# setup.py - distutils packaging # # Copyright (C) 2003-2010 Federico Di Gregorio # # psycopg2 is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it # under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published # by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # psycopg2 is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT # ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or # FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public # License for more details. """Python-PostgreSQL Database Adapter psycopg2 is a PostgreSQL database adapter for the Python programming language. psycopg2 was written with the aim of being very small and fast, and stable as a rock. psycopg2 is different from the other database adapter because it was designed for heavily multi-threaded applications that create and destroy lots of cursors and make a conspicuous number of concurrent INSERTs or UPDATEs. psycopg2 also provide full asynchronous operations and support for coroutine libraries. """ # note: if you are changing the list of supported Python version please fix # the docs in install.rst and the /features/ page on the website. classifiers = """\ Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable Intended Audience :: Developers License :: OSI Approved :: GNU Library or Lesser General Public License (LGPL) License :: OSI Approved :: Zope Public License Programming Language :: Python Programming Language :: Python :: 2.5 Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6 Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7 Programming Language :: Python :: 3 Programming Language :: Python :: 3.1 Programming Language :: Python :: 3.2 Programming Language :: Python :: 3.3 Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4 Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5 Programming Language :: C Programming Language :: SQL Topic :: Database Topic :: Database :: Front-Ends Topic :: Software Development Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules Operating System :: Microsoft :: Windows Operating System :: Unix """ # Note: The setup.py must be compatible with both Python 2 and 3 import os import sys import re import subprocess try: from setuptools import setup, Extension except ImportError: from distutils.core import setup, Extension from distutils.command.build_ext import build_ext from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_inc from distutils.ccompiler import get_default_compiler from distutils.util import get_platform try: from distutils.command.build_py import build_py_2to3 except ImportError: from distutils.command.build_py import build_py else: class build_py(build_py_2to3): # workaround subclass for ticket #153 pass # Configure distutils to run our custom 2to3 fixers as well from lib2to3.refactor import get_fixers_from_package build_py.fixer_names = get_fixers_from_package('lib2to3.fixes') \ + [ 'fix_b' ] sys.path.insert(0, 'scripts') try: import configparser except ImportError: import ConfigParser as configparser # Take a look at http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0386/ # for a consistent versioning pattern. PSYCOPG_VERSION = '2.7.dev0' version_flags = ['dt', 'dec'] PLATFORM_IS_WINDOWS = sys.platform.lower().startswith('win') class PostgresConfig: def __init__(self, build_ext): self.build_ext = build_ext self.pg_config_exe = self.build_ext.pg_config if not self.pg_config_exe: self.pg_config_exe = self.autodetect_pg_config_path() if self.pg_config_exe is None: sys.stderr.write("""\ Error: pg_config executable not found. Please add the directory containing pg_config to the PATH or specify the full executable path with the option: python setup.py build_ext --pg-config /path/to/pg_config build ... or with the pg_config option in 'setup.cfg'. """) sys.exit(1) def query(self, attr_name): """Spawn the pg_config executable, querying for the given config name, and return the printed value, sanitized. """ try: pg_config_process = subprocess.Popen( [self.pg_config_exe, "--" + attr_name], stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE) except OSError: raise Warning("Unable to find 'pg_config' file in '%s'" % self.pg_config_exe) pg_config_process.stdin.close() result = pg_config_process.stdout.readline().strip() if not result: raise Warning(pg_config_process.stderr.readline()) if not isinstance(result, str): result = result.decode('ascii') return result def find_on_path(self, exename, path_directories=None): if not path_directories: path_directories = os.environ['PATH'].split(os.pathsep) for dir_name in path_directories: fullpath = os.path.join(dir_name, exename) if os.path.isfile(fullpath): return fullpath return None def autodetect_pg_config_path(self): """Find and return the path to the pg_config executable.""" if PLATFORM_IS_WINDOWS: return self.autodetect_pg_config_path_windows() else: