1 This is a port of Python 2.6 to OS/2 using the EMX development tools 2 ========================================================================= 3 4 What's new since the previous release 5 ------------------------------------- 6 7 Another day, another version... 8 9 10 Licenses and info about Python and EMX 11 -------------------------------------- 12 13 Please read the file README.Python-2.6 included in this package for 14 information about Python 2.6. This file is the README file from the 15 Python 2.6 source distribution available via http://www.python.org/ 16 and its mirrors. The file LICENCE.Python-2.6 is the text of the Licence 17 from the Python 2.6 source distribution. 18 19 Note that the EMX package that this package depends on is released under 20 the GNU General Public Licence. Please refer to the documentation 21 accompanying the EMX Runtime libraries for more information about the 22 implications of this. A copy of version 2 of the GPL is included as the 23 file COPYING.gpl2. 24 25 Readline and GDBM are covered by the GNU General Public Licence. I think 26 Eberhard Mattes' porting changes to BSD DB v1.85 are also GPL'ed (BSD DB 27 itself is BSD Licenced). ncurses and expat appear to be covered by MIT 28 style licences - please refer to the source distributions for more detail. 29 zlib is distributable under a very free license. GNU UFC is under the 30 GNU LGPL (see file COPYING.lib). 31 32 My patches to the Python-2.x source distributions, and any other packages 33 used in this port, are placed in the public domain. 34 35 This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied warranty. 36 In no event will the author be held liable for any damages arising from the 37 use of the software. 38 39 I do hope however that it proves useful to someone. 40 41 42 Other ports 43 ----------- 44 45 There have been ports of previous versions of Python to OS/2. 46 47 The best known would be that by Jeff Rush, most recently of version 48 1.5.2. Jeff used IBM's Visual Age C++ (v3) for his ports, and his 49 patches have been included in the Python 2.6 source distribution. 50 51 Andy Zabolotny implemented a port of Python v1.5.2 using the EMX 52 development tools. His patches against the Python v1.5.2 source 53 distribution have become the core of this port, and without his efforts 54 this port wouldn't exist. Andy's port also appears to have been 55 compiled with his port of gcc 2.95.2 to EMX, which I have but have 56 chosen not to use for the binary distribution of this port (see item 16 57 of the "YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED" section below). 58 59 It is possible to have these earlier ports still usable after installing 60 this port - see the README.os2emx.multiple_versions file, contributed by 61 Dr David Mertz, for a suggested approach to achieving this. 62 63 64 Software requirements 65 --------------------- 66 67 This package requires the EMX Runtime package, available from the 68 Hobbes (http://hobbes.nmsu.edu/) and LEO (http://archiv.leo.org/) 69 archives of OS/2 software. I have used EMX version 0.9d fix04 in 70 developing this port. 71 72 My development system is running OS/2 v4 with fixpack 12. 73 74 3rd party software which has been linked into dynamically loaded modules: 75 - ncurses (see http://dickey.his.com/ for more info, v5.2) 76 - GNU Readline (Kai Uwe Rommel's port available from Hobbes or LEO, v2.1) 77 - GNU GDBM (Kai Uwe Rommel's port available from Hobbes or LEO, v1.7.3) 78 - zlib (derived from Hung-Chi Chu's port of v1.1.3, v1.1.4) 79 - expat (distributed with Python, v1.95.6) 80 - GNU UFC (Kai Uwe Rommel's port available from LEO, v2.0.4) 81 82 83 About this port 84 --------------- 85 86 I have attempted to make this port as complete and functional as I can, 87 notwithstanding the issues in the "YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED" section below. 88 89 Core components: 90 91 Python.exe is linked as an a.out executable, ie using EMX method E1 92 to compile & link the executable. This is so that fork() works (see 93 "YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED" item 1). 94 95 Python26.dll is created as a normal OMF DLL, with an OMF import 96 library and module definition file. There is also an a.out (.a) import 97 library to support linking the DLL to a.out executables. The DLL 98 requires the EMX runtime DLLs. 99 100 This port has been built with complete support for multithreading. 101 102 Modules: 103 104 With the exception of modules that have a significant code size, or are 105 not recommended or desired for normal use, the standard modules are now 106 built into the core DLL rather than configured as dynamically loadable 107 modules. This is for both reasons of performance (startup time) and 108 memory use (lots of small DLLs fragment the address space). 