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* Supported Python version for OE?
@ 2010-05-10 16:04 Joshua Lock
  2010-05-10 16:50 ` Khem Raj
  2010-05-11  8:23 ` Martyn Welch
  0 siblings, 2 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Joshua Lock @ 2010-05-10 16:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: openembedded-devel

Hi,

A question, (perhaps for the TSC?):

	"What's the minimum Python version we want to support in OE?"

According to the wiki we support Python 2.4 and above but I wonder if
people have any thoughts with regards to bumping it?

The reason I ask is because I had a user contact me about using Python
2.5 features (str.partition) in relocatable.bbclass, I hadn't even
noticed this and seems like not many others have but it's clearly
affecting at least one person.

I have a pretty trivial (if ugly) patch to work around this, but it
raised an interesting question so I thought I'd ask that before sending
the patch.

Cheers,
Joshua
-- 
Joshua Lock
        Intel Open Source Technology Centre




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

* Re: Supported Python version for OE?
  2010-05-10 16:04 Supported Python version for OE? Joshua Lock
@ 2010-05-10 16:50 ` Khem Raj
  2010-05-11  8:23 ` Martyn Welch
  1 sibling, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Khem Raj @ 2010-05-10 16:50 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: openembedded-devel

On (10/05/10 17:04), Joshua Lock wrote:
> Hi,
> 
> A question, (perhaps for the TSC?):
> 
> 	"What's the minimum Python version we want to support in OE?"
> 
> According to the wiki we support Python 2.4 and above but I wonder if
> people have any thoughts with regards to bumping it?

I think it was in recent discussions that we now use new 2.5+ features
so it should be bumped for git master atleast.

> 
> The reason I ask is because I had a user contact me about using Python
> 2.5 features (str.partition) in relocatable.bbclass, I hadn't even
> noticed this and seems like not many others have but it's clearly
> affecting at least one person.
> 
> I have a pretty trivial (if ugly) patch to work around this, but it
> raised an interesting question so I thought I'd ask that before sending
> the patch.
> 
> Cheers,
> Joshua
> -- 
> Joshua Lock
>         Intel Open Source Technology Centre
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Openembedded-devel mailing list
> Openembedded-devel@lists.openembedded.org
> http://lists.linuxtogo.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openembedded-devel



^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

* Re: Supported Python version for OE?
  2010-05-10 16:04 Supported Python version for OE? Joshua Lock
  2010-05-10 16:50 ` Khem Raj
@ 2010-05-11  8:23 ` Martyn Welch
  2010-05-12 10:23   ` Joshua Lock
  1 sibling, 1 reply; 4+ messages in thread
From: Martyn Welch @ 2010-05-11  8:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: openembedded-devel

Joshua Lock wrote:
> Hi,
>
> A question, (perhaps for the TSC?):
>
> 	"What's the minimum Python version we want to support in OE?"
>
> According to the wiki we support Python 2.4 and above but I wonder if
> people have any thoughts with regards to bumping it?
>   

I'd suggest that the better question to ask is:

     "Which versions of which distros do we currently intend OE to work on?"

Given that the revisions of Python for the following distributions are
as follows:

Ubuntu 10.04 LTS - 2.6.5
Ubuntu 8.04 LTS - 2.5.2

Debian lenny (stable) - 2.5.2
Debian squeeze (testing) - 2.5.3
Debian sid (unstable) - 2.5.4
Debian etch (oldstable) - 2.4.4

Fedora 12 - 2.6.2
Fedora 11 - 2.6
Fedora 10 - 2.5.2
Fedora 9 - 2.5.1
Fedora 8 - 2.5.1
Fedora 7 - 2.5
Fedora 6 - 2.4.3

RHEL6 (beta) - 2.6.2
RHEL5 - 2.4.3

OpenSUSE 11.2 - 2.6.2
OpenSUSE 11.1 - 2.6.0
OpenSUSE 11.0 - 2.5.2

This would suggest that using 2.5 features should be ok for the majority
of people. My one area of concern would be those using RHEL. RHEL 6
isn't out yet and v.5 uses 2.4.3 - this wouldn't impact me, so I'm not
overly fussed.

