From 2be26804d30a3301d66ad9b52cc273cd61041362 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniele Varrazzo Date: Sat, 23 Aug 2014 19:02:43 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] Dropped content from the INSTALL file The docs have it right. --- INSTALL | 105 ++------------------------------------------------------ 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 102 deletions(-) diff --git a/INSTALL b/INSTALL index d5eefe51..bb509ac2 100644 --- a/INSTALL +++ b/INSTALL @@ -1,103 +1,4 @@ -Compiling and installing psycopg -******************************** - -** Important note: if you plan to use psycopg2 in a multithreaded application, - make sure that your libpq has been compiled with the --with-thread-safety - option. psycopg2 will work correctly even with a non-thread-safe libpq but - libpq will leak memory. - -psycopg2 uses distutils for its build process, so most of the process is -executed by the setup.py script. Before building psycopg look at -setup.cfg file and change any settings to follow your system (or taste); -then: - - python setup.py build - -to build in the local directory; and: - - python setup.py install - -to install system-wide. - - -Common errors and build problems -================================ - -One of the most common errors is trying to build psycopg without the right -development headers for PostgreSQL, Python or both. If you get errors, look -for the following messages and then take the appropriate action: - -libpq-fe.h: No such file or directory - PostgreSQL headers are not properly installed on your system or are - installed in a non default path. First make sure they are installed, then - check setup.cfg and make sure pg_config points to a valid pg_config - executable. If you don't have a working pg_config try to play with the - include_dirs variable (and note that a working pg_config is better.) - - -Running the test suite -====================== - -The included Makefile allows to run all the tests included in the -distribution. Just use: - - make - make check - -The tests are run against a database called psycopg2_test on unix socket -and standard port. You can configure a different database to run the test -by setting the environment variables: - -- PSYCOPG2_TESTDB -- PSYCOPG2_TESTDB_HOST -- PSYCOPG2_TESTDB_PORT -- PSYCOPG2_TESTDB_USER - -The database should be created before running the tests. - -The standard Python unittest is used to run the tests. But if unittest2 is -found it will be used instead, with the result of having more informations -about skipped tests. - - -Building the documentation -========================== - -In order to build the documentation included in the distribution, use - - make env - make docs - -The first command will install all the dependencies (Sphinx, Docutils) in -an 'env' directory in the project tree. The second command will build both -the html format (in the 'doc/html' directory) and in plain text -(doc/psycopg2.txt) - - -Using setuptools and EasyInstall -================================ - -If setuptools are installed on your system you can easily create an egg for -psycopg and install it. Download the source distribution (if you're reading -this file you probably already have) and then edit setup.cfg to your taste -and build from the source distribution top-level directory using: - - easy_install . - - -Compiling under Windows with mingw32 -==================================== - -You can compile psycopg under Windows platform with mingw32 -(http://www.mingw.org/) compiler. MinGW is also shipped with IDEs such as -Dev-C++ (http://www.bloodshed.net/devcpp.html) and Code::Blocks -(http://www.codeblocks.org). gcc binaries should be in your PATH. - -You need a PostgreSQL with include and library files installed. At least v8.0 -is required. - -First you need to create a libpython2X.a as described in -http://starship.python.net/crew/kernr/mingw32/Notes.html. Then run: - - python setup.py build_ext --compiler=mingw32 install +Installation instructions are included in the docs. +Please check the 'doc/src/install.rst' file or online at +.