return self.find_on_path('pg_config') def autodetect_pg_config_path_windows(self): """Attempt several different ways of finding the pg_config executable on Windows, and return its full path, if found.""" # This code only runs if they have not specified a pg_config option # in the config file or via the commandline. # First, check for pg_config.exe on the PATH, and use that if found. pg_config_exe = self.find_on_path('pg_config.exe') if pg_config_exe: return pg_config_exe # Now, try looking in the Windows Registry to find a PostgreSQL # installation, and infer the path from that. pg_config_exe = self._get_pg_config_from_registry() if pg_config_exe: return pg_config_exe return None def _get_pg_config_from_registry(self): try: import winreg except ImportError: import _winreg as winreg reg = winreg.ConnectRegistry(None, winreg.HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE) try: pg_inst_list_key = winreg.OpenKey(reg, 'SOFTWARE\\PostgreSQL\\Installations') except EnvironmentError: # No PostgreSQL installation, as best as we can tell. return None try: # Determine the name of the first subkey, if any: try: first_sub_key_name = winreg.EnumKey(pg_inst_list_key, 0) except EnvironmentError: return None pg_first_inst_key = winreg.OpenKey(reg, 'SOFTWARE\\PostgreSQL\\Installations\\' + first_sub_key_name) try: pg_inst_base_dir = winreg.QueryValueEx( pg_first_inst_key, 'Base Directory')[0] finally: winreg.CloseKey(pg_first_inst_key) finally: winreg.CloseKey(pg_inst_list_key) pg_config_path = os.path.join( pg_inst_base_dir, 'bin', 'pg_config.exe') if not os.path.exists(pg_config_path): return None # Support unicode paths, if this version of Python provides the # necessary infrastructure: if sys.version_info[0] < 3 \ and hasattr(sys, 'getfilesystemencoding'): pg_config_path = pg_config_path.encode( sys.getfilesystemencoding()) return pg_config_path class psycopg_build_ext(build_ext): """Conditionally complement the setup.cfg options file. This class configures the include_dirs, library_dirs, libraries options as required by the system. Most of the configuration happens in finalize_options() method. If you want to set up the build step for a peculiar platform, add a method finalize_PLAT(), where PLAT matches your sys.platform. """ user_options = build_ext.user_options[:] user_options.extend([ ('use-pydatetime', None, "Use Python datatime objects for date and time representation."), ('pg-config=', None, "The name of the pg_config binary and/or full path to find it"), ('have-ssl', None, "Compile with OpenSSL built PostgreSQL libraries (Windows only)."), ('static-libpq', None, "Statically link the PostgreSQL client library"), ]) boolean_options = build_ext.boolean_options[:] boolean_options.extend(('use-pydatetime', 'have-ssl', 'static-libpq')) def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): build_ext.__init__(self, *args, **kwargs) def initialize_options(self): build_ext.initialize_options(self) self.use_pg_dll = 1 self.pgdir = None self.mx_include_dir = None self.use_pydatetime = 1 self.have_ssl = have_ssl self.static_libpq = static_libpq self.pg_config = None def compiler_is_msvc(self): return self.get_compiler_name().lower().startswith('msvc') def compiler_is_mingw(self): return self.get_compiler_name().lower().startswith('mingw') def get_compiler_name(self): """Return the name of the C compiler used to compile extensions. If a compiler was not explicitly set (on the command line, for example), fall back on the default compiler. """ if self.compiler: # distutils doesn't keep the type of self.compiler uniform; we # compensate: if isinstance(self.compiler, str): name = self.compiler else: name = self.compiler.compiler_type else: name = get_default_compiler() return name def get_export_symbols(self, extension): # Fix MSVC seeing two of the same export symbols. if self.compiler_is_msvc(): return [] else: return build_ext.get_export_symbols(self, extension) def build_extension(self, extension): build_ext.build_extension(self, extension) sysVer = sys.version_info[:2] # For Python versions that use MSVC compiler 2008, re-insert the # manifest into the resulting .pyd file. if self.compiler_is_msvc() and sysVer not in ((2, 4), (2, 5)): platform = get_platform() # Default to the x86 manifest manifest = '_psycopg.vc9.x86.manifest' if platform == 'win-amd64': manifest = '_psycopg.vc9.amd64.manifest' try: ext_path = self.get_ext_fullpath(extension.name) except AttributeError: ext_path = os.path.join(self.build_lib, 'psycopg2', '_psycopg.pyd') # Make sure spawn() will work if compile() was never # called. https://github.com/psycopg/psycopg2/issues/380 if not self.compiler.initialized: self.compiler.initialize() self.compiler.spawn( ['mt.exe', '-nologo', '-manifest', os.path.join('psycopg', manifest), '-outputresource:%s;2' % ext_path]) def