It's a distribution issue. As far as what I've found as having cutting edge (or even reasonably fresh) python packages in your package manager is dictated by the distro, who vary wildly in this.
Debian SID at times> All the Ubuntus > Debian SID at times> Fedora Core > Debian testing > Debian stable This is the #1 reason I use ubuntu on servers right now. And if the above is wrong now, these are generally feelings about a small sample set over a period of time. I really have just gone all Kubuntu/Xubuntu where I can these days. I will suggest you look into learning eggs, cheese shop and easy_install as an alternative to OS based package management for python. I was an awesome presentation by Brandon Rhodes Mill about Buildout at PyAtl a couple weeks ago. It automagically downloads all the eggs you need. You just create a setup.py and a quick config file, and check those in with your source. When you run a command when you start developing on a checkout, it pulls down all the eggs you need to work with that checkout from the cheeshop, putting them in a project local directory, which is then prepended to the python search path for that project. This means site-packages and you don't have fights when you install on multiple system who may need other past versions of modules. Buildout also gets the right version of python on the machine ( in a local directory again ) and is compatible with system where you don't have root access. Buildout was originally written by the Zope people I believe, but has been made independent of zope so all of us non-zope people can use it. --Michael Cheese Shop: www.python.org/pypi Monty Python Cheese Shop Skit: www.youtube.com/watch?v=B3KBuQHHKx0 Buildout: www.python.org/pypi/zc.buildout More about Eggs: http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/PythonEggs PyAtl (where presumably his talk will be posted): http://pyatl.org/ On Jan 23, 2008 11:01 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I decided to install Python2.5 on the server machine to save me the time > for low-level debugging >;) but it doesn't find the MySQLdb module... > > I searched through aptitude - the only thing I find is MySQLdb for Py2.4 > ... What's happening here? > > I have to say that the client PC (on which my script runs fine with 2.5) > has Ubuntu installed - can it be that the MySQLdb module is behind in > Debian? > > Sorry for going off topic - if you guys don't want that here can move > the problem to the Debian list - but maybe someone here knows about the > status of the packages...? > > - Paul > _______________________________________________ > Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor > -- Michael Langford Phone: 404-386-0495 Consulting: http://www.RowdyLabs.com _______________________________________________ Tutor maillist - Tutor@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/tutor