################################################################# # To build the stack module and type into dynamically-loaded # shareable object files on Linux, type 'make -f makefile.stack' # # To add them statically instead, modify Modules/Setup in the # Python build tree, to include lines like: # stackmod # stacktype # and run a 'make' at the top of the build tree to remake # Python itself; static linking is more portable, but it # requires access to Python's build/source tree (dynamic # loading of .so's does not--you need only a python lib # or executable for embedded and standalone programs). # # If you use dynamic loading (and this makefile), be sure # to put this directory on PYTHONPATH (or copy the .so's # to a dir already on the path or to the Python build # tree), and add the build tree's Lib directory too to # get the correct standard libs (Python may guess the wrong # standard libs, when the executable isn't python itself). # The .so's name must match module init function's name # (xxx.so and initxxx()), as well as the name passed to the # Py_InitModule() function; the .c file name is arbitrary. ################################################################# PY = $(MYPY) all: stackmod.so stacktype.so stackmod.so: stackmod.c gcc stackmod.c -g -I$(PY)/Include -I$(PY) -fpic -shared -o stackmod.so stacktype.so: stacktyp.c gcc stacktyp.c -g -I$(PY)/Include -I$(PY) -fpic -shared -o stacktype.so clean: rm -f stackmod.so stacktype.so *.pyc core