Reputation: 1155
I want to make a distributable package. And my package depends on some OS package
Here what I want to install:
def install_libmagic():
if sys.platform == 'darwin':
subprocess.run(['brew', 'install', 'libmagic'])
elif sys.platform == 'linux':
subprocess.run(['apt-get', 'update'])
subprocess.run(['apt-get', 'install', '-y', 'libmagic1'])
else:
raise Exception(f'Unknown system: {sys.platform}, can not install libmagic')
I want this code to be executed only when smb call:
pip install mypacakge
I don't want it to be executed when I run: python setup.py bdist_wheel
How can I achieve this?
I tried this:
setup(
...
install_requires=install_libmagic(),
)
Also tried to override install command:
from setuptools.command.install import install
class MyInstall(install):
def run(self):
install_libmagic()
install.run(self)
setup(
...
cmdclass={'install': MyInstall}
)
But the function was executed on python setup.py bdist_wheel
, which is not what I am trying to achieve.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 1295
Reputation: 21550
I think you're mixing up the behaviors of built distributions (wheels) and source distributions.
If your goal is run some subprocesses at install time, then you can't do this with a built distribution. A built distribution executes no Python code at install time. It only executes setup.py
at build time, which is why you're seeing your functions executed when you call python setup.py bdist_wheel
.
On the other hand, a source distribution (python setup.py sdist
) does execute the setup.py
file at both build time and install time (roughly the same as python setup.py install
) and would give you the behavior you're looking for.
However, as the comments have already mentioned, this is going to be very fragile and not very user-friendly or portable. What you're describing is really a distro/OS package that contains some Python module, and you'd probably be better off with that instead.
Upvotes: 1