On Nov 4, 2007, at 15:51 , Benjamin M. Schwartz wrote:
NumPy is included in the OLPC operating system, which is very constrained in space. Therefore, it would be nice to remove some subpackages to save a few megabytes. For example, the system does not include any Fortran code or compiler, so f2py (3.6 MB) seems superfluous. I also think the distutils subpackage (1.9M) is probably not necessary. Therefore, I have two questions.
1. Which packages do you think are necessary to have a functioning NumPy?
2. What is the easiest way to make (or get) a minimal NumPy installation? For example, would the scons/autoconf branch make this easier?
The *biggest* single optimisation for space that you could make is not to have both .pyc and .pyo files. AFAIK, the only difference between the two now is that .pyo files don't have asserts included. Testing on build 625 of the OLPC runnng in VMWare, that removes about 3MB from the numpy package right there (and even more when done globally -- about 25MB.). [btw, the Python test/ directory would be another 14MB.] After that, 1) remove f2py -- as you say, no Fortran, no need (2.2MB) 2) remove test directories "find . -name tests -type d -exec rm -rf {} ;' (1MB) 3) remove distutils (1MB) Now, it's down to about 3.5 MB; there's not much more that can be done after that. While I'm confident that removing the f2py and test directories can be done safely (by just removing the directories), I'm not so sure about numpy.distutils -- it really depends on what other software you're using. It could be trimmed a bit: the Fortran compiler descriptions in distutils/fcompiler/ could be removed, and system_info.py could be cut down. Although you can make up for the extra space it uses by removing Numeric (2MB). -- |>|\/|< /------------------------------------------------------------------\ |David M. Cooke http://arbutus.physics.mcmaster.ca/dmc/ |cookedm@physics.mcmaster.ca