finalize_win32(self): """Finalize build system configuration on win32 platform.""" sysVer = sys.version_info[:2] # Add compiler-specific arguments: extra_compiler_args = [] if self.compiler_is_mingw(): # Default MinGW compilation of Python extensions on Windows uses # only -O: extra_compiler_args.append('-O3') # GCC-compiled Python on non-Windows platforms is built with strict # aliasing disabled, but that must be done explicitly on Windows to # avoid large numbers of warnings for perfectly idiomatic Python C # API code. extra_compiler_args.append('-fno-strict-aliasing') # Force correct C runtime library linkage: if sysVer <= (2, 3): # Yes: 'msvcr60', rather than 'msvcrt', is the correct value # on the line below: self.libraries.append('msvcr60') elif sysVer in ((2, 4), (2, 5)): self.libraries.append('msvcr71') # Beyond Python 2.5, we take our chances on the default C runtime # library, because we don't know what compiler those future # versions of Python will use. for extension in ext: # ext is a global list of Extension objects extension.extra_compile_args.extend(extra_compiler_args) # End of add-compiler-specific arguments section. self.libraries.append("ws2_32") self.libraries.append("advapi32") if self.compiler_is_msvc(): # MSVC requires an explicit "libpq" if "pq" in self.libraries: self.libraries.remove("pq") self.libraries.append("secur32") self.libraries.append("libpq") self.libraries.append("shfolder") for path in self.library_dirs: if os.path.isfile(os.path.join(path, "ms", "libpq.lib")): self.library_dirs.append(os.path.join(path, "ms")) break if self.have_ssl: self.libraries.append("libeay32") self.libraries.append("ssleay32") self.libraries.append("crypt32") self.libraries.append("user32") self.libraries.append("gdi32") def finalize_darwin(self): """Finalize build system configuration on darwin platform.""" self.libraries.append('ssl') self.libraries.append('crypto') def finalize_linux(self): """Finalize build system configuration on GNU/Linux platform.""" # tell piro that GCC is fine and dandy, but not so MS compilers for extension in self.extensions: extension.extra_compile_args.append( '-Wdeclaration-after-statement') finalize_linux2 = finalize_linux finalize_linux3 = finalize_linux def finalize_options(self): """Complete the build system configuration.""" build_ext.finalize_options(self) pg_config_helper = PostgresConfig(self) self.include_dirs.append(".") if self.static_libpq: if not getattr(self, 'link_objects', None): self.link_objects = [] self.link_objects.append( os.path.join(pg_config_helper.query("libdir"), "libpq.a")) else: self.libraries.append("pq") try: self.library_dirs.append(pg_config_helper.query("libdir")) self.include_dirs.append(pg_config_helper.query("includedir")) self.include_dirs.append(pg_config_helper.query("includedir-server")) try: # Here we take a conservative approach: we suppose that # *at least* PostgreSQL 7.4 is available (this is the only # 7.x series supported by psycopg 2) pgversion = pg_config_helper.query("version").split()[1] except: pgversion = "7.4.0" verre = re.compile( r"(\d+)\.(\d+)(?:(?:\.(\d+))|(devel|(alpha|beta|rc)\d+))") m = verre.match(pgversion) if m: pgmajor, pgminor, pgpatch = m.group(1, 2, 3) if pgpatch is None or not pgpatch.isdigit(): pgpatch = 0 pgmajor = int(pgmajor) pgminor = int(pgminor) pgpatch = int(pgpatch) else: sys.stderr.write( "Error: could not determine PostgreSQL version from '%s'" % pgversion) sys.exit(1) define_macros.append(("PG_VERSION_NUM", "%d%02d%02d" % (pgmajor, pgminor, pgpatch))) # enable lo64 if libpq >= 9.3 and Python 64 bits if (pgmajor, pgminor) >= (9, 3) and is_py_64(): define_macros.append(("HAVE_LO64", "1")) # Inject the flag in the version string already packed up # because we didn't know the version before. # With distutils everything is complicated. for i, t in enumerate(define_macros): if t[0] == 'PSYCOPG_VERSION': n = t[1].find(')') if n > 0: define_macros[i] = ( t[0], t[1][:n] + ' lo64' + t[1][n:]) except Warning: w = sys.exc_info()[1] # work around py 2/3 different syntax sys.stderr.write("Error: %s\n" % w) sys.exit(1) if hasattr(self, "finalize_" + sys.platform): getattr(self, "finalize_" + sys.platform)() def is_py_64(): # sys.maxint not available since Py 3.1; # sys.maxsize not available before Py 2.6; # this is portable at least between Py 2.4 and 3.4. import struct return struct.calcsize("P") > 4 # let's start with macro definitions (the ones not already in setup.cfg) define_macros = [] include_dirs = [] # gather information to build the extension module ext = [] data_files = [] # sources sources = [ 'psycopgmodule.c', 'green.c', 'pqpath.c', 'utils.c', 'bytes_format.c', 'connection_int.c', 'connection_type.c', 'cursor_int.c', 'cursor_type.c', 'diagnostics_type.c', 'error_type.c', 'lobject_int.c', 'lobject_type.c', 'notify_type.c', 'xid_type.c', 