dev-python/trio: longdescription, dependency changes

Package-Manager: Portage-2.3.96, Repoman-2.3.21
Signed-off-by: Alessandro Barbieri <lssndrbarbieri@gmail.com>
This commit is contained in:
Alessandro Barbieri
2020-03-27 18:30:52 +01:00
parent 512d6a4806
commit 0e7cc63713
2 changed files with 37 additions and 15 deletions

View File

@@ -2,8 +2,19 @@
<!DOCTYPE pkgmetadata SYSTEM "http://www.gentoo.org/dtd/metadata.dtd">
<pkgmetadata>
<maintainer type="person">
<email>andrewammerlaan@riseup.net</email>
<name>Andrew Ammerlaan</name>
</maintainer>
<maintainer type="person">
<email>andrewammerlaan@riseup.net</email>
<name>Andrew Ammerlaan</name>
</maintainer>
<longdescription>
The Trio project's goal is to produce a production-quality, permissively licensed, async/await-native I/O library for Python. Like all async libraries, its main purpose is to help you write programs that do multiple things at the same time with parallelized I/O. A web spider that wants to fetch lots of pages in parallel, a web server that needs to juggle lots of downloads and websocket connections at the same time, a process supervisor monitoring multiple subprocesses... that sort of thing. Compared to other libraries, Trio attempts to distinguish itself with an obsessive focus on usability and correctness. Concurrency is complicated; we try to make it easy to get things right.
Trio was built from the ground up to take advantage of the latest Python features, and draws inspiration from many sources, in particular Dave Beazley's Curio. The resulting design is radically simpler than older competitors like asyncio and Twisted, yet just as capable. Trio is the Python I/O library I always wanted; I find it makes building I/O-oriented programs easier, less error-prone, and just plain more fun. Perhaps you'll find the same.
This project is young and still somewhat experimental: the overall design is solid and the existing features are fully tested and documented, but you may encounter missing functionality or rough edges. We do encourage you to use it, but you should read and subscribe to issue #1 to get warning and a chance to give feedback about any compatibility-breaking changes.
</longdescription>
<upstream>
<remote-id type="github">python-trio/trio</remote-id>
<remote-id type="pypi">trio</remote-id>
</upstream>
</pkgmetadata>

View File

@@ -8,30 +8,41 @@ PYTHON_COMPAT=( python3_{6,7} )
inherit distutils-r1 linux-info
DESCRIPTION="Python library for async concurrency and I/O"
HOMEPAGE="https://github.com/python-trio/trio"
HOMEPAGE="
https://github.com/python-trio/trio
https://pypi.org/project/trio
"
SRC_URI="https://github.com/python-trio/${PN}/archive/v${PV}.tar.gz -> ${P}.tar.gz"
LICENSE="Apache-2.0 MIT"
LICENSE="|| ( Apache-2.0 MIT )"
SLOT="0"
KEYWORDS="~amd64 ~x86"
DEPEND="dev-python/async_generator[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
RDEPEND="
dev-python/async_generator[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
>=dev-python/attrs-19.2.0[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
dev-python/idna[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
dev-python/outcome[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
dev-python/sniffio[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
dev-python/sortedcontainers[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]"
RDEPEND="${DEPEND}
$(python_gen_cond_dep 'dev-python/contextvars[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]' python3_6)"
BDEPEND="test? ( >=dev-python/astor-0.8.0[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
dev-python/sortedcontainers[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
$(python_gen_cond_dep 'dev-python/contextvars[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]' python3_6)
"
DEPEND="${RDEPEND}
test? (
>=dev-python/astor-0.8.0[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
>=dev-python/immutables-0.6[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
dev-python/jedi[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
dev-python/trustme[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
dev-python/yapf[${PYTHON_USEDEP}] )"
dev-python/yapf[${PYTHON_USEDEP}]
)
"
distutils_enable_tests pytest
distutils_enable_sphinx docs/source
distutils_enable_sphinx docs/source \
">=dev-python/immutables-0.6" \
dev-python/sphinxcontrib-trio \
dev-python/sphinx_rtd_theme \
dev-python/towncrier
python_prepare_all() {
# Disable tests require IPv6