On Sat, Dec 7, 2013 at 4:09 AM, Ralf Gommers <[email protected]> wrote:
> Wow -- took a little while, but presto! A pile of wheels, ready to go: > >> >> $ ls wheelhouse/ >> Jinja2-2.7.1-py27-none-any.whl >> pyzmq-14.0.1-cp27-none-macosx_10_6_intel.whl >> MarkupSafe-0.18-cp27-none-macosx_10_6_intel.whl >> readline-6.2.4.1-cp27-none-macosx_10_6_intel.whl >> Pygments-1.6-py27-none-any.whl >> tornado-3.1.1-py27-none-any.whl >> ipython-1.1.0-py27-none-any.whl >> >> >> Now, do they work? They do on my machine. Is there somewhere I could put >> them up so folks could test? >> > > You can't upload that whole stack anywhere pip finds it automatically. > yeah, that's where I'm still a little confused about pip and a "wheelhouse" -- other than PyPi, is there a way to put a pile of wheels somewhere and point pip to them -- i.e. simple http or ftp server or something? Or are folks going to need to download the whole pile first, then point pip at a local dir? Temporarily you can put them on SourceForge or on any public download site. > Then people can download and install with wheel. If you send me a link to > those files, then I'll put them up together with the numpy wheels on SF. > Thanks -- I'll try to do that later today. -Chris > > Ralf > > >> >> -Chris >> >> >> >> >> >> >> I can create some to try out and put them on a separate folder on >>> SourceForge. If that works they can be put on PyPi. >>> >>> For Windows things are less simple, because the wheel format doesn't >>> handle the multiple builds (no SSE, SSE2, SSE3) that are in the superpack >>> installers. A problem is that we don't really know how many users still >>> have old CPUs that don't support SSE3. The impact for those users is high, >>> numpy will install but crash (see >>> https://github.com/scipy/scipy/issues/1697). Questions: >>> 1. does anyone have a good idea to obtain statistics? >>> 2. in the absence of statistics, can we do an experiment by putting one >>> wheel up on PyPi which contains SSE3 instructions, for python 3.3 I >>> propose, and seeing for how many (if any) users this goes wrong? >>> >>> Ralf >>> >>> P.S. related question: did anyone check whether the recently merged >>> NPY_HAVE_SSE2_INTRINSIC puts SSE2 instructions into the no-SSE binary? >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> NumPy-Discussion mailing list >>> [email protected] >>> http://mail.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion >>> >>> >> >> >> -- >> >> Christopher Barker, Ph.D. >> Oceanographer >> >> Emergency Response Division >> NOAA/NOS/OR&R (206) 526-6959 voice >> 7600 Sand Point Way NE (206) 526-6329 fax >> Seattle, WA 98115 (206) 526-6317 main reception >> >> [email protected] >> >> _______________________________________________ >> NumPy-Discussion mailing list >> [email protected] >> http://mail.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion >> >> > > _______________________________________________ > NumPy-Discussion mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.scipy.org/mailman/listinfo/numpy-discussion > > -- Christopher Barker, Ph.D. Oceanographer Emergency Response Division NOAA/NOS/OR&R (206) 526-6959 voice 7600 Sand Point Way NE (206) 526-6329 fax Seattle, WA 98115 (206) 526-6317 main reception [email protected]
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