backports.lzma 0.0.14

Last updated:

0 purchases

backports.lzma 0.0.14 Image
backports.lzma 0.0.14 Images
Add to Cart

Description:

backports.lzma 0.0.14

Introduction
Python 3.3 onwards includes module lzma in the standard library, providing
support for working with LZMA and XZ compressed files via the XZ Utils C
library (XZ Utils is in a sense LZMA v2). See:

Python’s lzma - http://docs.python.org/dev/library/lzma.html
XZ Utils - http://tukaani.org/xz/

This code is a backport of the Python 3.3 standard library module lzma for
use on older versions of Python where it was not included. It is available
from PyPI (released downloads only) and GitHub (repository):

PyPI - http://pypi.python.org/pypi/backports.lzma/
GitHub - https://github.com/peterjc/backports.lzma

There are some older Python libraries like PylibLZMA and PyLZMA but these are
both using LZMA Utils (not XZ Utils, so they have no XZ support).

PylibLZMA - http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pyliblzma
PyLZMA - http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pylzma/
LZMA Utils - http://tukaani.org/lzma/



Supported Platforms
The lmza module provided with Python 3.3 should work on all the main
operating systems, so in theory so too should this backport:

Mac OS X: Tested under Python 2.6, 2.7, 3.0 to 3.4 inclusive
Linux: Tested under Python 2.6, 2.7, 3.0 to 3.6 inclusive
Windows: Tested under Python 2.7, 3.6 covering 32-bit and 64-bit,
and MSVC and mingw32 compilers

Other than some minor changes in the exceptions for some errors, based on the
unit tests everything seems to be working fine.
Support under Python 2.6 and 2.7 appears to be working in that all the
appropriate unit tests now pass. Supporting older verions of Python 2 is
probably going to be too much work.
We now also support the PyPy implementation of Python 2.7, currently tested
with PyPy 5.8.0. It does not currently work on the PyPy implementation of
Python 3, but that comes with the lzma standard library module anyway.


Installation
I recommend the Conda packaging system which supports Linux, MacOS and
Windows. Thanks to the conda-forge package you should be able to install
this library with one line, and have the dependencies handled automatically:
$ conda install -c conda-forge backports.lzma
If you are on Linux, there is a good chance that the system packages will
include this library and handle the dependencies, e.g. on RedHat/CentOS try:
$ sudo yum install python-backports-lzma
Otherwise, first you must install the XZ Utils C library. On RedHat or
CentOS Linux sytems, try:
$ sudo yum install xz-devel
On a Debian based Linux distribution use:
$ sudo apt-get install liblzma-dev
Otherwise do this from source, this is what I do on Mac OS X:
$ curl -L -O http://tukaani.org/xz/xz-5.0.4.tar.gz
$ tar -zxvf xz-5.0.4.tar.gz
$ cd xz-5.0.4
$ ./configure --prefix=$HOME
$ make
$ make check
$ make install
Now you can install this lzma backport. If using pip, this should
work:
$ pip install backports.lzma
Otherwise, you can compile this the old fashioned way. First download and
decompress the source code, or clone the github repository:
$ git clone git://github.com/peterjc/backports.lzma.git
$ cd backports.lzma
$ python setup.py install
$ cd test
$ python test_lzma.py
To install for a specific version of Python, replace python (which will
use the system’s default Python) in the above with a specific version like
python2, python2.6 or python3, python3.2, etc.
This should find the XZ Util header file and library automatically (and will
check for a local install under your home directory). You should now be able
to import the backport from Python as shown below.
If you are trying to install this under the system Python, you will need
admin rights and replace python setup.py install with
sudo python setup.py install instead.


Usage
The expected usage is as follows if you want to prioritise the standard
library provided lzma if present:
try:
import lzma
except ImportError:
from backports import lzma
#Then use lzma as normal, for example:
assert b"Hello!" == lzma.decompress(lzma.compress(b"Hello!"))
Please refer to the lzma documentation online:
http://docs.python.org/dev/library/lzma.html
Note that while lzma should be available on Python 3.3 onwards, you can
still install the backport. This is useful for two reasons, first testing the
two act the same way, and second it is possible that your Python installation
lacks the standard library lzma. This can happen if Python was installed
from source and XZ Utils was not available. If this was a systems level Python
install, as a user you could still install XZ Utils and this backport under
your own account.
This is using the shared backports namespace introduced by Brandon Rhodes
as documented here: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/backports/ and
http://bitbucket.org/brandon/backports


