# Note that the path could itself be a python file, or a directory # Python's compile_all module only works on directories, and requires a max # recursion depth # Note that the py_byte_compile macro should work for python2 as well # Which unfortunately makes the definition more complicated than it should be # The condition should be reversed once /usr/bin/python is python3! %py_byte_compile()\ py2_byte_compile () {\ python_binary="%1"\ bytecode_compilation_path="%2"\ find $bytecode_compilation_path -type f -a -name "*.py" -print0 | xargs -0 $python_binary -c 'import py_compile, sys; [py_compile.compile(f, dfile=f.partition("$RPM_BUILD_ROOT")[2]) for f in sys.argv[1:]]' || :\ find $bytecode_compilation_path -type f -a -name "*.py" -print0 | xargs -0 $python_binary -O -c 'import py_compile, sys; [py_compile.compile(f, dfile=f.partition("$RPM_BUILD_ROOT")[2]) for f in sys.argv[1:]]' || :\ }\ \ py3_byte_compile () {\ python_binary="%1"\ bytecode_compilation_path="%2"\ find $bytecode_compilation_path -type f -a -name "*.py" -print0 | xargs -0 $python_binary -O -c 'import py_compile, sys; [py_compile.compile(f, dfile=f.partition("$RPM_BUILD_ROOT")[2], optimize=opt) for opt in range(2) for f in sys.argv[1:]]' || :\ }\ \ [[ "%1" != *python3* ]] && py2_byte_compile "%1" "%2" || py3_byte_compile "%1" "%2" \ %{nil}