Bite code
Bite code

Reputation: 596713

Is there a Rake equivalent in Python?

Rake is a software build tool written in Ruby (like Ant or Make), and so all its files are written in this language. Does something like this exist in Python?

Upvotes: 100

Views: 32884

Answers (9)

Wernight
Wernight

Reputation: 37600

There is Phantom in Boo (which isn't Python, but nearly).

Upvotes: 0

Ned Batchelder
Ned Batchelder

Reputation: 375574

Paver has a similar set of goals, though I don't really know how it compares.

Upvotes: 28

charlax
charlax

Reputation: 26049

Although it is more commonly used for deployment, Fabric might be interesting for this use case.

Upvotes: 5

Hamish Downer
Hamish Downer

Reputation: 17057

There is also doit - I came across it while looking for these things a while ago, though I didn't get very far with evaluating it.

Upvotes: 5

Matthew Rankin
Matthew Rankin

Reputation: 461167

InvokeFabric without the SSH dependencies.

The Fabric roadmap discusses that Fabric 1.x will be split into three portions:

  1. Invoke — The non-SSH task execution.
  2. Fabric 2.x — The remote execution and deployment library that utilizes Invoke.
  3. Patchwork — The "common deployment/sysadmin operations, built on Fabric."

Invoke is a Python (2.6+ and 3.3+) task execution tool & library, drawing inspiration from various sources to arrive at a powerful & clean feature set.

Below are a few descriptive statements from Invoke's website:

  • Invoke is a Python (2.6+ and 3.3+) task execution tool & library, drawing inspiration from various sources to arrive at a powerful & clean feature set.
  • Like Ruby’s Rake tool and Invoke’s own predecessor Fabric 1.x, it provides a clean, high level API for running shell commands and defining/organizing task functions from a tasks.py file.

Upvotes: 41

Gian Marco
Gian Marco

Reputation: 23199

Shovel seems promising:

Shovel — Rake for Python

https://github.com/seomoz/shovel

Upvotes: 14

Lennart Regebro
Lennart Regebro

Reputation: 172239

Also check out buildout, which isn't so much a make system for software, as a make system for a deployment.

http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pysqlite/2.5.5

So it's not a direct rake equivalent, but may be a better match for what you want to do, or a really lousy one.

Upvotes: 0

las3rjock
las3rjock

Reputation: 8724

Waf is a Python-based framework for configuring, compiling and installing applications. It derives from the concepts of other build tools such as Scons, Autotools, CMake or Ant.

Upvotes: 6

Andrew Hare
Andrew Hare

Reputation: 351506

I would check out distutils:

The distutils package provides support for building and installing additional modules into a Python installation. The new modules may be either 100%-pure Python, or may be extension modules written in C, or may be collections of Python packages which include modules coded in both Python and C.

Upvotes: -2

Related Questions