-*-text-*- STATUS OF THE SWIG BINDINGS * Python The Python bindings are fairly well developed, although there are some missing parts. (N.B. As discussed below, they will not compile in Debug mode on Windows.) * Perl The Perl bindings are complete, with the exception of SVN::Wc, on which very little work has been done. * Ruby The Ruby bindings are a recent development, but are fully implemented. The Ruby bindings API may change incompatibly as development proceeds. Completed modules: - Svn::Client - Svn::Core::Config - Svn::Delta - Svn::Fs - Svn::Ra Not completed but enough modules: - Svn::Core::Diff Unsupported functions: - svn_diff_diff() - svn_diff_diff3() - svn_diff_diff4() - svn_diff_output() - svn_diff_file_diff4() Completed modules but including no-unit-test functions: - Svn::Repos Untested functions: - svn_repos_parse_dumpstream2() - svn_repos_get_fs_build_parser2() - Svn::Wc Untested functions: - svn_wc_get_status_editor2() - svn_wc_status_set_repos_locks() - svn_wc_crawl_revisions2() - svn_wc_get_update_editor2() - svn_wc_get_switch_editor2() - svn_wc_get_diff_editor3() - svn_wc_diff3() - svn_wc_get_prop_diffs() - svn_wc_merge() - svn_wc_merge_props() - svn_wc_merge_prop_diffs() - svn_wc_get_pristine_copy_path() - svn_wc_cleanup2() - svn_wc_relocate9) - svn_wc_transmit_text_deltas() - svn_wc_transmit_prop_deltas() - svn_wc_add_lock() - svn_wc_remove_lock() BUILDING SWIG BINDINGS FOR SVN ON UNIX Step 1: Install a suitable version of SWIG (which is currently SWIG version 1.3.24 or later). * Perhaps your distribution packages a suitable version - if it does install it, and skip to the last bullet point in this section. * Go to http://www.swig.org/, download the source tarball, and unpack. * In the SWIG-1.3.xx directory, run ./configure. If you plan to build the Python bindings, and have a system with more than one version of Python installed, you may need to pass --with-python=/path/to/correct/python/binary to the configure script. You need Python 2.5 or above. If you plan to build the Perl bindings, and have a system with more than one version of perl installed, you may need to pass --with-perl5=/path/to/correct/perl/binary to the configure script. You need Perl 5.8.0 or above. * Build and install. Run 'make && make install' * To verify you have SWIG installed correctly, run "swig -version" from the command line. SWIG should report that it is version 1.3.24 or newer. Step 2: Build and Install Subversion. See Subversion's own INSTALL file for details. Make sure that Subversion's ./configure script sees your installed SWIG! It tries to detect SWIG near the very end of its output. Also make sure that the configure script sees the paths to the perl and/or python executable you used to configure SWIG as above. If it does not then you can specify the correct path by adding PYTHON=/path/to/python or PERL=/path/to/perl onto the command line for configure. For example: ./configure PYTHON=/usr/bin/python2.5 PERL=/usr/bin/perl5.8.0 If Subversion's ./configure finds a SWIG that it's happy with, then it will build special glue libraries to link svn to the swig bindings: libsvn_swig_py.so (for Python) libsvn_swig_perl.so (for Perl) Step 3: Install Specific Language Bindings * Python 1. Run 'make swig-py' from the top of the Subversion build tree, to build the bindings. (This will invoke SWIG on the *.i files, resulting in a collection of .c source files. It will then compile and link those .c files into Python libraries.) 2. Run 'make check-swig-py' from the top of the Subversion build tree, to test the bindings 3. Run 'make install-swig-py' (as root, typically) from the top of the Subversion build tree. This will copy your new Python libraries into the appropriate system location. Note: If you don't have access to install to Python's site-packages directory, you can have the Python modules install to your home directory. You can do this by running 'make install-swig-py swig_pydir=~'. Note: If you want to install to an alternate prefix (usually only if you are building packages), you can supply the prefix here. An example of doing this for building rpms looks like 'make install-swig-py DESTDIR=$RPM_BUILD_ROOT/usr'. 4. Make sure that whatever directory the bindings got installed in is in your Python search path. That directory depends on how you installed; a typical location is /usr/local/lib/svn-python/. There are several ways to do this. See Python's documentation for 'sys.path' and 'PYTHONPATH'. A nice way to do this is: $ echo /usr/local/lib/svn-python \ > /usr/lib/python2.x/site-packages/subversion.pth You may also need to update your operating system's dynamic linker configuration to enable Python to load these new libraries. On some systems this is done by running 'ldconfig'. * Perl Perl 5.8.0 is required. You can specify the perl binary by passing PERL=/path/to/perl as part of the configure command in the top level of the Subversion source tree. Make sure that the Perl version used is the same one that you configured SWIG to run against during the SWIG configure (see above). 1. Run `make swig-pl' from the top of the Subversion build tree. 2. Run `make check-swig-pl' from the top of the Subversion build tree, to test the bindings 3. to install run `make install-swig-pl' from the top of the Subversion build tree. If you need to pass extra parameters to Perl build process (Makefile.PL), then you need to do this process somewhat different: 1. Run `make swig-pl-lib' from the top of the Subversion build tree. 2. Run `make install-swig-pl-lib' 3. cd subversion/bindings/swig/perl/native 4. Run `perl Makefile.PL EXTRAOPTIONSHERE` 5. Run `make install' To install the Perl bindings in a location other than the system Perl directory, use the above instructions with the extra option PREFIX=/your/prefix/here. * Ruby 1. Run `make swig-rb' from the top of the Subversion build tree, to build the bindings. 2. Run `make check-swig-rb' from the top of the Subversion build tree, to test the bindings. 3. To install, run `make install-swig-rb' from the top of the Subversion build tree. You can specify the ruby binary by passing RUBY=/path/to/ruby as part of the configure command in the top level of the Subversion source tree. Make sure that the Ruby version used is the same one that you configured SWIG to run against during the SWIG configure (see above). BUILDING SWIG BINDINGS FOR SVN ON WINDOWS 1. Install SWIG. Download the SWIG Windows zipfile (it's the same as the source tarball except that it also includes a copy of swig.exe) from http://www.swig.org/ and extract it somewhere, like C:\Program Files. 