Hi everybody (but especially Cameron), A while back I set up nightly dev binary builds for Anaconda and PyPI wheels--a month ago they stopped because something was wrong with the machine (right now these are Mac OS X only). I've restarted them on a different machine. We now have binary Anaconda builds made every night from the tip of the dev branch for Python 2.7 and 3.4. I'll try to set up PyPI wheels, and also set up the Windows builds, sometime this week. The files are hosted here: http://anaconda.org/jzuhone/yt/files Each file is tagged with the changeset that it was made off of. I'll need to figure out some way of managing them before they get too numerous. Here's how to install: conda install -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt and here's how to update: conda update -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt The key is to have the "dev" channel specified. Best, John
John,
This is terrific work. I think this will provide a really convenient and
fast way to download the development branch, and I know of several people
at STSci who may benefit from this immediately. Thanks for putting this
together!
After this gets tested out, we could doc up this email and put it on the
installer docs. I'll try to find some time to play with this in the next
week.
Cameron
On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 10:54 PM, John Zuhone
Hi everybody (but especially Cameron),
A while back I set up nightly dev binary builds for Anaconda and PyPI wheels--a month ago they stopped because something was wrong with the machine (right now these are Mac OS X only).
I've restarted them on a different machine. We now have binary Anaconda builds made every night from the tip of the dev branch for Python 2.7 and 3.4. I'll try to set up PyPI wheels, and also set up the Windows builds, sometime this week.
The files are hosted here:
http://anaconda.org/jzuhone/yt/files
Each file is tagged with the changeset that it was made off of. I'll need to figure out some way of managing them before they get too numerous.
Here's how to install:
conda install -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt
and here's how to update:
conda update -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt
The key is to have the "dev" channel specified.
Best,
John
_______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
-- Cameron Hummels NSF Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Astronomy California Institute of Technology http://chummels.org
Also, if anyone wants to play around, there are a couple of Linux ARM PyPI wheels for yt 3.2 stable up on the same site that are designed for Raspberry Pis. John ZuHone Kavli Center for Astrophysics and Space Research Massachusetts Institute of Technology 77 Massachusetts Ave., 37-582G Cambridge, MA 02139 (w) 617-253-2354 (m) 781-708-5004 jzuhone@space.mit.edu jzuhone@gmail.com http://www.jzuhone.com
On Aug 4, 2015, at 11:01 PM, Cameron Hummels
wrote: John,
This is terrific work. I think this will provide a really convenient and fast way to download the development branch, and I know of several people at STSci who may benefit from this immediately. Thanks for putting this together!
After this gets tested out, we could doc up this email and put it on the installer docs. I'll try to find some time to play with this in the next week.
Cameron
On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 10:54 PM, John Zuhone
wrote: Hi everybody (but especially Cameron), A while back I set up nightly dev binary builds for Anaconda and PyPI wheels--a month ago they stopped because something was wrong with the machine (right now these are Mac OS X only).
I've restarted them on a different machine. We now have binary Anaconda builds made every night from the tip of the dev branch for Python 2.7 and 3.4. I'll try to set up PyPI wheels, and also set up the Windows builds, sometime this week.
The files are hosted here:
http://anaconda.org/jzuhone/yt/files
Each file is tagged with the changeset that it was made off of. I'll need to figure out some way of managing them before they get too numerous.
Here's how to install:
conda install -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt
and here's how to update:
conda update -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt
The key is to have the "dev" channel specified.
Best,
John
_______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
-- Cameron Hummels NSF Postdoctoral Fellow Department of Astronomy California Institute of Technology http://chummels.org _______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
Hey John,
Woohoo! I just tried this and it worked for me with no hiccups. Thanks so
much--- the status I had reached with the IT people at STScI was that I
should use the conda version anyhow since ST is moving from ureka to conda
imminently, but the roadblock there was the lack of a dev version available
on conda. As much as I'd like to have the source, this is still really
really useful.
Thanks!
--Molly
On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 10:54 PM, John Zuhone
Hi everybody (but especially Cameron),
A while back I set up nightly dev binary builds for Anaconda and PyPI wheels--a month ago they stopped because something was wrong with the machine (right now these are Mac OS X only).
I've restarted them on a different machine. We now have binary Anaconda builds made every night from the tip of the dev branch for Python 2.7 and 3.4. I'll try to set up PyPI wheels, and also set up the Windows builds, sometime this week.
The files are hosted here:
http://anaconda.org/jzuhone/yt/files
Each file is tagged with the changeset that it was made off of. I'll need to figure out some way of managing them before they get too numerous.
Here's how to install:
conda install -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt
and here's how to update:
conda update -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt
The key is to have the "dev" channel specified.
Best,
John
_______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
On Wednesday, August 5, 2015, Molly Peeples
Hey John,
Woohoo! I just tried this and it worked for me with no hiccups. Thanks so much--- the status I had reached with the IT people at STScI was that I should use the conda version anyhow since ST is moving from ureka to conda imminently, but the roadblock there was the lack of a dev version available on conda. As much as I'd like to have the source, this is still really really useful.
FWIW you should've able to do "setup.py develop" in a checkout of the yt repository using conda's python. I do this regularly for most of my conda-based setups on clusters.
Thanks! --Molly
On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 10:54 PM, John Zuhone
javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','jzuhone@gmail.com');> wrote: Hi everybody (but especially Cameron),
A while back I set up nightly dev binary builds for Anaconda and PyPI wheels--a month ago they stopped because something was wrong with the machine (right now these are Mac OS X only).
I've restarted them on a different machine. We now have binary Anaconda builds made every night from the tip of the dev branch for Python 2.7 and 3.4. I'll try to set up PyPI wheels, and also set up the Windows builds, sometime this week.
The files are hosted here:
http://anaconda.org/jzuhone/yt/files
Each file is tagged with the changeset that it was made off of. I'll need to figure out some way of managing them before they get too numerous.
Here's how to install:
conda install -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt
and here's how to update:
conda update -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt
The key is to have the "dev" channel specified.
Best,
John
_______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org javascript:_e(%7B%7D,'cvml','yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org'); http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
Hi John,
Have you seen this?
https://github.com/conda-forge
https://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=en#!forum/conda-forge
I think it's still a bit rough around the edges but it will eventually be a
cloud service to build conda packages, leveraging appveyoy, travis, and
circle-CI to do the heavy lifting on the compute end. Might be worth
keeping an eye on so you don't have to maintain this stuff.
-Nathan
On Tue, Aug 4, 2015 at 9:54 PM, John Zuhone
Hi everybody (but especially Cameron),
A while back I set up nightly dev binary builds for Anaconda and PyPI wheels--a month ago they stopped because something was wrong with the machine (right now these are Mac OS X only).
I've restarted them on a different machine. We now have binary Anaconda builds made every night from the tip of the dev branch for Python 2.7 and 3.4. I'll try to set up PyPI wheels, and also set up the Windows builds, sometime this week.
The files are hosted here:
http://anaconda.org/jzuhone/yt/files
Each file is tagged with the changeset that it was made off of. I'll need to figure out some way of managing them before they get too numerous.
Here's how to install:
conda install -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt
and here's how to update:
conda update -c http://conda.anaconda.org/jzuhone/channel/dev yt
The key is to have the "dev" channel specified.
Best,
John
_______________________________________________ yt-dev mailing list yt-dev@lists.spacepope.org http://lists.spacepope.org/listinfo.cgi/yt-dev-spacepope.org
participants (5)
-
Cameron Hummels
-
John Zuhone
-
John ZuHone
-
Molly Peeples
-
Nathan Goldbaum