/usr/lib/python3.4/config-3.4m-x86_64-linux-gnu/Setup is in libpython3.4-dev 3.4.3-1ubuntu1~14.04.7.
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 243 244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256 257 258 259 260 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 268 269 270 271 272 273 274 275 276 277 278 279 280 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 289 290 291 292 293 294 295 296 297 298 299 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329 330 331 332 333 334 335 336 337 338 339 340 341 342 343 344 345 346 347 348 349 350 351 352 353 354 355 356 357 358 359 360 361 362 363 364 365 366 367 368 369 370 371 372 373 374 375 376 377 378 379 380 381 382 383 384 385 386 387 388 389 390 391 | # -*- makefile -*-
# The file Setup is used by the makesetup script to construct the files
# Makefile and config.c, from Makefile.pre and config.c.in,
# respectively. The file Setup itself is initially copied from
# Setup.dist; once it exists it will not be overwritten, so you can edit
# Setup to your heart's content. Note that Makefile.pre is created
# from Makefile.pre.in by the toplevel configure script.
# (VPATH notes: Setup and Makefile.pre are in the build directory, as
# are Makefile and config.c; the *.in and *.dist files are in the source
# directory.)
# Each line in this file describes one or more optional modules.
# Modules enabled here will not be compiled by the setup.py script,
# so the file can be used to override setup.py's behavior.
# Lines have the following structure:
#
# <module> ... [<sourcefile> ...] [<cpparg> ...] [<library> ...]
#
# <sourcefile> is anything ending in .c (.C, .cc, .c++ are C++ files)
# <cpparg> is anything starting with -I, -D, -U or -C
# <library> is anything ending in .a or beginning with -l or -L
# <module> is anything else but should be a valid Python
# identifier (letters, digits, underscores, beginning with non-digit)
#
# (As the makesetup script changes, it may recognize some other
# arguments as well, e.g. *.so and *.sl as libraries. See the big
# case statement in the makesetup script.)
#
# Lines can also have the form
#
# <name> = <value>
#
# which defines a Make variable definition inserted into Makefile.in
#
# Finally, if a line contains just the word "*shared*" (without the
# quotes but with the stars), then the following modules will not be
# built statically. The build process works like this:
#
# 1. Build all modules that are declared as static in Modules/Setup,
# combine them into libpythonxy.a, combine that into python.
# 2. Build all modules that are listed as shared in Modules/Setup.
# 3. Invoke setup.py. That builds all modules that
# a) are not builtin, and
# b) are not listed in Modules/Setup, and
# c) can be build on the target
#
# Therefore, modules declared to be shared will not be
# included in the config.c file, nor in the list of objects to be
# added to the library archive, and their linker options won't be
# added to the linker options. Rules to create their .o files and
# their shared libraries will still be added to the Makefile, and
# their names will be collected in the Make variable SHAREDMODS. This
# is used to build modules as shared libraries. (They can be
# installed using "make sharedinstall", which is implied by the
# toplevel "make install" target.) (For compatibility,
# *noconfig* has the same effect as *shared*.)
#
# In addition, *static* explicitly declares the following modules to
# be static. Lines containing "*static*" and "*shared*" may thus
# alternate throughout this file.
# NOTE: As a standard policy, as many modules as can be supported by a
# platform should be present. The distribution comes with all modules
# enabled that are supported by most platforms and don't require you
# to ftp sources from elsewhere.
# Some special rules to define PYTHONPATH.
# Edit the definitions below to indicate which options you are using.
# Don't add any whitespace or comments!
# Directories where library files get installed.
# DESTLIB is for Python modules; MACHDESTLIB for shared libraries.
DESTLIB=$(LIBDEST)
MACHDESTLIB=$(BINLIBDEST)
