pybuild | Portable Python build script for Linux | Script Programming library
kandi X-RAY | pybuild Summary
kandi X-RAY | pybuild Summary
this is a build script that will build a portable python distro for either 321 bit or 64 bit linux distros. this python is portable which means that it can be copied to any directory on any linux install (that is not too much older than your build machine) and it will all work. this python distro contains python 2.7.2 and the standard library as well as a bunch of other modules that i find useful. many of the modules have binary shared libraries as part of them and the main challenge of building is to arrange things so that all binary shared library dependencies are included in the python distro and are used in place of any similar system libraries. this means that you
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QUESTION
I'm trying to upload my first django app and I've been struggle with this issue for sometime, help is appreciated.
I already set up my project to be on heroku, I followed this tutorial: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6DI_7Zja8Zc in which django_heroku module is used to configure DB, here is the link to library https://pypi.org/project/django-heroku/
The app throws the error on login as if user tables didn't exist but I already create a super user using the heroku bash feature, after apply migrations using "heroku run python manage.py migrate". When I run "ls" command on heroku bash this is my directory:
manage.py Procfile requirements.txt runtime.txt smoke staticfile
"smoke" is my folder app, should I could see the db in this directory? if the db was not created how could I create a superuser using heroku bash feature?
This is the DB configuration that django gives me on server:
...ANSWER
Answered 2022-Jan-18 at 21:06If you look at the django-heroku
repository on GitHub I think you'll find that it has been abandoned. It has a banner saying
This repository has been archived by the owner. It is now read-only.
and has not had a new commit on the master
branch since October, 2018.
The heroku-on-django
library aims to be an updated replacement for django-heroku
:
This has been forked from django-heroku because it was abandoned and then renamed to django-on-heroku because old project has been archived.
It is also somewhat stagnant (the most recent commit to master
at the time of writing is from October, 2020) but it should work better than django-heroku
.
In either case, make sure to put this at the bottom of your settings.py
as indicated in the documentation:
QUESTION
I wanted to reactivate an old python project I worked on two years ago.
I wanted to recreate the same working conditions with one difference: when I developed at the time i worked on Ubuntu WSL (win10) with virtualenvs. Now I want to work directly from windows 10 using Anaconda.
commands in Anaconda prompt (admin rights) I entered
...ANSWER
Answered 2021-Dec-15 at 21:50I'm going to close this as I have found a satisfying solution:
- I tested my code with updated packages (pip) and it still worked.
- pybuilder==0.13.3
- tried
pyb
again in the anaconda prompt and it executed without problems
since this is merely an issue with outdated software I'll mark this as answered
QUESTION
I have the following structure in my Django project
The gitignore is the one suggested by https://www.toptal.com/developers/gitignore/api/django
The steps to initialize GIT were: Create the project with apps/A and apps/B, create the .gitignore file and run git init
.
Then I ran makemigrations
and migrate
The problem occurs when, starting from master, a new branch called Z is created with an apps/ZApp, a new model is created and makemigrations
and migrate
are executed from that branch. Thus:
ANSWER
Answered 2021-Apr-21 at 23:41This is expected behavior. Git isn't doing anything at all to files it ignores. That means if .pyc files are created while you have one branch open, then you switch to another branch, nothing will happen to the .pyc files, because all you've done is switch git branches, and those files are ignored by git.
If you like, you can add a post-checkout hook that deletes all pycache directories and .pyc files each time you check out a branch.
QUESTION
I am trying to merge a development branch back into the master. I have run git rm '*.pyc'
in both files and this is my gitignore (copied from here):
ANSWER
Answered 2020-Oct-23 at 06:22First, note that .gitignore
content itself never has any direct effect on a merge. That is because git merge
merges the contents of commits, which are already committed and cannot be changed. They have the files that they have. No power on Earth, or anywhere else, can change them. Your git merge
is merging some existing commits, in preparation for making a new commit.
I have run
git rm '*.pyc'
in both files ...
Do you mean "in both commits"? "In both files" makes little sense here.
I don't recall renaming or deleting any
venv/lib/*
files.
If venv/lib
contained *.pyc
files, and you ran the above git rm
, you would remove those *.pyc
files from both your work-tree and Git's index. Once the files are out of Git's index, then the existing *.pyc
entry in an existing .gitignore
can take effect, preventing future *.pyc
files from entering Git's index via your work-tree. A subsequent commit would then lack those *.pyc
files.
I'll just look at the first conflict here, and split up long lines for posting purposes only:
QUESTION
I have a python/django/wagtail project that I built locally using db.sqlite3. I did an initial push with everything to github, and then pulled it to my server. I made a change to the wsgi file and did some work in the cms which updated the database.
I made some changes locally. I changed my .gitignore to exclude db.sqlite3 and wsgi.py. git add .
, git commit
, git push origin master
. then, on the server, sudo git pull origin master
. db.sqlite3 reverts back to before I made the cms changes and the wsgi.py reverts back to pointing to my dev settings.
I made the changes back to the cms but now I need to do another update when I have made even more cms changes and I do not want to overwrite the database again. wsgi.py is a small fix but still. My .gitignore
...ANSWER
Answered 2020-Oct-14 at 14:01Adding a line to .gitignore
does not stop that file from being tracked by git - it just means that changes to it won't show up in git status
/ git diff
and similar. To remove it from git, you need to run git rm name-of-file
. However, this will also delete the actual file, so to avoid losing data, the best approach is:
- make a copy of db.sqlite3
git rm db.sqlite3
- move your copy of the file back to the original filename
- commit the change to git
Then, on your live server:
- make a copy of db.sqlite3
git pull
- move your copy of the file back to the original filename
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Install pybuild
You can use pybuild like any standard Python library. You will need to make sure that you have a development environment consisting of a Python distribution including header files, a compiler, pip, and git installed. Make sure that your pip, setuptools, and wheel are up to date. When using pip it is generally recommended to install packages in a virtual environment to avoid changes to the system.
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