> The reason I ask is because I had a user contact me about using Python
> 2.5 features (str.partition) in relocatable.bbclass, I hadn't even
> noticed this and seems like not many others have but it's clearly
> affecting at least one person.
>
> I have a pretty trivial (if ugly) patch to work around this, but it
> raised an interesting question so I thought I'd ask that before sending
> the patch.
>   

The only other question I can think of is "is there an advantage to
using the Python 2.5 features?".

Martyn
> Cheers,
> Joshua
>   


-- 
Martyn Welch (Principal Software Engineer)   |   Registered in England and
GE Intelligent Platforms                     |   Wales (3828642) at 100
T +44(0)127322748                            |   Barbirolli Square, Manchester,
E martyn.welch@ge.com                        |   M2 3AB  VAT:GB 927559189




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

* Re: Supported Python version for OE?
  2010-05-11  8:23 ` Martyn Welch
@ 2010-05-12 10:23   ` Joshua Lock
  0 siblings, 0 replies; 4+ messages in thread
From: Joshua Lock @ 2010-05-12 10:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
  To: openembedded-devel

On Tue, 2010-05-11 at 09:23 +0100, Martyn Welch wrote:
> Joshua Lock wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > A question, (perhaps for the TSC?):
> >
> > 	"What's the minimum Python version we want to support in OE?"
> >
> > According to the wiki we support Python 2.4 and above but I wonder if
> > people have any thoughts with regards to bumping it?
> >   
> 
> I'd suggest that the better question to ask is:
> 
>      "Which versions of which distros do we currently intend OE to work on?"

That's a good way to re-phrase it.

> 
> Given that the revisions of Python for the following distributions are
> as follows:
> 
> Ubuntu 10.04 LTS - 2.6.5
> Ubuntu 8.04 LTS - 2.5.2
> 
> Debian lenny (stable) - 2.5.2
> Debian squeeze (testing) - 2.5.3
> Debian sid (unstable) - 2.5.4
> Debian etch (oldstable) - 2.4.4
> 
> Fedora 12 - 2.6.2
> Fedora 11 - 2.6
> Fedora 10 - 2.5.2
> Fedora 9 - 2.5.1
> Fedora 8 - 2.5.1
> Fedora 7 - 2.5
> Fedora 6 - 2.4.3
> 
> RHEL6 (beta) - 2.6.2
> RHEL5 - 2.4.3
> 
> OpenSUSE 11.2 - 2.6.2
> OpenSUSE 11.1 - 2.6.0
> OpenSUSE 11.0 - 2.5.2
> 
> This would suggest that using 2.5 features should be ok for the majority
> of people. My one area of concern would be those using RHEL. RHEL 6
> isn't out yet and v.5 uses 2.4.3 - this wouldn't impact me, so I'm not
> overly fussed.

Hmm, thanks for the data. I'm not overly fussed either but suspect that
supporting RHEL5 is a desire for at least a while after RHEL6 comes out?

> 
> > The reason I ask is because I had a user contact me about using Python
> > 2.5 features (str.partition) in relocatable.bbclass, I hadn't even
> > noticed this and seems like not many others have but it's clearly
> > affecting at least one person.
> >
> > I have a pretty trivial (if ugly) patch to work around this, but it
> > raised an interesting question so I thought I'd ask that before sending
> > the patch.
> >   
> 
> The only other question I can think of is "is there an advantage to
> using the Python 2.5 features?".

Only that it's less code and that the code is more thoroughly tested.
The patch was just what prompted me to question a Python 2.4 dependency.

Thanks,
Joshua
-- 
Joshua Lock
        Intel Open Source Technology Centre




^ permalink raw reply	[flat|nested] 4+ messages in thread

end of thread, other threads:[~2010-05-12 10:27 UTC | newest]

Thread overview: 4+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2010-05-10 16:04 Supported Python version for OE? Joshua Lock
2010-05-10 16:50 ` Khem Raj
2010-05-11  8:23 ` Martyn Welch
2010-05-12 10:23   ` Joshua Lock

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