# NOTE: all the paths are now relative to the prefix that is computed
# at run time!
# Standard path -- don't edit.
# No leading colon since this is the first entry.
# Empty since this is now just the runtime prefix.
DESTPATH=
# Site specific path components -- should begin with : if non-empty
SITEPATH=
# Standard path components for test modules
TESTPATH=
# Path components for machine- or system-dependent modules and shared libraries
MACHDEPPATH=:plat-$(MULTIARCH)
EXTRAMACHDEPPATH=
COREPYTHONPATH=$(DESTPATH)$(SITEPATH)$(TESTPATH)$(MACHDEPPATH)$(EXTRAMACHDEPPATH)
PYTHONPATH=$(COREPYTHONPATH)
# The modules listed here can't be built as shared libraries for
# various reasons; therefore they are listed here instead of in the
# normal order.
# This only contains the minimal set of modules required to run the
# setup.py script in the root of the Python source tree.
posix posixmodule.c # posix (UNIX) system calls
errno errnomodule.c # posix (UNIX) errno values
pwd pwdmodule.c # this is needed to find out the user's home dir
# if $HOME is not set
_sre _sre.c # Fredrik Lundh's new regular expressions
_codecs _codecsmodule.c # access to the builtin codecs and codec registry
_weakref _weakref.c # weak references
_functools _functoolsmodule.c # Tools for working with functions and callable objects
_operator _operator.c # operator.add() and similar goodies
_collections _collectionsmodule.c # Container types
itertools itertoolsmodule.c # Functions creating iterators for efficient looping
atexit atexitmodule.c # Register functions to be run at interpreter-shutdown
_stat _stat.c # stat.h interface
# access to ISO C locale support
_locale _localemodule.c # -lintl
# Standard I/O baseline
_io -I$(srcdir)/Modules/_io _io/_iomodule.c _io/iobase.c _io/fileio.c _io/bytesio.c _io/bufferedio.c _io/textio.c _io/stringio.c
# The zipimport module is always imported at startup. Having it as a
# builtin module avoids some bootstrapping problems and reduces overhead.
zipimport zipimport.c
# faulthandler module
faulthandler faulthandler.c
# debug tool to trace memory blocks allocated by Python
_tracemalloc _tracemalloc.c hashtable.c
# The rest of the modules listed in this file are all commented out by
# default. Usually they can be detected and built as dynamically
# loaded modules by the new setup.py script added in Python 2.1. If
# you're on a platform that doesn't support dynamic loading, want to
# compile modules statically into the Python binary, or need to
# specify some odd set of compiler switches, you can uncomment the
# appropriate lines below.
# ======================================================================
# The Python symtable module depends on .h files that setup.py doesn't track
_symtable symtablemodule.c
# Uncommenting the following line tells makesetup that all following
# modules are to be built as shared libraries (see above for more
# detail; also note that *static* reverses this effect):
#*shared*
# GNU readline. Unlike previous Python incarnations, GNU readline is
# now incorporated in an optional module, configured in the Setup file
# instead of by a configure script switch. You may have to insert a
# -L option pointing to the directory where libreadline.* lives,
# and you may have to change -ltermcap to -ltermlib or perhaps remove
# it, depending on your system -- see the GNU readline instructions.
# It's okay for this to be a shared library, too.
#readline readline.c -lreadline -ltermcap
# Modules that should always be present (non UNIX dependent):
#array arraymodule.c # array objects
#cmath cmathmodule.c _math.c # -lm # complex math library functions
#math mathmodule.c _math.c # -lm # math library functions, e.g. sin()
