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141 lines
5.5 KiB
ReStructuredText
141 lines
5.5 KiB
ReStructuredText
******************************************
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How To Build Tahoe-LAFS On A Desert Island
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******************************************
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(or an airplane, or anywhere else without internet connectivity)
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Here's the story: you leave for the airport in an hour, you know you want to
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do some Tahoe hacking on the flight. What can you grab right now that will
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let you install the necessary dependencies later, when you are offline?
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Pip can help, with a technique described in the pip documentation
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https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/user_guide/#installing-from-local-packages .
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First, do two setup steps:
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* ``mkdir ~/.pip/wheels``
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* edit ``~/.pip/pip.conf`` to set ``[global] find-links = ~/.pip/wheels``
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(the filename may vary on non-unix platforms: check the pip documentation for
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details)
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This instructs all ``pip install`` commands to look in your local directory
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for compiled wheels, in addition to asking PyPI and the normal wheel cache.
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Before you get shipwrecked (or leave the internet for a while), do this from
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your tahoe source tree (or any python source tree that you want to hack on):
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* ``pip wheel -w ~/.pip/wheels .``
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That command will require network and time: it will download and compile
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whatever is necessary right away. Schedule your shipwreck for *after* it
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completes.
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Specifically, it will get wheels for everything that the current project
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(".", i.e. tahoe) needs, and write them to the ``~/.pip/wheels`` directory.
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It will query PyPI to learn the current version of every dependency, then
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acquire wheels from the first source that has one:
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* copy from our ``~/.pip/wheels`` directory
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* copy from the local wheel cache (see below for where this lives)
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* download a wheel from PyPI
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* build a wheel from a tarball (cached or downloaded)
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Later, on the plane, do this:
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* ``virtualenv --no-download ve``
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* ``. ve/bin/activate``
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* ``pip install --no-index --editable .``
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That tells virtualenv/pip to not try to contact PyPI, and your ``pip.conf``
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"find-links" tells them to use the wheels in ``~/.pip/wheels/`` instead.
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How This Works
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==============
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The pip wheel cache
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-------------------
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Modern versions of pip and setuptools will, by default, cache both their HTTP
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downloads and their generated wheels. When pip is asked to install a package,
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it will first check with PyPI. If the PyPI index says it needs to download a
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newer version, but it can find a copy of the tarball/zipball/wheel in the
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HTTP cache, it will not actually download anything. Then it tries to build a
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wheel: if it already has one in the wheel cache (downloaded or built
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earlier), it will not actually build anything.
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If it cannot contact PyPI, it will fail. The ``--no-index`` above is to tell
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it to skip the PyPI step, but that leaves it with no source of packages. The
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``find-links`` setting is what provides an alternate source of packages.
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The HTTP and wheel caches are not single flat directories: they use a
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hierarchy of subdirectories, named after a hash of the URL or name of the
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object being stored (this is to avoid filesystem limitations on the size of a
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directory). As a result, the wheel cache is not suitable for use as a
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``find-links`` target (but see below).
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There is a command named ``pip wheel`` which only creates wheels (and stores
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them in ``--wheel-dir=``, which defaults to the current directory). This
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command does not populate the wheel cache: it reads from (and writes to) the
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HTTP cache, and reads from the wheel cache, but will only save the generated
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wheels into the directory you specify with ``--wheel-dir=``.
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Where Does The Cache Live?
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--------------------------
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Pip's cache location depends upon the platform. On linux, it defaults to
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~/.cache/pip/ (both http/ and wheels/). On OS-X (homebrew), it uses
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~/Library/Caches/pip/ . On Windows, try ~\AppData\Local\pip\cache .
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The location can be overridden by ``pip.conf``. Look for the "wheel-dir",
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"cache-dir", and "find-links" options.
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How Can I Tell If It's Using The Cache?
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---------------------------------------
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When "pip install" has to download a source tarball (and build a wheel), it
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will say things like::
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Collecting zfec
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Downloading zfec-1.4.24.tar.gz (175kB)
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Building wheels for collected packages: zfec
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Running setup.py bdist_wheel for zfec ... done
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Stored in directory: $CACHEDIR
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Successfully built zfec
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Installing collected packages: zfec
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Successfully installed zfec-1.4.24
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When "pip install" can use a cached downloaded tarball, but does not have a
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cached wheel, it will say::
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Collecting zfec
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Using cached zfec-1.4.24.tar.gz
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Building wheels for collected packages: zfec
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Running setup.py bdist_wheel for zfec ... done
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Stored in directory: $CACHEDIR
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Successfully built zfec
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Installing collected packages: zfec
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Successfully installed zfec-1.4.24
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When "pip install" can use a cached wheel, it will just say::
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Collecting zfec
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Installed collected packages: zfec
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Successfully installed zfec-1.4.24
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Many packages publish pre-built wheels next to their source tarballs. This is
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common for non-platform-specific (pure-python) packages. It is also common
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for them to provide pre-compiled windows and OS-X wheel, so users do not have
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to have a compiler installed (pre-compiled Linux wheels are not common,
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because there are too many platform variations). When "pip install" can use a
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downloaded wheel like this, it will say::
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Collecting six
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Downloading six-1.10.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
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Installing collected packages: six
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Successfully installed six-1.10.0
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Note that older versions of pip do not always use wheels, or the cache. Pip
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8.0.0 or newer should be ok. The version of setuptools may also be
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significant.
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