Short History
* Removed reST version.
This commit is contained in:
parent
d86fd7c54c
commit
1d48b04cfb
@ -1,57 +0,0 @@
|
|||||||
==========================================
|
|
||||||
A Short History of gpg bindings for Python
|
|
||||||
==========================================
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
In 2002 John Goerzen released PyME; Python bindings for the GPGME
|
|
||||||
module which utilised the current release of Python of the time
|
|
||||||
(Python 2.2 or 2.3) and SWIG. Shortly after creating it and ensuring
|
|
||||||
it worked he stopped supporting it, though left his work available on
|
|
||||||
his Gopher site.
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
A couple of years later the project was picked up by Igor Belyi and
|
|
||||||
actively developed and maintained by him from 2004 to 2008. Igor's
|
|
||||||
whereabouts at the time of this document's creation are unknown, but
|
|
||||||
the current authors do hope he is well. We're assuming (or hoping)
|
|
||||||
that life did what life does and made continuing untenable.
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
In 2014 Martin Albrecht wanted to patch a bug in the PyME code and
|
|
||||||
discovered the absence of Igor. Following a discussion on the PyME
|
|
||||||
mailing list he became the new maintainer for PyME, releasing version
|
|
||||||
0.9.0 in May of that year. He remains the maintainer of the original
|
|
||||||
PyME release in Python 2.6 and 2.7 (available via PyPI).
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
In 2015 Ben McGinnes approached Martin about a Python 3 version, while
|
|
||||||
investigating how complex a task this would be the task ended up being
|
|
||||||
completed. A subsequent discussion with Werner Koch led to the
|
|
||||||
decision to fold the Python 3 port back into the original GPGME
|
|
||||||
release in the languages subdirectory for non-C bindings. Ben is the
|
|
||||||
maintainer of the Python 3 port within GPGME.
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
In 2016 PyME was renamed to "gpg" and adopted by the upstream GnuPG
|
|
||||||
team.
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
---------------------
|
|
||||||
The Annoyances of Git
|
|
||||||
---------------------
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
As anyone who has ever worked with git knows, submodules are horrible
|
|
||||||
way to deal with pretty much anything. In the interests of avoiding
|
|
||||||
migraines, that is being skipped with addition of PyME to GPGME.
|
|
||||||
Instead the files will be added to the subdirectory, along with a copy
|
|
||||||
of the entire git log up to that point as a separate file within the
|
|
||||||
docs directory (old-commits.log). As the log for PyME is nearly 100KB
|
|
||||||
and the log for GPGME is approximately 1MB, this would cause
|
|
||||||
considerable bloat, as well as some confusion, should the two be
|
|
||||||
merged. Hence the unfortunate, but necessary, step to simply move the
|
|
||||||
files. A regular repository version will be maintained should it be
|
|
||||||
possible to implement this better in the future.
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
------------------
|
|
||||||
The Perils of PyPI
|
|
||||||
------------------
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
At the current time the Python 3 fork is not available via PyPI and
|
|
||||||
the pip installer. The recommended installation method is to follow
|
|
||||||
the instructions in lang/py3-pyme/INSTALL. This will build the
|
|
||||||
necessary SWIG portions against the installed version of GPGME.
|
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user