#_struct _struct.c # binary structure packing/unpacking
#time timemodule.c -lrt # -lm # time operations and variables
#_weakref _weakref.c # basic weak reference support
#_testcapi _testcapimodule.c # Python C API test module
#_random _randommodule.c # Random number generator
#_elementtree _elementtree.c -lexpat # elementtree accelerator
#_pickle _pickle.c # pickle accelerator
#_datetime _datetimemodule.c # datetime accelerator
#_bisect _bisectmodule.c # Bisection algorithms
#_heapq _heapqmodule.c # Heap queue algorithm
#unicodedata unicodedata.c # static Unicode character database
# Modules with some UNIX dependencies -- on by default:
# (If you have a really backward UNIX, select and socket may not be
# supported...)
#fcntl fcntlmodule.c # fcntl(2) and ioctl(2)
#spwd spwdmodule.c # spwd(3)
#grp grpmodule.c # grp(3)
#select selectmodule.c # select(2); not on ancient System V
# Memory-mapped files (also works on Win32).
#mmap mmapmodule.c
# CSV file helper
#_csv _csv.c
# Socket module helper for socket(2)
#_socket socketmodule.c
# Socket module helper for SSL support; you must comment out the other
# socket line above, and possibly edit the SSL variable:
#_ssl _ssl.c -lssl -lcrypto
# The crypt module is now disabled by default because it breaks builds
# on many systems (where -lcrypt is needed), e.g. Linux (I believe).
#
# First, look at Setup.config; configure may have set this for you.
#_crypt _cryptmodule.c # -lcrypt # crypt(3); needs -lcrypt on some systems
# Some more UNIX dependent modules -- off by default, since these
# are not supported by all UNIX systems:
#nis nismodule.c -lnsl # Sun yellow pages -- not everywhere
#termios termios.c # Steen Lumholt's termios module
#resource resource.c # Jeremy Hylton's rlimit interface
#_posixsubprocess _posixsubprocess.c # POSIX subprocess module helper
# Multimedia modules -- off by default.
# These don't work for 64-bit platforms!!!
# #993173 says audioop works on 64-bit platforms, though.
# These represent audio samples or images as strings:
#audioop audioop.c # Operations on audio samples
# Note that the _md5 and _sha modules are normally only built if the
# system does not have the OpenSSL libs containing an optimized version.
# The _md5 module implements the RSA Data Security, Inc. MD5
# Message-Digest Algorithm, described in RFC 1321.
#_md5 md5module.c
# The _sha module implements the SHA checksum algorithms.
# (NIST's Secure Hash Algorithms.)
#_sha1 sha1module.c
#_sha256 sha256module.c
#_sha512 sha512module.c
#_hashlib _hashopenssl.c -lssl -lcrypto
# The _tkinter module.
#
# The command for _tkinter is long and site specific. Please
# uncomment and/or edit those parts as indicated. If you don't have a
# specific extension (e.g. Tix or BLT), leave the corresponding line
# commented out. (Leave the trailing backslashes in! If you
# experience strange errors, you may want to join all uncommented
# lines and remove the backslashes -- the backslash interpretation is
# done by the shell's "read" command and it may not be implemented on
# every system.
# *** Always uncomment this (leave the leading underscore in!):
# _tkinter _tkinter.c tkappinit.c -DWITH_APPINIT \
# *** Uncomment and edit to reflect where your Tcl/Tk libraries are:
# -L/usr/local/lib \
# *** Uncomment and edit to reflect where your Tcl/Tk headers are:
# -I/usr/local/include \
# *** Uncomment and edit to reflect where your X11 header files are:
# -I/usr/X11R6/include \
# *** Or uncomment this for Solaris:
# -I/usr/openwin/include \
# *** Uncomment and edit for Tix extension only:
# -DWITH_TIX -ltix8.1.8.2 \
# *** Uncomment and edit for BLT extension only:
# -DWITH_BLT -I/usr/local/blt/blt8.0-unoff/include -lBLT8.0 \
# *** Uncomment and edit for PIL (TkImaging) extension only:
# (See http://www.pythonware.com/products/pil/ for more info)
# -DWITH_PIL -I../Extensions/Imaging/libImaging tkImaging.c \
# *** Uncomment and edit for TOGL extension only:
# -DWITH_TOGL togl.c \
# *** Uncomment and edit to reflect your Tcl/Tk versions:
# -ltk8.2 -ltcl8.2 \
# *** Uncomment and edit to reflect where your X11 libraries are:
# -L/usr/X11R6/lib \
# *** Or uncomment this for Solaris:
# -L/usr/openwin/lib \
# *** Uncomment these for TOGL extension only:
# -lGL -lGLU -lXext -lXmu \
# *** Uncomment for AIX:
# -lld \
# *** Always uncomment this; X11 libraries to link with:
# -lX11
# Lance Ellinghaus's syslog module
#syslog syslogmodule.c # syslog daemon interface
