On 09/09/2014 10:41 AM, Doug Hellmann wrote: > > On Sep 8, 2014, at 8:18 PM, James E. Blair <cor...@inaugust.com> wrote: > >> Sean Dague <s...@dague.net> writes: >> >>> The crux of the issue is that zookeeper python modules are C extensions. >>> So you have to either install from packages (which we don't do in unit >>> tests) or install from pip, which means forcing zookeeper dev packages >>> locally. Realistically this is the same issue we end up with for mysql >>> and pg, but given their wider usage we just forced that pain on developers. >> ... >>> Which feels like we need some decoupling on our requirements vs. tox >>> targets to get there. CC to Monty and Clark as our super awesome tox >>> hackers to help figure out if there is a path forward here that makes sense. >> >> From a technical standpoint, all we need to do to make this work is to >> add the zookeeper python client bindings to (test-)requirements.txt. >> But as you point out, that makes it more difficult for developers who >> want to run unit tests locally without having the requisite libraries >> and header files installed. > > I don’t think I’ve ever tried to run any of our unit tests on a box where I > hadn’t also previously run devstack to install all of those sorts of > dependencies. Is that unusual?
It is for Linux users, running local unit tests is the norm for me. -Sean -- Sean Dague http://dague.net _______________________________________________ OpenStack-dev mailing list OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev