[Zope-dev] [Zope-Checkins] SVN: Zope/branches/tseaver-clarify_install_docs/doc/ Split out docs for 'normal' installation from those using 'zc.buildout'.
Tres Seaver
tseaver at palladion.com
Wed Mar 3 15:27:17 EST 2010
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yuppie wrote:
> Tres Seaver wrote:
>> Chris Withers wrote:
>>> By all means, document virtualenv as an option, but blessing it as "the
>>> one true way" is a bit much...
>
> I'm also surprised that you propose to make this *the* recommended way.
>
>> Here's my rationale:
>>
>> - - The docs are intended primarily for folks who want to install and
>> run Zope, rather than hack on it.
>
> So you recommend virtualenv for administrators and buildout for
> developers? Or where do you draw the line? And when do you recommend to
> switch from one setup to the other? Or do you always recommend virtualenv?
I recommend virtualenv to anybody who just wants to install and run the
Zope2 appserver, without needing to drink a lot of "kool-aid": just
install it from PyPI, run 'mkzopeinstance', and you're done. Note that
I specifically remomve the non-virtualenv easy_install docs: I don't
want us *ever* to encourage the use of easy_install outside a virtualenv.
> I thought zc.buildout is preferred by most people in the Zope community.
buildout works for *developers*: it is completely strange for people
who just want to install and run Zope. Mixing the buildout version of
the installation in with the non-buildout version was a disaster, from a
readability standpoint.
>> - - zc.buildout is *super* heavyweight compared to virtualenv
>>
>> - - zc.buildout creates an environment which is puzzling as hell for
>> anybody who hasn't already drunk the koolaid ('parts'? 'eggs'?
>> WTF?)
>
> virtualenv is also puzzling if you are not familiar with it. Using
> activate and deactivate or the right paths isn't much easier to learn
> than using zc.buildout.
The environment itself is much closer to what people expect: libraries
installed under 'lib/pythonX.Y', scripts in 'bin', headers in 'include',
no funky 'parts' or 'eggs' directories, no idea that config files might
get blown away just because you update software. I know that some of
that is due to popular recipes, but that argument is specious:
buildout's value proposition derives in part from the network effect of
having those recipes available and widely used.
Activate is a completely unnecessary attractive nuisacne: I *never* use
it, and I routinely see people who *do* use it end up running from
different environments than the ones they think they are running.
>> - - virtualenv, or something damn near it, is likely to land in Python
>> itself.
>>
>> - - Nearly anybody else in the Python world is more likely to be
>> familiar with the virtualenv stuff than with buildout.
>
> But not everybody in the Python world is familiar with virtualenv. Why
> should we encourage people to make themselves familiar with virtualenv
> instead of zc.buildout?
I would bet that, outside the Zope community, virtualenv's mindshare is
ten times that of buildout. Adding it to the stdlib was actually a
topic on the agenda of the pre-PyCon language summit, for instance.
>> - - We have two alternate zc.buildout scenarios (install Zope + run
>> mkzopeinstance vs. self-contained environment). The first has no
>> real advantage over the virtualenv one, except being able to
>> run buildout to update the software (heaven help you if you forget
>> to configure the index properly!). The second leaves you without
>> the annotated config file, a *major* faux pas.
>
> I consider the self-contained scenario still as experimental. Following
> the instructions requires much more typing than the other scenarios. But
> I'm optimistic it can and will be improved.
The self-contained mode is likely *perfect* for developers who produce a
highly-customized bundle o Zope, 3rd party software, and custom code.
It just isn't right as the "first choice" for somebody installing Zope
for the first time.
Tres.
- --
===================================================================
Tres Seaver +1 540-429-0999 tseaver at palladion.com
Palladion Software "Excellence by Design" http://palladion.com
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