Howdy all, I'm improving an existing application that's partly written using Python and the standard library. Many of the improvements I want to make can be done by using third-party free software.
The immediate customer for this application is happy to install Python on their machine, but I'd like to remove the hassle of asking them to continually install new versions of great third-party Python software that isn't packaged for their OS. I want to supply those modules as part of implementing my application. What I'd like to do is: - Pull down the external packages and modules from the internet - Put those things in a predictable location within my application's source tree - Have the third-party stuff be placed in a location specific for this application, so that I know my application is using exactly what I pulled down from the internet - Have the implementation of my application, and all the new versions of whatever third-party software I use, be automated with a command I can give to the customer I specifically *don't* want the third-party packages to need to be installed explicitly by the customer. I would prefer if all this can be done without needing root access on the implementation machine. What kind of infrastructure am I looking at? Python eggs, for my application and all its dependencies? That would likely involve making eggs of other people's programs. Moving files around and diddling the system path? I would expect this type of requirement isn't particularly unique. How have other people solved it? -- \ "Well, my brother says Hello. So, hooray for speech therapy." | `\ -- Emo Philips | _o__) | Ben Finney -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list