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Re: [PATCH v2 3/7] configure: Look for auxiliary Python installations


From: Thomas Huth
Subject: Re: [PATCH v2 3/7] configure: Look for auxiliary Python installations
Date: Fri, 10 Feb 2023 08:39:46 +0100
User-agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:91.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/91.13.0

On 10/02/2023 01.31, John Snow wrote:
At the moment, we look for just "python3" and "python", which is good
enough almost all of the time. But ... if you are on a platform that
uses an older Python by default and only offers a newer Python as an
option, you'll have to specify --python=/usr/bin/foo every time.

We can be kind and instead make a cursory attempt to locate a suitable
Python binary ourselves, looking for the remaining well-known binaries.

This configure loop will prefer, in order:

1. Whatever is specified in $PYTHON
2. python3
3. python
4. python3.11 down through python3.6

Notes:

- Python virtual environment provides binaries for "python3", "python",
   and whichever version you used to create the venv,
   e.g. "python3.8". If configure is invoked from inside of a venv, this
   configure loop will not "break out" of that venv unless that venv is
   created using an explicitly non-suitable version of Python that we
   cannot use.

- In the event that no suitable python is found, the first python found
   is the version used to generate the human-readable error message.

- The error message isn't printed right away to allow later
   configuration code to pick up an explicitly configured python.

Signed-off-by: John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com>
---
  configure | 33 +++++++++++++++++++++++++--------
  1 file changed, 25 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)

diff --git a/configure b/configure
index 64960c6000f..ea8c973d13b 100755
--- a/configure
+++ b/configure
@@ -592,20 +592,39 @@ esac
: ${make=${MAKE-make}} -# We prefer python 3.x. A bare 'python' is traditionally
-# python 2.x, but some distros have it as python 3.x, so
-# we check that too
+
+check_py_version() {
+    # We require python >= 3.6.
+    # NB: a True python conditional creates a non-zero return code (Failure)
+    "$1" -c 'import sys; sys.exit(sys.version_info < (3,6))'
+}
+
  python=
+first_python=
  explicit_python=no
-for binary in "${PYTHON-python3}" python
+# A bare 'python' is traditionally python 2.x, but some distros
+# have it as python 3.x, so check in both places.
+for binary in "${PYTHON-python3}" python python3.{11..6}
  do
      if has "$binary"
      then
          python=$(command -v "$binary")
-        break
+        if test -z "$first_python"; then
+           first_python=$python
+        fi
+        if check_py_version "$python"; then
+            # This one is good.
+            first_python=
+            break
+        fi
      fi
  done
+# If first_python is set, we didn't find a suitable binary.
+# Use this one for possible future error messages.
+if test -n "$first_python"; then
+    python="$first_python"
+fi

  # Check for ancillary tools used in testing
  genisoimage=
@@ -1037,9 +1056,7 @@ then
      error_exit "GNU make ($make) not found"
  fi
-# Note that if the Python conditional here evaluates True we will exit
-# with status 1 which is a shell 'false' value.
-if ! $python -c 'import sys; sys.exit(sys.version_info < (3,6))'; then
+if ! check_py_version "$python"; then
    error_exit "Cannot use '$python', Python >= 3.6 is required." \
        "Use --python=/path/to/python to specify a supported Python."
  fi

I like the idea!

Reviewed-by: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com>




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