##// END OF EJS Templates
posix: always seek to EOF when opening a file in append mode...
posix: always seek to EOF when opening a file in append mode Python 3 already does this, so skip it there. Consider the program: #include <stdio.h> int main() { FILE *f = fopen("narf", "w"); fprintf(f, "narf\n"); fclose(f); f = fopen("narf", "a"); printf("%ld\n", ftell(f)); fprintf(f, "troz\n"); printf("%ld\n", ftell(f)); return 0; } on macOS, FreeBSD, and Linux with glibc, this program prints 5 10 but on musl libc (Alpine Linux and probably others) this prints 0 10 By my reading of https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/functions/fopen.html this is technically correct, specifically: > Opening a file with append mode (a as the first character in the > mode argument) shall cause all subsequent writes to the file to be > forced to the then current end-of-file, regardless of intervening > calls to fseek(). in other words, the file position doesn't really matter in append-mode files, and we can't depend on it being at all meaningful unless we perform a seek() before tell() after open(..., 'a'). Experimentally after a .write() we can do a .tell() and it'll always be reasonable, but I'm unclear from reading the specification if that's a smart thing to rely on. This matches what we do on Windows and what Python 3 does for free, so let's just be consistent. Thanks to Yuya for the idea.

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build-linux-wheels.sh
34 lines | 1.1 KiB | application/x-sh | BashLexer
#!/bin/bash
# This file is directly inspired by
# https://github.com/pypa/python-manylinux-demo/blob/master/travis/build-wheels.sh
set -e -x
PYTHON_TARGETS=$(ls -d /opt/python/cp27*/bin)
# Create an user for the tests
useradd hgbuilder
# Bypass uid/gid problems
cp -R /src /io && chown -R hgbuilder:hgbuilder /io
# Compile wheels for Python 2.X
for PYBIN in $PYTHON_TARGETS; do
"${PYBIN}/pip" wheel /io/ -w wheelhouse/
done
# Bundle external shared libraries into the wheels with
# auditwheel (https://github.com/pypa/auditwheel) repair.
# It also fix the ABI tag on the wheel making it pip installable.
for whl in wheelhouse/*.whl; do
auditwheel repair "$whl" -w /src/wheelhouse/
done
# Install packages and run the tests for all Python versions
cd /io/tests/
for PYBIN in $PYTHON_TARGETS; do
# Install mercurial wheel as root
"${PYBIN}/pip" install mercurial --no-index -f /src/wheelhouse
# But run tests as hgbuilder user (non-root)
su hgbuilder -c "\"${PYBIN}/python\" /io/tests/run-tests.py --with-hg=\"${PYBIN}/hg\" --blacklist=/io/contrib/packaging/linux-wheel-centos5-blacklist"
done