109 110 I haven't yet changed the building of Python's dynamically loadable 111 modules over to using the DistUtils. 112 113 See "YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED" item 3 for notes about the fcntl module, and 114 "YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED" item 10 for notes about the pwd and grp modules. 115 116 This port supports case sensitive module import semantics, matching 117 the Windows release. This can be deactivated by setting the PYTHONCASEOK 118 environment variable (the value doesn't matter) - see "YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED" 119 item 12. 120 121 Optional modules: 122 123 Where I've been able to locate the required 3rd party packages already 124 ported to OS/2, I've built and included them. 125 126 These include ncurses (_curses, _curses_panel), BSD DB (bsddb185), 127 GNU GDBM (gdbm, dbm), zlib (zlib), GNU Readline (readline), and GNU UFC 128 (crypt). 129 130 Expat is now included in the Python release sourceball, and the pyexpat 131 module is always built. 132 133 I have built these modules statically linked against the 3rd party 134 libraries. Unfortunately my attempts to use the dll version of GNU 135 readline have been a dismal failure, in that when the dynamically 136 linked readline module is active other modules immediately provoke a 137 core dump when imported. 138 139 Only the BSD DB package (part of the BSD package distributed with EMX) 140 needs source modifications to be used for this port, pertaining to use 141 of errno with multithreading. 142 143 The other packages, except for ncurses and zlib, needed Makefile changes 144 for multithreading support but no source changes. 145 146 The _curses_panel module is a potential problem - see "YOU HAVE BEEN 147 WARNED" item 13. 148 149 Upstream source patches: 150 151 No updates to the Python 2.6 release have become available. 152 153 Eberhard Mattes' EMXFIX04 update to his EMX 0.9d tools suite includes 154 bug fixes for the BSD DB library. The bsddb module included in this 155 port incorporates these fixes. 156 157 Library and other distributed Python code: 158 159 The Python standard library lives in the Lib directory. All the standard 160 library code included with the Python 2.6 source distribution is included 161 in the binary archive, with the exception of the dos-8x3 and tkinter 162 subdirectories which have been omitted to reduce the size of the binary 163 archive - the dos-8x3 components are unnecessary duplicates and Tkinter 164 is not supported by this port (yet). All the plat-* subdirectories in the 165 source distribution have also been omitted, except for the plat-os2emx 166 subdirectory. 167 168 The Tools and Demo directories contain a collection of Python scripts. 169 To reduce the size of the binary archive, the Demo/sgi, Demo/Tix, 170 Demo/tkinter, Tools/audiopy and Tools/IDLE subdirectories have been 171 omitted as not being supported by this port. The Misc directory has 172 also been omitted. 173 174 All subdirectories omitted from the binary archive can be reconstituted 175 from the Python 2.6 source distribution, if desired. 176 177 Support for building Python extensions: 178 179 The Config subdirectory contains the files describing the configuration 180 of the interpreter and the Makefile, import libraries for the Python DLL, 181 and the module definition file used to create the Python DLL. The 182 Include subdirectory contains all the standard Python header files 183 needed for building extensions. 184 185 As I don't have the Visual Age C++ compiler, I've made no attempt to 186 have this port support extensions built with that compiler. 187 188 189 Packaging 190 --------- 191 192 This port is packaged as follows: 193 - python-2.6-os2emx-bin-03????.zip (binaries, library modules) 194 - python-2.6-os2emx-src-03???? (patches+makefiles for non-Python code) 195 196 As all the Python specific patches for the port are now part of the 197 Python release tarball, only the patches and makefiles involved in 198 building external libraries for optional extensions are included in 199 the source archive. 200 201 Documentation for the Python language, as well as the Python 2.6 202 source distibution, can be obtained from the Python website 203 (http://www.python.org/) or the Python project pages at Sourceforge 204 (http://sf.net/projects/python/). 205 206 207 Installation 208 ------------ 209 210 Obtain and install, as per the included instructions, the EMX runtime 211 package. 