It's time to start preparing for a version of redo that doesn't work unless we build it first (because it will rely on C modules, and eventually be rewritten in C altogether). To get rolling, remove the old-style symlinks to the main programs, and rename those programs from redo-*.py to redo/cmd_*.py. We'll also move all library functions into the redo/ dir, which is a more python-style naming convention. Previously, install.do was generating wrappers for installing in /usr/bin, which extend sys.path and then import+run the right file. This made "installed" redo work quite differently from running redo inside its source tree. Instead, let's always generate the wrappers in bin/, and not make anything executable except those wrappers. Since we're generating wrappers anyway, let's actually auto-detect the right version of python for the running system; distros can't seem to agree on what to call their python2 binaries (sigh). We'll fill in the right #! shebang lines. Since we're doing that, we can stop using /usr/bin/env, which will a) make things slightly faster, and b) let us use "python -S", which tells python not to load a bunch of extra crap we're not using, thus improving startup times. Annoyingly, we now have to build redo using minimal/do, then run the tests using bin/redo. To make this less annoying, we add a toplevel ./do script that knows the right steps, and a Makefile (whee!) for people who are used to typing 'make' and 'make test' and 'make clean'.
26 lines
581 B
Python
26 lines
581 B
Python
import os, errno, fcntl
|
|
|
|
|
|
def join(between, l):
|
|
return between.join(l)
|
|
|
|
|
|
def unlink(f):
|
|
"""Delete a file at path 'f' if it currently exists.
|
|
|
|
Unlike os.unlink(), does not throw an exception if the file didn't already
|
|
exist.
|
|
"""
|
|
try:
|
|
os.unlink(f)
|
|
except OSError, e:
|
|
if e.errno == errno.ENOENT:
|
|
pass # it doesn't exist, that's what you asked for
|
|
|
|
|
|
def close_on_exec(fd, yes):
|
|
fl = fcntl.fcntl(fd, fcntl.F_GETFD)
|
|
fl &= ~fcntl.FD_CLOEXEC
|
|
if yes:
|
|
fl |= fcntl.FD_CLOEXEC
|
|
fcntl.fcntl(fd, fcntl.F_SETFD, fl)
|