Revisions


v0.0.1 - January 2013

First public release





v0.0.2 - April 2013

Fix the seekable attribute on Python 2 (Tomer Chachamu)
More search paths for lib/include headers (Wynn Wilkes)





v0.0.3 - June 2014

Supports unicode filenames on Python 2 (Irving Reid)





v0.0.4 - September 2014

Declare namespace package to avoid warnings (Ralph Bean)
(Later retracted from PyPI due to installation problems with
setuptools versus distutils, see GitHub issue #8 and #9).





v0.0.5 - June 2016

Backported fix for Python Issue 19839 to ignore non-LZMA trailing data
(original Python 3.5.1 patch by Nadeem Vawda, backported by Deroko, see
GitHub pull request #5).





v0.0.6 - June 2016

Updated namespace packaging declaration now required by more recent
versions of setuptools which prevented simple installation of v0.0.4
and v0.0.5 from PyPI.





v0.0.7 - February 2017

Check and prefer the sys.prefix at installation time to find the
lib and include headers (John Kirkham).





v0.0.8 - February 2017

Switch to using README.rst for this document in order to display
nicely on PyPI.





v0.0.9 - 3 January 2018

Now compiles under Windows with passing tests, checked under AppVeyor
(see GitHub pull request #25 by Nehal J Wani).





v0.0.10 - 8 January 2018

Now supports PyPy (specifically their Python 2 implementation, but not
yet pypy3 which implements Python 3; see GitHub pull requests #27 and
#29 by Michał Górny).





v0.0.11 - 16 May 2018

Should address namespace issues in v0.0.4, v0.0.5 and v0.0.6 related to
a problem in setuptools, and causing side effects with other backports
(see pull request #32 from Toshio Kuratomi, and issues #8, #16 and #28).





v0.0.12 - 30 June 2018

Fixes locale issue in setup.py under Python 3 (see #33 reported by
Ben Hearsum).





v0.0.13 - 11 July 2018

Use setuptools instead of distutils if available, useful for
compiling your own wheel or egg files (see #34 from @wiggin15).





v0.0.14 - 12 September 2019

Back ported fix decompressing files using FORMAT_ALONE without
end markers (see #40 from Ma Kin and Python issue 21872).







Contributors
The initial Python lzma module implementation was by Per Øyvind Karlsen, which
was then rewritten by Nadeem Vawda and included with Python 3.3. Based on this
work, it was backported to also run on Python 2.6, 2.7 and 3.0, 3.1 and 3.2 by
Peter Cock.
Later contributors include: Tomer Chachamu, Wynn Wilkes, Irving Reid,
Ralph Bean, Deroko, John Kirkham, Nehal J Wani, Michał Górny, Toshio Kuratomi,
Ma Lin.


Bug Reports
Please report any reproducible bugs via the GitHub issue tracker at
https://github.com/peterjc/backports.lzma/issues including details about
your operating system, version of Python, XY Utils, the lzma backport etc.
Reproducible test cases are particularly helpful.
If you can demonstrate a problem in this backport but not in the lzma
module included with Python 3.3 or later, then it is clearly something we
will need to fix.
Any issues in the lzma module as bundled with Python 3.3 or later
should be reported to the Python project at http://bugs.python.org instead
(and we can hopefully apply any official fix to the backport as well).


Release Process
The version is incremented in file backports/lzma/__init__.py (from where
setup.py will extract it at runtime).
After testing locally and with TravisCI (see below), new releases are tagged
in git as follows:
$ git tag backports.lzma.vX.X.X
Tags must explicitly be pushed to GitHub:
$ git push origin master --tags
I then use the following to upload a new release to the Python Packaging Index
(PyPI):
$ python setup.py sdist
$ twine upload dist/backports.lzma-X.X.X.tar.gz
If not already installed, try pip install twine.
The update then appears on http://pypi.python.org/pypi/backports.lzma/


Automated Testing
TravisCI is being used for continuous integration testing under Linux, see
https://travis-ci.org/peterjc/backports.lzma

Similarly, AppVeyor is being used for testing under Windows, see:
https://ci.appveyor.com/project/peterjc/backports-lzma/history

License:

For personal and professional use. You cannot resell or redistribute these repositories in their original state.

Customer Reviews

There are no reviews.