'adapter_asis.c', 'adapter_binary.c', 'adapter_datetime.c', 'adapter_list.c', 'adapter_pboolean.c', 'adapter_pdecimal.c', 'adapter_pint.c', 'adapter_pfloat.c', 'adapter_qstring.c', 'microprotocols.c', 'microprotocols_proto.c', 'typecast.c', ] depends = [ # headers 'config.h', 'pgtypes.h', 'psycopg.h', 'python.h', 'connection.h', 'cursor.h', 'diagnostics.h', 'error.h', 'green.h', 'lobject.h', 'notify.h', 'pqpath.h', 'xid.h', 'adapter_asis.h', 'adapter_binary.h', 'adapter_datetime.h', 'adapter_list.h', 'adapter_pboolean.h', 'adapter_pdecimal.h', 'adapter_pint.h', 'adapter_pfloat.h', 'adapter_qstring.h', 'microprotocols.h', 'microprotocols_proto.h', 'typecast.h', 'typecast_binary.h', # included sources 'typecast_array.c', 'typecast_basic.c', 'typecast_binary.c', 'typecast_builtins.c', 'typecast_datetime.c', ] parser = configparser.ConfigParser() parser.read('setup.cfg') # Choose a datetime module have_pydatetime = True have_mxdatetime = False use_pydatetime = int(parser.get('build_ext', 'use_pydatetime')) # check for mx package if parser.has_option('build_ext', 'mx_include_dir'): mxincludedir = parser.get('build_ext', 'mx_include_dir') else: mxincludedir = os.path.join(get_python_inc(plat_specific=1), "mx") if os.path.exists(mxincludedir): # Build the support for mx: we will check at runtime if it can be imported include_dirs.append(mxincludedir) define_macros.append(('HAVE_MXDATETIME', '1')) sources.append('adapter_mxdatetime.c') depends.extend(['adapter_mxdatetime.h', 'typecast_mxdatetime.c']) have_mxdatetime = True version_flags.append('mx') # now decide which package will be the default for date/time typecasts if have_pydatetime and (use_pydatetime or not have_mxdatetime): define_macros.append(('PSYCOPG_DEFAULT_PYDATETIME', '1')) elif have_mxdatetime: define_macros.append(('PSYCOPG_DEFAULT_MXDATETIME', '1')) else: error_message = """\ psycopg requires a datetime module: mx.DateTime module not found python datetime module not found Note that psycopg needs the module headers and not just the module itself. If you installed Python or mx.DateTime from a binary package you probably need to install its companion -dev or -devel package.""" for line in error_message.split("\n"): sys.stderr.write("error: " + line) sys.exit(1) # generate a nice version string to avoid confusion when users report bugs version_flags.append('pq3') # no more a choice version_flags.append('ext') # no more a choice if version_flags: PSYCOPG_VERSION_EX = PSYCOPG_VERSION + " (%s)" % ' '.join(version_flags) else: PSYCOPG_VERSION_EX = PSYCOPG_VERSION if not PLATFORM_IS_WINDOWS: define_macros.append(('PSYCOPG_VERSION', '"' + PSYCOPG_VERSION_EX + '"')) else: define_macros.append(('PSYCOPG_VERSION', '\\"' + PSYCOPG_VERSION_EX + '\\"')) if parser.has_option('build_ext', 'have_ssl'): have_ssl = int(parser.get('build_ext', 'have_ssl')) else: have_ssl = 0 if parser.has_option('build_ext', 'static_libpq'): static_libpq = int(parser.get('build_ext', 'static_libpq')) else: static_libpq = 0 # And now... explicitly add the defines from the .cfg files. # Looks like setuptools or some other cog doesn't add them to the command line # when called e.g. with "pip -e git+url'. This results in declarations # duplicate on the commandline, which I hope is not a problem. for define in parser.get('build_ext', 'define').split(','): if define: define_macros.append((define, '1')) # build the extension sources = [ os.path.join('psycopg', x) for x in sources] depends = [ os.path.join('psycopg', x) for x in depends] ext.append(Extension("psycopg2._psycopg", sources, define_macros=define_macros, include_dirs=include_dirs, depends=depends, undef_macros=[])) # Compute the direct download url. # Note that the current package installation programs are stupidly intelligent # and will try to install a beta if they find a link in the homepage instead of # using these pretty metadata. But that's their problem, not ours. download_url = ( "http://initd.org/psycopg/tarballs/PSYCOPG-%s/psycopg2-%s.tar.gz" % ('-'.join(PSYCOPG_VERSION.split('.')[:2]), PSYCOPG_VERSION)) try: f = open("README.rst") readme = f.read() f.close() except: print("failed to read readme: ignoring...") readme = __doc__ setup(name="psycopg2", version=PSYCOPG_VERSION, maintainer="Federico Di Gregorio", maintainer_email="fog@initd.org", author="Federico Di Gregorio", author_email="fog@initd.org", url="http://initd.org/psycopg/", download_url=download_url, license="LGPL with exceptions or ZPL", platforms=["any"], description=readme.split("\n")[0], long_description="\n".join(readme.split("\n")[2:]).lstrip(), classifiers=[x for x in classifiers.split("\n") if x], data_files=data_files, package_dir={'psycopg2': 'lib', 'psycopg2.tests': 'tests'}, packages=['psycopg2', 'psycopg2.tests'], cmdclass={ 'build_ext': psycopg_build_ext, 'build_py': build_py, }, ext_modules=ext)