/include |
| #DBLIB=$(DB)/lib |
| #_bsddb _bsddb.c -I$(DBINC) -L$(DBLIB) -ldb-$(DBLIBVER) |
| |
| |
| # Helper module for various ascii-encoders |
| #binascii binascii.c |
| |
| # Fred Drake's interface to the Python parser |
| #parser parsermodule.c |
| |
| |
| # Lee Busby's SIGFPE modules. |
| # The library to link fpectl with is platform specific. |
| # Choose *one* of the options below for fpectl: |
| |
| # For SGI IRIX (tested on 5.3): |
| #fpectl fpectlmodule.c -lfpe |
| |
| # For Solaris with SunPro compiler (tested on Solaris 2.5 with SunPro C 4.2): |
| # (Without the compiler you don't have -lsunmath.) |
| #fpectl fpectlmodule.c -R/opt/SUNWspro/lib -lsunmath -lm |
| |
| # For other systems: see instructions in fpectlmodule.c. |
| #fpectl fpectlmodule.c ... |
| |
| # Test module for fpectl. No extra libraries needed. |
| #fpetest fpetestmodule.c |
| |
| # Andrew Kuchling's zlib module. |
| # This require zlib 1.1.3 (or later). |
| # See http://www.gzip.org/zlib/ |
| #zlib zlibmodule.c -I$(prefix)/include -L$(exec_prefix)/lib -lz |
| |
| # Interface to the Expat XML parser |
| # |
| # Expat was written by James Clark and is now maintained by a group of |
| # developers on SourceForge; see www.libexpat.org for more |
| # information. The pyexpat module was written by Paul Prescod after a |
| # prototype by Jack Jansen. Source of Expat 1.95.2 is included in |
| # Modules/expat/. Usage of a system shared libexpat.so/expat.dll is |
| # not advised. |
| # |
| # More information on Expat can be found at www.libexpat.org. |
| # |
| #EXPAT_DIR=/usr/local/src/expat-1.95.2 |
| #pyexpat pyexpat.c -DHAVE_EXPAT_H -I$(EXPAT_DIR)/lib -L$(EXPAT_DIR) -lexpat |
| |
| |
| # Hye-Shik Chang's CJKCodecs |
| |
| # multibytecodec is required for all the other CJK codec modules |
| #_multibytecodec cjkcodecs/multibytecodec.c |
| |
| #_codecs_cn cjkcodecs/_codecs_cn.c |
| #_codecs_hk cjkcodecs/_codecs_hk.c |
| #_codecs_iso2022 cjkcodecs/_codecs_iso2022.c |
| #_codecs_jp cjkcodecs/_codecs_jp.c |
| #_codecs_kr cjkcodecs/_codecs_kr.c |
| #_codecs_tw cjkcodecs/_codecs_tw.c |
| |
| # Example -- included for reference only: |
| # xx xxmodule.c |
| |
| # Another example -- the 'xxsubtype' module shows C-level subtyping in action |
| xxsubtype xxsubtype.c |