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Merge pull request #955 from minrk/websocket...
Merge pull request #955 from minrk/websocket Websocket fixes: 1. alert client on failed and lost web socket connections A long message is given if the connection fails within 1s, which assumes the connection did not succeed. Otherwise, it is a short 'connection closed unexpectedly'. This also means that clients are notified on server termination (for better or worse). 2. remove superfluous ws-hostname parameter from notebook This made the notebook server artificially and unnecessarily brittle against tunneling and explicit hostname resolution. Now, the ws_url is defined based on the Origin of the request for the url, so it always matches the http[s] url. This means that it will follow the same tunnel, and the hostname will be already resolved. Resolving the hostname twice makes no sense at all unless the websockets are going to a different server than the http requests. Implemented as a property, so it should still be easy to change for future cases where it might behave differently (e.g. websockets on a different host, or at a non-root url).

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release.py
140 lines | 4.8 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""Release data for the IPython project."""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (c) 2008-2011, IPython Development Team.
# Copyright (c) 2001-2007, Fernando Perez <fernando.perez@colorado.edu>
# Copyright (c) 2001, Janko Hauser <jhauser@zscout.de>
# Copyright (c) 2001, Nathaniel Gray <n8gray@caltech.edu>
#
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
#
# The full license is in the file COPYING.txt, distributed with this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Name of the package for release purposes. This is the name which labels
# the tarballs and RPMs made by distutils, so it's best to lowercase it.
name = 'ipython'
# IPython version information. An empty _version_extra corresponds to a full
# release. 'dev' as a _version_extra string means this is a development
# version
_version_major = 0
_version_minor = 12
_version_micro = '' # use '' for first of series, number for 1 and above
_version_extra = 'dev'
#_version_extra = '' # Uncomment this for full releases
# Construct full version string from these.
_ver = [_version_major, _version_minor]
if _version_micro:
_ver.append(_version_micro)
if _version_extra:
_ver.append(_version_extra)
__version__ = '.'.join(map(str, _ver))
version = __version__ # backwards compatibility name
description = "IPython: Productive Interactive Computing"
long_description = \
"""
IPython provides a rich toolkit to help you make the most out of using Python
interactively. Its main components are:
* Powerful interactive Python shells (terminal- and Qt-based).
* Support for interactive data visualization and use of GUI toolkits.
* Flexible, embeddable interpreters to load into your own projects.
* Tools for high level and interactive parallel computing.
The enhanced interactive Python shells have the following main features:
* Comprehensive object introspection.
* Input history, persistent across sessions.
* Caching of output results during a session with automatically generated
references.
* Readline based name completion.
* Extensible system of 'magic' commands for controlling the environment and
performing many tasks related either to IPython or the operating system.
* Configuration system with easy switching between different setups (simpler
than changing $PYTHONSTARTUP environment variables every time).
* Session logging and reloading.
* Extensible syntax processing for special purpose situations.
* Access to the system shell with user-extensible alias system.
* Easily embeddable in other Python programs and wxPython GUIs.
* Integrated access to the pdb debugger and the Python profiler.
The parallel computing architecture has the following main features:
* Quickly parallelize Python code from an interactive Python/IPython session.
* A flexible and dynamic process model that be deployed on anything from
multicore workstations to supercomputers.
* An architecture that supports many different styles of parallelism, from
message passing to task farming.
* Both blocking and fully asynchronous interfaces.
* High level APIs that enable many things to be parallelized in a few lines
of code.
* Share live parallel jobs with other users securely.
* Dynamically load balanced task farming system.
* Robust error handling in parallel code.
The latest development version is always available from IPython's `GitHub
site <http://github.com/ipython>`_.
"""
license = 'BSD'
authors = {'Fernando' : ('Fernando Perez','fperez.net@gmail.com'),
'Janko' : ('Janko Hauser','jhauser@zscout.de'),
'Nathan' : ('Nathaniel Gray','n8gray@caltech.edu'),
'Ville' : ('Ville Vainio','vivainio@gmail.com'),
'Brian' : ('Brian E Granger', 'ellisonbg@gmail.com'),
'Min' : ('Min Ragan-Kelley', 'benjaminrk@gmail.com')
}
author = 'The IPython Development Team'
author_email = 'ipython-dev@scipy.org'
url = 'http://ipython.org'
# This will only be valid for actual releases sent to PyPI, but that's OK since
# those are the ones we want pip/easy_install to be able to find.
download_url = 'http://archive.ipython.org/release/%s' % version
platforms = ['Linux','Mac OSX','Windows XP/2000/NT']
keywords = ['Interactive','Interpreter','Shell','Parallel','Distributed']
classifiers = [
'Intended Audience :: Developers',
'Intended Audience :: Science/Research'
'License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License',
'Programming Language :: Python',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 2',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 2.6',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 3',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.1',
'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.2',
'Topic :: System :: Distributed Computing',
'Topic :: System :: Shells'
]