"Eugene Morozov" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > But I want to know other opinions before going with scons. What is the best > tool for installing python applications?
The tools you mention are actually more applicable to Python packages in that they install the code into an existing Python install on the machine. For applications most people want standalone programs that the user doesn't know or care is written in Python and doesn't have any dependencies on things already installed on their system. In that case you can use a Freezing tool which will package up an executable stub, your code, the interpretter dll/so and other binary/source modules you may use (eg GTK in your case). This will give you a single directory with no dependcies that will run your program. Then you can use an installer that is platform specific. For example on Windows you'll want the program to install from a setup.exe and be in the Add/Remove programs list in the Contol Panel. On Linux you'll want it added to KDE/Gnome user menus. For freezing tools, there are: - cx-Freeze (Windows, Linux, Mac?) - py2exe (Windows) - McMillan Installer (Windows, Linux, Mac?) - py2app (Mac) - bundlebuilder (Mac) For installers, there are: - InnoSetup (Windows) - NSIS (Windows) - rpm/dpkg (Linux) - dimg tools (Mac) - EPM (Linux/Unix) IMHO the best of breed are Windows: py2exe/InnoSetup Linux: cx-Freeze/rpm Mac: py2app/dimg Other people use other combinations and have their favourites. You can see some slides from a talk I did a while back that goes into a little more detail, as well as giving an idea of how much "code"/templates were written for the bitpim project to use a freezer/installer on Windows, Linux and Mac. http://bitpim.org/papers/baypiggies/ (See slides 18 thru 22). Roger -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list