212 213 Unpack this archive, preserving the subdirectories, in the root directory 214 of the drive where you want Python to live. 215 216 Add the Python directory (eg C:\Python26) to the PATH and LIBPATH 217 variables in CONFIG.SYS. 218 219 You should then set the PYTHONHOME and PYTHONPATH environment variables 220 in CONFIG.SYS. 221 222 PYTHONHOME should be set to Python's top level directory. PYTHONPATH 223 should be set to the semicolon separated list of principal Python library 224 directories. 225 I use: 226 SET PYTHONHOME=F:/Python26 227 SET PYTHONPATH=F:/Python26/Lib;F:/Python26/Lib/plat-os2emx; 228 F:/Python26/Lib/lib-dynload;F:/Python26/Lib/site-packages 229 230 NOTE!: the PYTHONPATH setting above is linewrapped for this document - it 231 should all be on one line in CONFIG.SYS! 232 233 If you wish to use the curses module, you should set the TERM and TERMINFO 234 environment variables appropriately. 235 236 If you don't already have ncurses installed, I have included a copy of the 237 EMX subset of the Terminfo database included with the ncurses-5.2 source 238 distribution. This can be used by setting the TERMINFO environment variable 239 to the path of the Terminfo subdirectory below the Python home directory. 240 On my system this looks like: 241 SET TERMINFO=F:/Python26/Terminfo 242 243 For the TERM environment variable, I would try one of the following: 244 SET TERM=ansi 245 SET TERM=os2 246 SET TERM=window 247 248 You will have to reboot your system for these changes to CONFIG.SYS to take 249 effect. 250 251 If you wish to compile all the included Python library modules to bytecode, 252 you can change into the Python home directory and run the COMPILEALL.CMD 253 batch file. 254 255 You can execute the regression tests included with the Python 2.6 source 256 distribution by changing to the Python 2.6 home directory and executing the 257 REGRTEST.CMD batch file. The following tests are known to fail at this 258 time: 259 - test_mhlib (I don't know of any port of MH to OS/2); 260 - test_strptime (see "YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED" item 22); 261 - test_time (see "YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED" item 22); 262 - test_posixpath (see "YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED" item 23). 263 264 Note that some of the network related tests expect the loopback interface 265 (interface "lo", with IP address 127.0.0.1) to be enabled, which from my 266 experience is not the default configuration. Additionally, test_popen2 267 expects the "cat" utility (such as found in ports of the GNU tools) to 268 be installed. 269 270 271 Building from source 272 -------------------- 273 274 With the EMX port now checked into Python's CVS repository, the build 275 infrastructure is part of the Python release sourceball. 276 277 Prerequisites 278 279 First and foremost, you need an operational EMX development installation - 280 EMX v0.9d with fix04 (the latest at time of writing) & the gcc 2.8.1 281 compiler released by Eberhard Mattes is the recommended setup. 282 283 If you have a different version of gcc installed, see "YOU HAVE BEEN 284 WARNED" item 16. 285 286 Other items of software required:- 287 288 - GNU make (I'm using v3.76.1) 289 - rm, cp, mkdir from the GNU file utilities package 290 - GNU find 291 - GNU sed 292 293 Procedure 294 295 0. all changes mentioned apply to files in the PC/os2emx subdirectory 296 of the Python release source tree. make is also executed from this 297 directory, so change into this directory before proceeding. 298 299 1. decide if you need to change the location of the Python installation. 300 If you wish to do this, set the value of the Makefile variable LIB_DIR 301 to the directory you wish to use for PYTHONHOME 302 (eg /usr/local/lib/python2.6). 303 304 If you want Python to find its library without the PYTHONHOME 305 environment variable set, set the value of the Makefile variable 306 FIXED_PYHOME to "yes" (uncomment the appropriate line). 307 308 2. If you wish the Python executables (python.exe, pythonpm.exe & pgen.exe) 309 to be installed in a directory other than the PYTHONHOME directory, set 310 the value of the Makefile variable EXE_DIR to the appropriate directory. 311 312 3. If you wish the Python core DLL (python27.dll) to be installed in a 313 directory other than the directory in which the Python executables are 314 installed (by default, the PYTHONHOME directory), set the value of the 315 Makefile variable DLL_DIR to the appropriate directory. This DLL must 316 be placed in a directory on the system's LIBPATH, or that gets set 317 with BEGINLIBPATH or ENDLIBPATH. 318 319 4. If you have installed any of the libraries that can be used to build 320 optional Python modules, set the value of the relevant HAVE_<package> 321 Makefile variable to "yes". The Makefile currently supports: 322 323 library Makefile variable 324 ........................................ 325 zlib (1.1.4) HAVE_ZLIB 326 GNU UltraFast Crypt HAVE_UFC 327 Tcl/Tk HAVE_TCLTK (not known to work) 328 GNU Readline HAVE_GREADLINE 329 BSD DB (v1.85) HAVE_BSDDB 330 ncurses HAVE_NCURSES 331 GNU gdbm HAVE_GDBM 332 libbz2 HAVE_BZ2 333 OpenSSL HAVE_OPENSSL 334 335 Please note that you need to check that what you have installed 336 is compatible with Python's build options. In particular, the 337 BSD DB v1.85 library needs to be rebuilt with a source patch for 338 multithread support (doesn't change the library's reentrant status 339 but allows it to be linked to Python which is multithreaded). 340 Widely available binary packages of other librarys & DLLs are 341 not built/linked with multithread support. Beware! 342 343 Also note that the Makefile currently expects any libraries to be 344 found with the default library search path. You may need to add 345 -L switches to the LDFLAGS Makefile variable if you have installed 346 libraries in directories not in the default search path (which can 347 be controlled by the LIBRARY_PATH environment variable used by EMX). 348 349 5. make 350 351 It is usually a good idea to redirect the stdout and stderr streams 352 of the make process to log files, so that you can review any messages. 353 354 6. make test 355 356 This runs the Python regression tests, and completion is a sign of 357 a usable build. You should check the list of skipped modules to 358 ensure that any optional modules you selected have been built; 359 checking the list of failures against the list of known failures 360 elsewhere in this document is also prudent. 361 362 7. make install 363 >>>>>> NOT YET COMPLETE <<<<<< 364 365 8. change to a directory outside the Python source tree and start Python. 366 Check the version and build date to confirm satisfactory installation. 367 368 369 YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!! 370 ---------------------- 371 372 I know about a number of nasties in this port. 373 374 1. Eberhard Mattes, author of EMX, writes in his documentation that fork() 375 is very inefficient in the OS/2 environment. It also requires that the 376 executable be linked in a.out format rather than OMF. Use the os.exec 377 and/or the os.spawn family of functions where possible. 378 379 2. In the absence of GNU Readline, terminating the interpreter requires a 380 control-Z (^Z) followed by a carriage return. Jeff Rush documented this 381 problem in his Python 1.5.2 port. With Readline, a control-D (^D) works 382 as per the standard Unix environment. 383 384 3. EMX only has a partial implementation of fcntl(). The fcntl module 385 in this port supports what EMX supports. If fcntl is important to you, 386 please review the EMX C Library Reference (included in .INF format in the 387 EMXVIEW.ZIP archive as part of the complete EMX development tools suite). 388 Because of other side-effects I have modified the test_fcntl.py test 389 script to deactivate the exercising of the missing functionality. 390 391 4. the PyBSDDB3 module has been imported into the Python standard 392 library, with the intent of superceding the BSDDB 1.85 module (bsddb). 393 As I don't yet have a satisfactory port of Sleepcat's more recent DB 394 library (3.3.x/4.0.x/4.1.x), I haven't included a binary of this 395 module. I have left the Python part of the PyBSDDB package in this 396 distribution for completeness. 397 398 5. As a consequence of the PyBSDDB3 module being imported, the former 399 BSD DB (bsddb) module, linked against the DB v1.85 library from EMX, 400 has been renamed bsddb185. The bsddb185 module will not be built by 401 default on most platforms, but in the absence of a PyBSDDB3 module I 402 have retained it in the EMX port. 403 404 Version 1.85 of the DB library is widely known to have bugs, although 405 some patches have become available (and are incorporated into the 406 included bsddb185 module). Unless you have problems with software 407 licenses which would rule out GDBM (and the dbm module because it is 408 linked against the GDBM library) or need it for file format compatibility, 409 you may be better off deleting it and relying on GDBM. 410 411 Any code you have which uses the v1.85 bsddb module can be modified to 412 use the renamed module by changing 413 414 import bsddb 415 416 to 417 418 import bsddb185 as bsddb 419 420 6. The readline module has been linked against ncurses rather than the 421 termcap library supplied with EMX. 422 423 7. I have configured this port to use "/" as the preferred path separator 424 character, rather than "\" ('\\'), in line with the convention supported 425 by EMX. Backslashes are still supported of course, and still appear in 426 unexpected places due to outside sources that don't get normalised. 