Compiling/Installing Python 2.7 on OSX 10.6
Ned Deily
nad at acm.org
Thu Nov 4 16:05:22 EDT 2010
In article
<238cec6d-2f47-4c97-8941-e28e6808946c at a9g2000pro.googlegroups.com>,
Jeremy <jlconlin at gmail.com> wrote:
[...]
> I downloaded the source from python.org and extracted with 'tar -xzvf
> Python-2.7.tgz' My home space is on some network somewhere. I think
> the network filesystem creates the ._ at the beginning of the files.
> It's really quite annoying.
It is and really shouldn't be happening. If I understand correctly,
whoever administers your system is doing its users a disservice by
putting OS X home directories on such a file system.
> > The path names look a little suspicious, too:
> > /home/jlconlin. What file system type are these files on? You
> > shouldn't run into problems if you use an HFS+ file system (for
> > instance) and extract the tarball from the command line using
> > /usr/bin/tar.
>
> I am intentionally installing in my home directory (i.e., /home/
> jlconlin) because I don't have access to /usr/local. Supposedly this
> is possible, and in fact common.
It is common and not normally a problem. I was just noting that the
path name was not the OS X default of /Users/jlconlin.
That said, there are a couple of options. Either find another file
system to install to or, after extracting, you may be able to delete the
spurious '._' files by a judicious use of find (-name '\.\_*' perhaps),
or you could probably just ignore all the "compiling" errors. Those
aren't "compile" errors in the sense of C compiler errors; rather they
are from one of the final install steps that produces optimized .pyc and
.pyo versions of all of the standard library .py files. The ._ files
aren't python files but they do end in .py so compileall mistakenly
tries to bytecompile them, too.
> Is it safe to ignore these modules then?
Yes.
--
Ned Deily,
nad at acm.org
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