El mié, 19-04-2017 a las 10:31 -0400, Richard Ryniker escribió:
Running on Raspberry Pi 3, with updates to April 19:
[ryniker@RPi3-2 ~]$ uname -a
Linux RPi3-2 4.11.0-0.rc5.git0.1.fc26.armv7hl #1 SMP Mon Apr 3
21:06:36 UTC 2017 armv7l armv7l armv7l GNU/Linux
[ryniker@RPi3-2 ~]$ /usr/bin/python3.6 --version
Python detected LC_CTYPE=C: LC_ALL & LANG coerced to C.UTF-8 (set
another locale or PYTHONCOERCECLOCALE=0 to disable this locale
coercion behaviour).
Python 3.6.0
[ryniker@RPi3-2 ~]$ env | grep LC
LC_ALL=C
[ryniker@RPi3-2 ~]$
I downloaded and built the current 3.6.1 Python with only default
configuration, and there is no complaint:
[ryniker@RPi3-2 ~]$ /usr/local/bin/python3.6 --version
Python 3.6.1
[ryniker@RPi3-2 ~]$
If Fedora packages Python configured to complain about awkward locale
settings, it would be nice if Fedora starts after installation with a
non-objectionable value.
In order to boot F26 on a Raspberry Pi, it is necessary to blacklist
the
vc4 module to avoid a kernel failure
(
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1387733). This means the
default target can be multi-user, but not graphical. Consequently,
the
first boot application never runs. Is first boot where appropriate
locale configuration should occur?
this is a generic issue not arm specific so is more appropriate on the
devel list however it is related to
https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/python3_c.utf-8_locale there are
a few ways to work around it. one of which is to set your locale to
C.UTF-8 or to make sure that you have the glibc-langpack-<foo> locale
installed for your running locale
Dennis