427 428 8. While the DistUtils components are now functional, other 429 packaging/binary handling tools and utilities such as those included in 430 the Demo and Tools directories - freeze in particular - are unlikely to 431 work. If you do get them going, I'd like to know about your success. 432 433 9. I haven't set out to support the [BEGIN|END]LIBPATH functionality 434 supported by one of the earlier ports (Rush's??). If it works let me know. 435 436 10. As a result of the limitations imposed by EMX's library routines, the 437 standard extension module pwd only synthesises a simple passwd database, 438 and the grp module cannot be supported at all. 439 440 I have written pure Python substitutes for pwd and grp, which can process 441 real passwd and group files for those applications (such as MailMan) that 442 require more than EMX emulates. I have placed pwd.py and grp.py in 443 Lib/plat-os2emx, which is usually before Lib/lib-dynload (which contains 444 pwd.pyd) in the PYTHONPATH. If you have become attached to what pwd.pyd 445 supports, you can put Lib/lib-dynload before Lib/plat-os2emx in PYTHONPATH 446 or delete/rename pwd.py & grp.py. 447 448 pwd.py & grp.py support locating their data files by looking in the 449 environment for them in the following sequence: 450 pwd.py: $ETC_PASSWD (%ETC_PASSWD%) 451 $ETC/passwd (%ETC%/passwd) 452 $PYTHONHOME/Etc/passwd (%PYTHONHOME%/Etc/passwd) 453 grp.py: $ETC_GROUP (%ETC_GROUP%) 454 $ETC/group (%ETC%/group) 455 $PYTHONHOME/Etc/group (%PYTHONHOME%/Etc/group) 456 457 The ETC_PASSWD and ETC_GROUP environment variables are intended to allow 458 support for multiple passwd/grp files, where other applications may not 459 support as wide a variety of input variations (drive remappings, 460 separators etc). 461 462 Both modules support using either the ":" character (Unix standard) or 463 ";" (OS/2, DOS, Windows standard) field separator character, and pwd.py 464 implements the following drive letter conversions for the home_directory and 465 shell fields (for the ":" separator only): 466 $x -> x: 467 x; -> x: 468 469 Example versions of passwd and group are in the Etc subdirectory. The 470 regression tests (test_pwd and test_grp) will fail if valid password and 471 group files cannot be found, but should pass otherwise. 472 473 Be aware that Python's pwd & group modules are for reading password and 474 group information only. 475 476 11. EMX's termios routines don't support all of the functionality now 477 exposed by the termios module - refer to the EMX documentation to find 478 out what is supported. 479 480 12. The case sensitive import semantics introduced in Python 2.1 for other 481 case insensitive but case preserving file/operating systems (Windows etc), 482 have been incorporated into this port, and are active by default. Setting 483 the PYTHONCASEOK environment variable (to any value) reverts to the 484 previous (case insensitive) semantics. This can be an issue with some 485 file management utilities that do not preserve the case of file and 486 directory names. 487 488 13. Because I am statically linking ncurses, the _curses_panel 489 module has potential problems arising from separate library data areas. 490 To avoid this, I have configured the _curses_.pyd (imported as 491 "_curses_panel") to import the ncurses symbols it needs from _curses.dll 492 (which is the curses module, but with a .dll extension rather than .pyd 493 so that the dynamic loader can actually import the symbols from it as a 494 DLL). 495 496 The site module (Lib/site.py) has code added to tweak BEGINLIBPATH so 497 that _curses.dll is found when _curses_panel is imported. If you have 498 problems attempting to use the _curses_panel support please let me know, 499 and I'll have another look at this. 500 501 14. sys.platform reports "os2emx" instead of "os2". os.name still 502 reports "os2". This change was to make it easier to distinguish between 503 the VAC++ build (formerly maintained by Michael Muller) and the EMX build 504 (this port), principally for DistUtils. 505 506 15. it appears that the %W substitution in the EMX strftime() routine has 507 an off-by-one bug. strftime was listed as passing the regression tests 508 in previous releases, but this fact appears to have been an oversight in 509 the regression test suite. To fix this really requires a portable 510 strftime routine - I'm looking into using one from FreeBSD, but its not 511 ready yet. 512 513 16. I have successfully built this port with Andy Zabolotny's ports of 514 pgcc 2.95 and gcc 3.2.1, in addition to EM's gcc 2.8.1. To use the 515 bsddb185 module with the gcc 3.2.1 build, I had to recompile the DB library 516 with gcc 3.2.1 - I don't know why, but trying to import the module built 517 against a DB library compiled with gcc 2.8.1 would result in a SYS3175 518 error. 