By default, %{py3_dist foo} generates python3dist(foo).
This change makes it respect %python3_pkgversion so when
it is redefined as X.Y, %{py3_dist foo} generates pythonX.Y(foo).
See https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/PythonMacroError
While doing it, make %python macros more consistent with %python3 macros,
mostly wrt whitespace but also to use python -m pip over plain pip etc.
One significant change is the removal of sleeps from python macros,
this could affect packages that use python macros to build for Python 2
while also using python3 macros to build for Python 3.
In reality, I consider that unlikely. The sleep in python2 macros stays.
The --strip-file-prefix option was already removed from %pyX_install_wheel
but we forgot to remove it from %py_install_wheel.
- Hardcode the default Python 3 version in the SRPM macros
- Provide python38-foo for python3-foo and the other way around (future RHEL compatibility)
Fixes https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1812087
$ rpm --eval '%python_provide python38-setuptools'
Provides: python-setuptools = %{version}-%{release}
Provides: python3-setuptools = %{version}-%{release}
Obsoletes: python-setuptools < %{version}-%{release}
$ rpm --eval '%python_provide python3-setuptools'
Provides: python-setuptools = %{version}-%{release}
Provides: python38-setuptools = %{version}-%{release}
Obsoletes: python-setuptools < %{version}-%{release}
$ rpm --eval '%python_provide python39-setuptools'
$ rpm --define 'python3_pkgversion 39' --eval '%python_provide python%{python3_pkgversion}-setuptools'
To make the implementation of %python_provide easier,
any names starting with "python" or "pypy" are recognized as valid arguments.
Previously, this was an ERROR:
$ rpm --eval '%python_provide pythonista'
%python_provide: ERROR: pythonista not recognized.
Now it is a no-op. The behavior was never documented and the change is
backwards compatible for working spec files.
Adds the %pypi_source macro, as well as %__pypi_url and
%__pypi_default_extension. This should make references to sources in
PyPI much simpler for nearly all Python packages.