******** Buildout ******** .. contents:: The Buildout project provides support for creating applications, especially Python applications. It provides tools for assembling applications from multiple parts, Python or otherwise. An application may actually contain multiple programs, processes, and configuration settings. The word "buildout" refers to a description of a set of parts and the software to create and assemble them. It is often used informally to refer to an installed system based on a buildout definition. For example, if we are creating an application named "Foo", then "the Foo buildout" is the collection of configuration and application-specific software that allows an instance of the application to be created. We may refer to such an instance of the application informally as "a Foo buildout". To get a feel for some of the things you might use buildouts for, see the `Buildout examples`_. To lean more about using buildouts, see `Detailed Documentation`_. To see screencasts, talks, useful links and more documentation, visit the `Buildout website `_. Recipes ******* Existing recipes include: `zc.recipe.egg `_ The egg recipe installes one or more eggs, with their dependencies. It installs their console-script entry points with the needed eggs included in their paths. It is suitable for use with a "clean" Python: one without packages installed in site-packages. `z3c.recipe.scripts `_ Like zc.recipe.egg, this recipe builds interpreter scripts and entry point scripts based on eggs. It can be used with a Python that has packages installed in site-packages, such as a system Python. The interpreter also has more features than the one offered by zc.recipe.egg. `zc.recipe.testrunner `_ The testrunner egg creates a test runner script for one or more eggs. `zc.recipe.zope3checkout `_ The zope3checkout recipe installs a Zope 3 checkout into a buildout. `zc.recipe.zope3instance `_ The zope3instance recipe sets up a Zope 3 instance. `zc.recipe.filestorage `_ The filestorage recipe sets up a ZODB file storage for use in a Zope 3 instance created by the zope3instance recipe. Buildout examples ***************** Here are a few examples of what you can do with buildouts. We'll present these as a set of use cases. Try out an egg ============== Sometimes you want to try an egg (or eggs) that someone has released. You'd like to get a Python interpreter that lets you try things interactively or run sample scripts without having to do path manipulations. If you can and don't mind modifying your Python installation, you could use easy_install, otherwise, you could create a directory somewhere and create a buildout.cfg file in that directory containing:: [buildout] parts = mypython [mypython] recipe = zc.recipe.egg interpreter = mypython eggs = theegg where theegg is the name of the egg you want to try out. Run buildout in this directory. It will create a bin subdirectory that includes a mypython script. If you run mypython without any arguments you'll get an interactive interpreter with the egg in the path. If you run it with a script and script arguments, the script will run with the egg in its path. Of course, you can specify as many eggs as you want in the eggs option. If the egg provides any scripts (console_scripts entry points), those will be installed in your bin directory too. Work on a package ================= I often work on packages that are managed separately. They don't have scripts to be installed, but I want to be able to run their tests using the `zope.testing test runner `_. In this kind of application, the program to be installed is the test runner. A good example of this is `zc.ngi `_. Here I have a subversion project for the zc.ngi package. The software is in the src directory. The configuration file is very simple:: [buildout] develop = . parts = test [test] recipe = zc.recipe.testrunner eggs = zc.ngi I use the develop option to create a develop egg based on the current directory. I request a test script named "test" using the zc.recipe.testrunner recipe. In the section for the test script, I specify that I want to run the tests in the zc.ngi package. When I check out this project into a new sandbox, I run bootstrap.py to get setuptools and zc.buildout and to create bin/buildout. I run bin/buildout, which installs the test script, bin/test, which I can then use to run the tests. This is probably the most common type of buildout. If I need to run a previous version of zc.buildout, I use the `--version` option of the bootstrap.py script:: $ python bootstrap.py --version 1.1.3 The `zc.buildout project `_ is a slightly more complex example of this type of buildout. Install egg-based scripts ========================= A variation of the `Try out an egg`_ use case is to install scripts into your ~/bin directory (on Unix, of course). My ~/bin directory is a buildout with a configuration file that looks like:: [buildout] parts = foo bar bin-directory = . [foo] ... where foo and bar are packages with scripts that I want available. As I need new scripts, I can add additional sections. The bin-directory option specified that scripts should be installed into the current directory. Multi-program multi-machine systems =================================== Using an older prototype version of the buildout, we've build a number of systems involving multiple programs, databases, and machines. One typical example consists of: - Multiple Zope instances - Multiple ZEO servers - An LDAP server - Cache-invalidation and Mail delivery servers - Dozens of add-on packages - Multiple test runners - Multiple deployment modes, including dev, stage, and prod, with prod deployment over multiple servers Parts installed include: - Application software installs, including Zope, ZEO and LDAP software - Add-on packages - Bundles of configuration that define Zope, ZEO and LDAP instances - Utility scripts such as test runners, server-control scripts, cron jobs. Questions and Bug Reporting *************************** Please send questions and comments to the `distutils SIG mailing list `_. Report bugs using the `zc.buildout Launchpad Bug Tracker `_.