adding-packages-python.txt 10 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257
  1. // -*- mode:doc; -*-
  2. // vim: set syntax=asciidoc:
  3. === Infrastructure for Python packages
  4. This infrastructure applies to Python packages that use the standard
  5. Python setuptools mechanism as their build system, generally
  6. recognizable by the usage of a +setup.py+ script.
  7. [[python-package-tutorial]]
  8. ==== +python-package+ tutorial
  9. First, let's see how to write a +.mk+ file for a Python package,
  10. with an example :
  11. ------------------------
  12. 01: ################################################################################
  13. 02: #
  14. 03: # python-foo
  15. 04: #
  16. 05: ################################################################################
  17. 06:
  18. 07: PYTHON_FOO_VERSION = 1.0
  19. 08: PYTHON_FOO_SOURCE = python-foo-$(PYTHON_FOO_VERSION).tar.xz
  20. 09: PYTHON_FOO_SITE = http://www.foosoftware.org/download
  21. 10: PYTHON_FOO_LICENSE = BSD-3-Clause
  22. 11: PYTHON_FOO_LICENSE_FILES = LICENSE
  23. 12: PYTHON_FOO_ENV = SOME_VAR=1
  24. 13: PYTHON_FOO_DEPENDENCIES = libmad
  25. 14: PYTHON_FOO_SETUP_TYPE = distutils
  26. 15:
  27. 16: $(eval $(python-package))
  28. ------------------------
  29. On line 7, we declare the version of the package.
  30. On line 8 and 9, we declare the name of the tarball (xz-ed tarball
  31. recommended) and the location of the tarball on the Web. Buildroot
  32. will automatically download the tarball from this location.
  33. On line 10 and 11, we give licensing details about the package (its
  34. license on line 10, and the file containing the license text on line
  35. 11).
  36. On line 12, we tell Buildroot to pass custom options to the Python
  37. +setup.py+ script when it is configuring the package.
  38. On line 13, we declare our dependencies, so that they are built
  39. before the build process of our package starts.
  40. On line 14, we declare the specific Python build system being used. In
  41. this case the +distutils+ Python build system is used. The two
  42. supported ones are +distutils+ and +setuptools+.
  43. Finally, on line 16, we invoke the +python-package+ macro that
  44. generates all the Makefile rules that actually allow the package to be
  45. built.
  46. [[python-package-reference]]
  47. ==== +python-package+ reference
  48. As a policy, packages that merely provide Python modules should all be
  49. named +python-<something>+ in Buildroot. Other packages that use the
  50. Python build system, but are not Python modules, can freely choose
  51. their name (existing examples in Buildroot are +scons+ and
  52. +supervisor+).
  53. In their +Config.in+ file, they should depend on +BR2_PACKAGE_PYTHON+
  54. so that when Buildroot will enable Python 3 usage for modules, we will
  55. be able to enable Python modules progressively on Python 3.
  56. The main macro of the Python package infrastructure is
  57. +python-package+. It is similar to the +generic-package+ macro. It is
  58. also possible to create Python host packages with the
  59. +host-python-package+ macro.
  60. Just like the generic infrastructure, the Python infrastructure works
  61. by defining a number of variables before calling the +python-package+
  62. or +host-python-package+ macros.
  63. All the package metadata information variables that exist in the
  64. xref:generic-package-reference[generic package infrastructure] also
  65. exist in the Python infrastructure: +PYTHON_FOO_VERSION+,
  66. +PYTHON_FOO_SOURCE+, +PYTHON_FOO_PATCH+, +PYTHON_FOO_SITE+,
  67. +PYTHON_FOO_SUBDIR+, +PYTHON_FOO_DEPENDENCIES+, +PYTHON_FOO_LICENSE+,
  68. +PYTHON_FOO_LICENSE_FILES+, +PYTHON_FOO_INSTALL_STAGING+, etc.
  69. Note that:
  70. * It is not necessary to add +python+ or +host-python+ in the
  71. +PYTHON_FOO_DEPENDENCIES+ variable of a package, since these basic
  72. dependencies are automatically added as needed by the Python
  73. package infrastructure.
  74. * Similarly, it is not needed to add +host-setuptools+ and/or
  75. +host-distutilscross+ dependencies to +PYTHON_FOO_DEPENDENCIES+ for
  76. setuptools-based packages, since these are automatically added by
  77. the Python infrastructure as needed.
  78. One variable specific to the Python infrastructure is mandatory:
  79. * +PYTHON_FOO_SETUP_TYPE+, to define which Python build system is used
  80. by the package. The two supported values are +distutils+ and
  81. +setuptools+. If you don't know which one is used in your package,
  82. look at the +setup.py+ file in your package source code, and see
  83. whether it imports things from the +distutils+ module or the
  84. +setuptools+ module.
  85. A few additional variables, specific to the Python infrastructure, can
  86. optionally be defined, depending on the package's needs. Many of them
  87. are only useful in very specific cases, typical packages will
  88. therefore only use a few of them, or none.
  89. * +PYTHON_FOO_SUBDIR+ may contain the name of a subdirectory inside the
  90. package that contains the main +setup.py+ file. This is useful,
  91. if for example, the main +setup.py+ file is not at the root of
  92. the tree extracted by the tarball. If +HOST_PYTHON_FOO_SUBDIR+ is not
  93. specified, it defaults to +PYTHON_FOO_SUBDIR+.
  94. * +PYTHON_FOO_ENV+, to specify additional environment variables to
  95. pass to the Python +setup.py+ script (for both the build and install
  96. steps). Note that the infrastructure is automatically passing
  97. several standard variables, defined in +PKG_PYTHON_DISTUTILS_ENV+
  98. (for distutils target packages), +HOST_PKG_PYTHON_DISTUTILS_ENV+
  99. (for distutils host packages), +PKG_PYTHON_SETUPTOOLS_ENV+ (for
  100. setuptools target packages) and +HOST_PKG_PYTHON_SETUPTOOLS_ENV+
  101. (for setuptools host packages).
