On 10.2.2012 18:09, 80 wrote:
Python guidelines recommends that packagers installs python eggs
using
distutils (python setup.py install as recommended in guidelines) while
pip use the same install method as easy_install (provided by
setuptools/distribute). The former one install egg metadata as a file,
the latter as a directory, that's not a packaging/rpm issue.
a) I don't think the answer “Then don’t do it” is a good one. Some other
Fedora-packaged languages (Perl comes to mind) allow three levels (or
maybe even four) of installation of packages (in CPAN meaning of the
word), system-wide-RPM-packaged, system-wide-unpackaged (to
/usr/local/*), and per-user-in-$HOME. Not sure how it is with Ruby and
PHP, but I believe this should be a standard in all major
Fedora-packaged languages.
b) distutils v. setuptools conflict is just an unfortunate testimony of
immature bad state of the Python upstream packaging, but it seems to me
that generally Python world is moving towards setuptools. Shouldn't we
follow the suite and move towards setuptools as well?
c) If we want to have as many Python packages packaged in RPMs (the
terminology is going to kill me soon) do we have some pip2spec (in the
same manner as there is cpan2spec)?
Best,
Matěj