I've tried to implement Compass compiling during setuptools' build
, but the following code runs compilation during explicit build
command and doesn't runs during install
.
#!/usr/bin/env python
import os
import setuptools
from distutils.command.build import build
SETUP_DIR = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__))
class BuildCSS(setuptools.Command):
description = 'build CSS from SCSS'
user_options = []
def initialize_options(self):
pass
def run(self):
os.chdir(os.path.join(SETUP_DIR, 'django_project_dir', 'compass_project_dir'))
import platform
if 'Windows' == platform.system():
command = 'compass.bat compile'
else:
command = 'compass compile'
import subprocess
try:
subprocess.check_call(command.split())
except (subprocess.CalledProcessError, OSError):
print 'ERROR: problems with compiling Sass. Is Compass installed?'
raise SystemExit
os.chdir(SETUP_DIR)
def finalize_options(self):
pass
class Build(build):
sub_commands = build.sub_commands + [('build_css', None)]
setuptools.setup(
# Custom attrs here.
cmdclass={
'build': Build,
'build_css': BuildCSS,
},
)
Any custom instructions at Build.run
(e.g. some printing) doesn't apply during install
too, but dist
instance contains in commands
attribute only my build
command implementation instances. Incredible! But I think the trouble is in complex relations between setuptools
and distutils
. Does anybody knows how to make custom building run during install
on Python 2.7?
Update: Found that install
definitely doesn't calls build
command, but it calls bdist_egg
which runs build_ext
. Seems like I should implement "Compass" build extension.
Usually, Yes. the setuptools is not part of the python vanilla codebase, hence not a vanilla modules. python.org installers or mac homebrew will install it for you, but if someone compile the python by himself or install it on some linux distribution he may not get it and will need to install it by himself.
A Python file that relies only on the standard library can be redistributed and reused without the need to use setuptools. But for projects that consist of multiple files, need additional libraries, or need a specific version of Python, setuptools will be required.
Unfortunatelly, I haven't found the answer. Seems like the ability to run post-install scripts correctly there's only at Distutils 2. Now you can use this work-around:
Update: Because of setuptools' stack checks, we should override install.do_egg_install
, not run
method:
from setuptools.command.install import install
class Install(install):
def do_egg_install(self):
self.run_command('build_css')
install.do_egg_install(self)
Update2: easy_install
runs exactly bdist_egg
command which is used by install
too, so the most correct way (espetially if you want to make easy_install
work) is to override bdist_egg
command. Whole code:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import setuptools
from distutils.command.build import build as _build
from setuptools.command.bdist_egg import bdist_egg as _bdist_egg
class bdist_egg(_bdist_egg):
def run(self):
self.run_command('build_css')
_bdist_egg.run(self)
class build_css(setuptools.Command):
description = 'build CSS from SCSS'
user_options = []
def initialize_options(self):
pass
def finalize_options(self):
pass
def run(self):
pass # Here goes CSS compilation.
class build(_build):
sub_commands = _build.sub_commands + [('build_css', None)]
setuptools.setup(
# Here your setup args.
cmdclass={
'bdist_egg': bdist_egg,
'build': build,
'build_css': build_css,
},
)
You may see how I've used this here.
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