2. Install whatever languages you want to build runtimes for. Windows versions of Python and Perl are available from: http://www.python.org/ http://www.activestate.com/ActivePerl/ NOTE: Our Python SWIG bindings will currently NOT compile in Debug mode unless you have python24_d.lib (which binary distributions of Python do not contain). Therefore, the Python bindings will only compile in Release mode. (This is due to pyconfig.h using the _DEBUG flag too and setting a #pragma comment(lib) value.) For Perl support, you also need to add the paths into Visual Studio. In Visual C++ 6, go to Tools -> Options -> Directories. In Visual C++ .NET, go to Tools -> Options -> Projects -> VC++ Directories. Add the following paths: Executable Directories: For Perl, path to perl.exe (for example, C:\Program Files\Perl\bin) Library Directories: For Perl, path to perl##.lib (for example, C:\Program Files\Perl\lib\CORE) Include Directories: For Perl, path to perl.h (for example, C:\Program Files\Perl\lib\CORE) 3. Create the Visual Studio project files via gen-make.py, adding in the --with-swig parameter to the installed location for SWIG. Example: > gen-make.py -t vcproj --with-swig="C:\Program Files\SWIG-2.0.2" 4. If you haven't already built Subversion, you should do so now. Instructions are in the main INSTALL file. 5. Build the bindings. Open the Subversion workspace in Visual C++ (subversion_msvc.dsw or subversion_vcnet.sln) and build one or more of the following projects: __SWIG_PYTHON__ __SWIG_PERL__ 6. Install the bindings. The procedure varies depending on the language. For Python, create two folders: \Lib\site-packages\svn \Lib\site-packages\libsvn Copy subversion\bindings\swig\python\svn\*.py into the svn folder. Copy subversion\bindings\swig\python\*.py and Release\subversion\bindings\swig\python\*.pyd and Release\subversion\bindings\swig\python\libsvn_swig_py\libsvn_swig_py-1.dll into the libsvn folder. Optionally, you can run the following commands to compile the Python sources into bytecode: python \lib\compileall.py \Lib\site-packages\svn python \lib\compileall.py \Lib\site-packages\libsvn This can make the modules load faster for users without write access to the site-packages directory. For Perl, the bindings have be copied into a more complicated directory structure inside the Perl library directory. Running the commands below from the subversion source directory will copy the files to the right places: set PERL_LIBS="C:\Program Files\Perl\site\lib" md %PERL_LIBS%\SVN %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN copy subversion\bindings\swig\perl\native\*.pm %PERL_LIBS%\SVN md %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Client copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Client.dll %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Client copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Client.pdb %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Client md %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Core copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Core.dll %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Core copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Core.pdb %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Core md %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Delta copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Delta.dll %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Delta copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Delta.pdb %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Delta md %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Fs copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Fs.dll %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Fs copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Fs.pdb %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Fs md %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Ra copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Ra.dll %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Ra copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Ra.pdb %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Ra md %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Repos copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Repos.dll %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Repos copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Repos.pdb %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Repos md %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Wc copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Wc.dll %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Wc copy Release\subversion\bindings\swig\perl\_Wc.pdb %PERL_LIBS%\auto\SVN\_Wc TESTING SWIG BINDINGS * Python You can exercise the Python bindings test suite by running 'make check-swig-py' as described in the install section. * Perl The Perl bindings are using the standard module testing facilities to do regression tests. Simply run 'make check-swig-pl' as described in the install section. * Ruby To test the Ruby bindings, simply run `make check-swig-rb' as described in the install section. USING SWIG BINDINGS * Python 1. Ensure Python's module search path includes the 'lib/svn-python' subdirectory of the Subversion installation directory. For example, include that directory in the 'PYTHONPATH' environment variable or insert it into 'sys.path' at run time. 2. Import the required modules into your Python program. For example: import svn.client, svn.repos 3. The APIs available within each module are broadly the same as the corresponding C APIs except: * you may omit the module prefix (for example, 'svn_client_') * pool arguments are optional * using Python exceptions instead of returning svn_error_t * returning a tuple of outputs instead of return-by-pointer * do not pass a baton along with a callback function See python/README for more details on these differences. For examples of how to use the Python bindings, check out the sample/demo programs found in tools/examples/ in the Subversion source code tree. Additionally, there are several third-party tools that make use of these bindings, including ViewVC (http://viewvc.tigris.org/) and Trac (http://trac.edgewall.org/). * Perl ### TODO * Ruby For examples of how to use the Ruby bindings, take a look at the .rb files in the following directory: subversion/bindings/swig/test