# Curses support, requiring the System V version of curses, often
# provided by the ncurses library. e.g. on Linux, link with -lncurses
# instead of -lcurses).
#
# First, look at Setup.config; configure may have set this for you.
#_curses _cursesmodule.c -lcurses -ltermcap
# Wrapper for the panel library that's part of ncurses and SYSV curses.
#_curses_panel _curses_panel.c -lpanel -lncurses
# Modules that provide persistent dictionary-like semantics. You will
# probably want to arrange for at least one of them to be available on
# your machine, though none are defined by default because of library
# dependencies. The Python module dbm/__init__.py provides an
# implementation independent wrapper for these; dbm/dumb.py provides
# similar functionality (but slower of course) implemented in Python.
# The standard Unix dbm module has been moved to Setup.config so that
# it will be compiled as a shared library by default. Compiling it as
# a built-in module causes conflicts with the pybsddb3 module since it
# creates a static dependency on an out-of-date version of db.so.
#
# First, look at Setup.config; configure may have set this for you.
#_dbm _dbmmodule.c # dbm(3) may require -lndbm or similar
# Anthony Baxter's gdbm module. GNU dbm(3) will require -lgdbm:
#
# First, look at Setup.config; configure may have set this for you.
#_gdbm _gdbmmodule.c -I/usr/local/include -L/usr/local/lib -lgdbm
# Helper module for various ascii-encoders
#binascii binascii.c
# Fred Drake's interface to the Python parser
#parser parsermodule.c
#_ctypes _ctypes/_ctypes.c _ctypes/callbacks.c _ctypes/callproc.c _ctypes/stgdict.c _ctypes/cfield.c _ctypes/malloc_closure.c -lffi
# Lee Busby's SIGFPE modules.
# The library to link fpectl with is platform specific.
# Choose *one* of the options below for fpectl:
# For SGI IRIX (tested on 5.3):
#fpectl fpectlmodule.c -lfpe
# For Solaris with SunPro compiler (tested on Solaris 2.5 with SunPro C 4.2):
# (Without the compiler you don't have -lsunmath.)
#fpectl fpectlmodule.c -R/opt/SUNWspro/lib -lsunmath -lm
# For other systems: see instructions in fpectlmodule.c.
#fpectl fpectlmodule.c ...
# Test module for fpectl. No extra libraries needed.
#fpetest fpetestmodule.c
# Andrew Kuchling's zlib module.
# This require zlib 1.1.3 (or later).
# See http://www.gzip.org/zlib/
#zlib zlibmodule.c -I$(prefix)/include -L$(exec_prefix)/lib -lz
# Interface to the Expat XML parser
#
# Expat was written by James Clark and is now maintained by a group of
# developers on SourceForge; see www.libexpat.org for more
# information. The pyexpat module was written by Paul Prescod after a
# prototype by Jack Jansen. Source of Expat 1.95.2 is included in
# Modules/expat/. Usage of a system shared libexpat.so/expat.dll is
# not advised.
#
# More information on Expat can be found at www.libexpat.org.
#
#pyexpat pyexpat.c -lexpat
# Hye-Shik Chang's CJKCodecs
# multibytecodec is required for all the other CJK codec modules
#_multibytecodec cjkcodecs/multibytecodec.c
#_codecs_cn cjkcodecs/_codecs_cn.c
#_codecs_hk cjkcodecs/_codecs_hk.c
#_codecs_iso2022 cjkcodecs/_codecs_iso2022.c
#_codecs_jp cjkcodecs/_codecs_jp.c
#_codecs_kr cjkcodecs/_codecs_kr.c
#_codecs_tw cjkcodecs/_codecs_tw.c
# Example -- included for reference only:
# xx xxmodule.c
# Another example -- the 'xxsubtype' module shows C-level subtyping in action
xxsubtype xxsubtype.c
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