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python312-berkeleydb-devel-18.1.10-1.1 RPM for armv6hl

From OpenSuSE Ports Tumbleweed for armv6hl

Name: python312-berkeleydb-devel Distribution: openSUSE Tumbleweed
Version: 18.1.10 Vendor: openSUSE
Release: 1.1 Build date: Wed Oct 9 08:33:55 2024
Group: Unspecified Build host: reproducible
Size: 13878 Source RPM: python-berkeleydb-18.1.10-1.1.src.rpm
Packager: http://bugs.opensuse.org
Url: https://www.jcea.es/programacion/pybsddb.htm
Summary: Development files for python312-berkeleydb
This module provides a nearly complete wrapping of the Oracle/Sleepycat C API
for the Database Environment, Database, Cursor, Log Cursor, Sequence and
Transaction objects, and each of these is exposed as a Python type in the
berkeleydb.db module.

This package contains the development files for python312-berkeleydb

Provides

Requires

License

BSD-3-Clause

Changelog

* Wed Oct 09 2024 Dirk Müller <dmueller@suse.com>
  - update to 18.1.10:
    * Since MS Windows is unsupported without community help, I
      deleted some legacy code. It could be restored if there is
      demand and some help to improve MS Windows support.
    * New URL for :Oracle:`Oracle documentation <index.html>`.
    * Now we also use Python Stable ABI under Python 3.8 and 3.9.
      Under Python 3.10 and up we can define types that users can
      not instantiate as Py_TPFLAGS_DISALLOW_INSTANTIATION, but
      that flag is not available under previous Python versions. In
      Python 3.8 and 3.9 we used to do type->tp_new = NULL; for
      that, but this approach is not available under Python Stable
      ABI. That is the reason this module could use Python Stable
      ABI only when compiled under Python 3.10 and superior. In
      this release we define the slot Py_tp_new as NULL in Python
      3.8 and 3.9 to achieve the same effect, and that is available
      under Python Stable ABI.
    * Since this module can now use Python Stable ABI under all
      supported Python releases, that is exactly what we do. From
      now on this module always uses Python Stable ABI.
    * WARNING - BREAKING CHANGE: Change return value of
      berkeleydb.py_limited_api(). This function was introduced in
      18.1.9 and it is used to indicate if the module was using the
      Python Stable ABI or not, and the version Python Stable ABI
      used. Now that the module has been improved to use Python
      Stable ABI always, the function returns a tuple of integers.
      First tuple element tells us what Python Stable ABI version
      are we supporting. Second element tells us what Python
      release was this module compiled under, although it should
      work in any more recent Python release. Since this function
      was introduced in release 18.1.9, we consider this breaking
      change a minor infraction affecting most probably nobody.
    * Delete some unneeded ancient Python 2.x code.
    * Delete more unneeded code to check threading support since
      Python 3.7 and up always guarantee threads.
    * pkg_resources is deprecated, so migrate to packaging. This is
      already provided by modern setuptools. This change only
      affects you if you run the test suite.
    * If compiled under Python 3.10 or higher, we use the Python
      Stable ABI, as defined in PEP 384 and related PEPs. That is,
      you can use the same compiled module with any Python release
      if Python version >= 3.10. In order to achieve this, we have
      made these changes:  Some fast Python API (not error
      checking) have been replaced by somewhat slower functions
      (functions that do error checking), because the former are
      not available in the Stable ABI: PyBytes_GET_SIZE(),
      PyBytes_AS_STRING(), PyTuple_SET_ITEM(). We replaced
      PyErr_Warn() by PyErr_WarnEx() because it is not available in
      the Stable ABI. When an exception is raised because an
      incompatible type, we need to write complicated code because
      Py_TYPE(keyobj)->tp_name is not available in the Stable ABI.
      Code generated for Python < 3.11 is "ugly", we will clean it
      up when the minimum supported Python version is 3.11.
      TYPE->tp_alloc is not available under the Stable ABI. We
      replace it with PyType_GenericNew(). Internal types that
      should NOT be instanciated by the user has type->tp_new =
      NULL. This can not be done under the Stable ABI, so we use
      Py_TPFLAGS_DISALLOW_INSTANTIATION flag. This is the reason we
      only create Stable ABI modules under Python >= 3.10, because
      that flag is defined in that Python release. The new function
      berkeleydb.py_limited_api() returns an integer describing the
      minimum supported Stable ABI or None. If None, the module is
      not compiled with Stable ABI and can not be used with a
      different Python version. When not None, the value of
      berkeleydb.py_limited_api() can be easily interpreted using
      something like hex(berkeleydb.py_limited_api()).
    * Some fast Python API (not error checking) have been replaced
      by somewhat slower functions (functions that do error
      checking), because the former are not available in the Stable
      ABI: PyBytes_GET_SIZE(), PyBytes_AS_STRING(),
      PyTuple_SET_ITEM().
    * We replaced PyErr_Warn() by PyErr_WarnEx() because it is not
      available in the Stable ABI.
    * When an exception is raised because an incompatible type, we
      need to write complicated code because
      Py_TYPE(keyobj)->tp_name is not available in the Stable ABI.
      Code generated for Python < 3.11 is "ugly", we will clean it
      up when the minimum supported Python version is 3.11.
    * TYPE->tp_alloc is not available under the Stable ABI. We
      replace it with PyType_GenericNew().
    * Internal types that should NOT be instanciated by the user
      has type->tp_new = NULL. This can not be done under the
      Stable ABI, so we use Py_TPFLAGS_DISALLOW_INSTANTIATION flag.
      This is the reason we only create Stable ABI modules under
      Python >= 3.10, because that flag is defined in that Python
      release.
    * The new function berkeleydb.py_limited_api() returns an
      integer describing the minimum supported Stable ABI or None.
      If None, the module is not compiled with Stable ABI and can
      not be used with a different Python version. When not None,
      the value of berkeleydb.py_limited_api() can be easily
      interpreted using something like
      hex(berkeleydb.py_limited_api()).
    * Python 3.13 added to the full test matrix.
    * Experimental Python 3.13 support. Tested under 3.13.0b2.
    * This code can be compiled under MS Windows, but I am unable
      to provide support for it and it is far from trivial. Because
      of this and some complains about it, I change the
      "Classifiers" for this project from  'Operating System :: OS
      Independent'  to  'Operating System :: Unix'  I would restore
      MS Windows support if there is some kind of community support
      for it. I can not do it by myself alone. Sorry about that.
* Mon Feb 05 2024 Steve Kowalik <steven.kowalik@suse.com>
  - Initial release of 18.1.8

Files

/usr/include/python3.12/berkeleydb
/usr/include/python3.12/berkeleydb/berkeleydb.h
/usr/share/licenses/python312-berkeleydb-devel
/usr/share/licenses/python312-berkeleydb-devel/LICENSE.txt
/usr/share/licenses/python312-berkeleydb-devel/licenses.txt


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Fabrice Bellet, Sat Nov 16 01:18:36 2024