diff options
author | John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com> | 2023-02-10 01:31:43 +0100 |
---|---|---|
committer | Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com> | 2023-02-27 11:01:30 +0100 |
commit | fee6d4124a470a541eeb51c59ee2b4aea09c6c49 (patch) | |
tree | 5b6339dcc0bd0704a40c9ed06d2c28bfe9c42d0f /configure | |
parent | 462a65678e0fc15f924bf0f9f4d384fc18487b9b (diff) |
configure: Look for auxiliary Python installations
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>
Reviewed-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'configure')
-rwxr-xr-x | configure | 61 |
1 files changed, 45 insertions, 16 deletions
@@ -592,20 +592,43 @@ 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) + "$1" -c 'import sys; sys.exit(sys.version_info < (3,6))' +} + python= -explicit_python=no -for binary in "${PYTHON-python3}" python -do - if has "$binary" - then - python=$(command -v "$binary") - break +first_python= +if test -z "${PYTHON}"; then + explicit_python=no + # 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 python3 python python3.11 python3.10 python3.9 python3.8 python3.7 python3.6; do + if has "$binary"; then + python=$(command -v "$binary") + if check_py_version "$python"; then + # This one is good. + first_python= + break + else + first_python=$python + fi + fi + done +else + # Same as above, but only check the environment variable. + has "${PYTHON}" || error_exit "The PYTHON environment variable does not point to an executable" + python=$(command -v "$PYTHON") + explicit_python=yes + if check_py_version "$python"; then + # This one is good. + first_python= + else + first_python=$first_python fi -done - +fi # Check for ancillary tools used in testing genisoimage= @@ -1030,16 +1053,22 @@ rm -f ./*/config-devices.mak.d if test -z "$python" then - error_exit "Python not found. Use --python=/path/to/python" + # If first_python is set, there was a binary somewhere even though + # it was not suitable. Use it for the error message. + if test -n "$first_python"; then + error_exit "Cannot use '$first_python', Python >= 3.6 is required." \ + "Use --python=/path/to/python to specify a supported Python." + else + error_exit "Python not found. Use --python=/path/to/python" + fi fi + if ! has "$make" 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 |