519 520 I have not attempted to compile Python with any version of gcc prior to 521 v2.8.1. 522 523 This release sees the default optimisation change to 524 "-O3 -fomit-frame-pointer -mprobe". This works fine too for pgcc 2.95 525 but not for gcc 3.2.1. 526 527 With gcc 3.2.1, -O3 causes 2 unexpected test failures: test_format and 528 test_unicode. Both these tests pass if -O2 is instead of -O3 with this 529 compiler, and the performance difference is negligible (in contrast to 530 gcc 2.8.1 and pgcc 2.95, where the performance difference between the 531 2 optimisation settings approaches 10%). 532 533 17. os.spawnv() and os.spawnve() expose EMX's library routines rather 534 than use the emulation in os.py. 535 536 In order to make use of some of the features this makes available in 537 the OS/2 environment, you should peruse the relevant EMX documentation 538 (EMXLIB.INF in the EMXVIEW.ZIP archive accompanying the EMX archives 539 on Hobbes or LEO). Be aware that I have exposed all the "mode" options 540 supported by EMX, but there are combinations that either cannot be 541 practically used by/in Python or have the potential to compromise your 542 system's stability. 543 544 18. pythonpm.exe used to be just python.exe with the WINDOWAPI linker 545 option set in the pythonpm.def file. In practice, this turns out to do 546 nothing useful. 547 548 I have written a replacement which wraps the Python DLL in a genuine 549 Presentation Manager application. This version actually runs the 550 Python interpreter in a separate thread from the PM shell, in order 551 that PythonPM has a functioning message queue as good PM apps should. 552 In its current state, PythonPM's window is hidden. It can be displayed, 553 although it will have no content as nothing is ever written to the 554 window. Only the "hide" button is available. Although the code 555 has support for shutting PythonPM down when the Python interpreter is 556 still busy (via the "control" menu), this is not well tested and given 557 comments I've come across in EMX documentation suggesting that the 558 thread killing operation has problems I would suggest caution in 559 relying on this capability. 560 561 PythonPM processes commandline parameters normally. The standard input, 562 output and error streams are only useful if redirected, as PythonPM's 563 window is not a console in any form and so cannot accept or display 564 anything. This means that the -i option is ineffective. 565 566 Because the Python thread doesn't create its own message queue, creating 567 PM Windows and performing most PM operations is not possible from within 568 this thread. How this will affect supporting PM extensions (such as 569 Tkinter using a PM port of Tcl/Tk, or wxPython using the PM port of 570 WxWindows) is still being researched. 571 572 Note that os.fork() _DOES_NOT_WORK_ in PythonPM - SYS3175s are the result 573 of trying. os.spawnv() _does_ work. PythonPM passes all regression tests 574 that the standard Python interpreter (python.exe) passes, with the exception 575 of test_fork1 and test_socket which both attempt to use os.fork(). 576 577 I very much want feedback on the performance, behaviour and utility of 578 PythonPM. I would like to add a PM console capability to it, but that 579 will be a non-trivial effort. I may be able to leverage the code in 580 Illya Vaes' Tcl/Tk port, which would make it easier. 581 582 19. os.chdir() uses EMX's _chdir2(), which supports changing both drive 583 and directory at once. Similarly, os.getcwd() uses EMX's _getcwd() 584 which returns drive as well as path. 585 586 20. pyconfig.h is installed in the Include subdirectory with all 587 other include files. 588 589 21. the default build explicitly sets the number of file handles 590 available to a Python process to 250. EMX default is 40, which is 591 insufficient for the tempfile regression test (test_tempfile) which 592 tries to create 100 temporary files. 593 594 This setting can be overridden via the EMXOPT environment variable: 595 set EMXOPT=-h250 596 is equivalent to the setting currently used. The emxbind utility (if you 597 have it installed) can also be used to permanently change the setting in 598 python.exe - please refer to the EMX documentation for more information. 