  102. * +PYTHON_FOO_BUILD_OPTS+, to specify additional options to pass to the
  103. Python +setup.py+ script during the build step. For target distutils
  104. packages, the +PKG_PYTHON_DISTUTILS_BUILD_OPTS+ options are already
  105. passed automatically by the infrastructure.
  106. * +PYTHON_FOO_INSTALL_TARGET_OPTS+, +PYTHON_FOO_INSTALL_STAGING_OPTS+,
  107. +HOST_PYTHON_FOO_INSTALL_OPTS+ to specify additional options to pass
  108. to the Python +setup.py+ script during the target installation step,
  109. the staging installation step or the host installation,
  110. respectively. Note that the infrastructure is automatically passing
  111. some options, defined in +PKG_PYTHON_DISTUTILS_INSTALL_TARGET_OPTS+
  112. or +PKG_PYTHON_DISTUTILS_INSTALL_STAGING_OPTS+ (for target distutils
  113. packages), +HOST_PKG_PYTHON_DISTUTILS_INSTALL_OPTS+ (for host
  114. distutils packages), +PKG_PYTHON_SETUPTOOLS_INSTALL_TARGET_OPTS+ or
  115. +PKG_PYTHON_SETUPTOOLS_INSTALL_STAGING_OPTS+ (for target setuptools
  116. packages) and +HOST_PKG_PYTHON_SETUPTOOLS_INSTALL_OPTS+ (for host
  117. setuptools packages).
  118. * +HOST_PYTHON_FOO_NEEDS_HOST_PYTHON+, to define the host python
  119. interpreter. The usage of this variable is limited to host
  120. packages. The two supported value are +python2+ and +python3+. It
  121. will ensure the right host python package is available and will
  122. invoke it for the build. If some build steps are overloaded, the
  123. right python interpreter must be explicitly called in the commands.
  124. With the Python infrastructure, all the steps required to build and
  125. install the packages are already defined, and they generally work well
  126. for most Python-based packages. However, when required, it is still
  127. possible to customize what is done in any particular step:
  128. * By adding a post-operation hook (after extract, patch, configure,
  129. build or install). See xref:hooks[] for details.
  130. * By overriding one of the steps. For example, even if the Python
  131. infrastructure is used, if the package +.mk+ file defines its own
  132. +PYTHON_FOO_BUILD_CMDS+ variable, it will be used instead of the
  133. default Python one. However, using this method should be restricted
  134. to very specific cases. Do not use it in the general case.
  135. [[scanpypi]]
  136. ==== Generating a +python-package+ from a PyPI repository
  137. If the Python package for which you would like to create a Buildroot
  138. package is available on PyPI, you may want to use the +scanpypi+ tool
  139. located in +utils/+ to automate the process.
  140. You can find the list of existing PyPI packages
  141. https://pypi.python.org[here].
  142. +scanpypi+ requires Python's +setuptools+ package to be installed on
  143. your host.
  144. When at the root of your buildroot directory just do :
  145. -----------------------
  146. utils/scanpypi foo bar -o package
  147. -----------------------
  148. This will generate packages +python-foo+ and +python-bar+ in the package
  149. folder if they exist on https://pypi.python.org.
  150. Find the +external python modules+ menu and insert your package inside.
  151. Keep in mind that the items inside a menu should be in alphabetical order.
  152. Please keep in mind that you'll most likely have to manually check the
  153. package for any mistakes as there are things that cannot be guessed by
  154. the generator (e.g. dependencies on any of the python core modules
  155. such as BR2_PACKAGE_PYTHON_ZLIB). Also, please take note that the
  156. license and license files are guessed and must be checked. You also
  157. need to manually add the package to the +package/Config.in+ file.
  158. If your Buildroot package is not in the official Buildroot tree but in
  159. a br2-external tree, use the -o flag as follows:
  160. -----------------------
  161. utils/scanpypi foo bar -o other_package_dir
  162. -----------------------
  163. This will generate packages +python-foo+ and +python-bar+ in the
  164. +other_package_directory+ instead of +package+.
  165. Option +-h+ will list the available options:
  166. -----------------------
  167. utils/scanpypi -h
  168. -----------------------
  169. [[python-package-cffi-backend]]
  170. ==== +python-package+ CFFI backend
  171. C Foreign Function Interface for Python (CFFI) provides a convenient
  172. and reliable way to call compiled C code from Python using interface
  173. declarations written in C. Python packages relying on this backend can
  174. be identified by the appearance of a +cffi+ dependency in the
  175. +install_requires+ field of their +setup.py+ file.
  176. Such a package should:
  177. * add +python-cffi+ as a runtime dependency in order to install the
  178. compiled C library wrapper on the target. This is achieved by adding
  179. +select BR2_PACKAGE_PYTHON_CFFI+ to the package +Config.in+.
  180. ------------------------
  181. config BR2_PACKAGE_PYTHON_FOO
  182. bool "python-foo"
  183. select BR2_PACKAGE_PYTHON_CFFI # runtime
  184. ------------------------
  185. * add +host-python-cffi+ as a build-time dependency in order to
  186. cross-compile the C wrapper. This is achieved by adding
  187. +host-python-cffi+ to the +PYTHON_FOO_DEPENDENCIES+ variable.
  188. ------------------------
  189. ################################################################################
  190. #
  191. # python-foo
  192. #
  193. ################################################################################
  194. ...
  195. PYTHON_FOO_DEPENDENCIES = host-python-cffi
  196. $(eval $(python-package))
  197. ------------------------