599 600 22. a pure python strptime module is now part of the Python standard 601 library, superceding a platform specific extension module. This module 602 leverages the strftime module, and as a result test_strptime fails 603 due to the EMX strftime bug in item 20 above. 604 605 23. test_posixpath attempts to exercise various Posix path related 606 functionality. Most of the sub-tests pass, but the "ismount" and 607 "samestat" subtests fail: 608 - EMX provides not satisfactory mount point emulation, so "ismount" 609 cannot succeed; 610 - EMX documents that successive stat() calls will produce different 611 results, so "samestat" cannot succeed. 612 613 test_posixpath should skip these tests on EMX. 614 615 24. I have reports of BitTorrent not working. It appears that the 616 EMX select() emulation, possibly in concert with bugs in the TCP/IP 617 stack, runs into problems under the stress imposed by this application. 618 I think it suffices to say that BitTorrent is a fair stress test of a 619 system's networking capability. 620 621 25. In the absence of an EMX implementation of the link() function, I've 622 implemented a crude Python emulation, in the file 623 Lib/plat-os2emx/_emx_link.py. This is imported into the os module, and 624 becomes available as os.link() in the normal way. 625 626 The emulation copies the source file in binary mode, and will fail if 627 disk space is exhausted. The call fails if the target already exists. 628 There are no guarantees to thread safety with this emulation - beware! 629 630 The emulation was written to support a link() based file locking system 631 used in GNU Mailman. 632 633 26. AF_UNIX sockets, otherwise known as Unix domain sockets, are now 634 supported. Unfortunately, there are some traps arising from the 635 implementation in IBM's TCP/IP stack:- 636 - the path name must start with '\\socket\\' ('/socket/' won't work!), 637 with the length of the full path name less than 108 characters; 638 - unlike Unix, the socket endpoints don't exist in the filesystem; 639 - by default, sockets are in binary mode. 640 641 27. As of Python 2.4, the mpz, rotor and xreadlines modules have been 642 dropped from the Python source tree. 643 644 28. The subprocess module was added to the standard library relatively 645 late in the 2.4 development cycle. Unfortunately I haven't had the 646 round tuits to adapt the module to the EMX environment yet, and 647 test_subprocess has a number of failures as a result. 648 649 29. The default stack size for threads has been 64k. This is proving 650 insufficient for some codebases, such as Zope. The thread stack size 651 still defaults to 64k, but this can now be increased via the stack_size() 652 function exposed by the threading & thread modules as well as by defining 653 THREAD_STACK_SIZE to an appropriate value in the Makefile (which contains 654 a commented out definition for 128kB thread stacks). I have seen 655 references to heavy Zope/Plone usage requiring 1MB thread stacks on 656 FreeBSD and Linux, but doubt that for most likely usage on OS/2 that 657 more than 256kB is necessary. The size of the required stacks (main 658 and thread) can vary significantly depending on which version of gcc 659 is used along with the compiler optimisations selected. Note that the 660 main thread stack size is set during linking and is currently 2MB. 661 662 ... probably other issues that I've not encountered, or don't remember :-( 663 664 If you encounter other difficulties with this port, which can be 665 characterised as peculiar to this port rather than to the Python release, 666 I would like to hear about them. However I cannot promise to be able to do 667 anything to resolve such problems. See the Contact section below... 668 669 670 To do... 671 -------- 672 673 In no particular order of apparent importance or likelihood... 674 675 - support Tkinter and/or alternative GUI (wxWindows??) 676 677 678 Credits 679 ------- 680 681 In addition to people identified above, I'd like to thank: 682 - the BDFL, Guido van Rossum, and crew for Python; 683 - Dr David Mertz, for trying out a pre-release of this port; 684 - the Python-list/comp.lang.python community; 685 - John Poltorak, for input about pwd/grp. 686 687 Contact 688 ------- 689 690 Constructive feedback, negative or positive, about this port is welcome 691 and should be addressed to me at the e-mail addresses below. 692 693 I have a private mailing list for announcements of fixes & updates to 694 this port. If you wish to receive such e-mail announcments, please send 695 me an e-mail requesting that you be added to this list. 696 697 Andrew MacIntyre 698 E-mail: andymac (a] bullseye.apana.org.au, or andymac (a] pcug.org.au 699 Web: http://www.andymac.org/ 700 701 28 January, 2008. 702