doit comes from the idea of bringing the power of build-tools to execute any kind of task
- Website & docs - http://pydoit.org
- Project management on github - https://github.com/pydoit/doit
- Discussion group - https://groups.google.com/forum/#!forum/python-doit
- News/twitter - https://twitter.com/py_doit
- Plugins, extensions and projects based on doit - https://github.com/pydoit/doit/wiki/powered-by-doit
The MIT License Copyright (c) 2008-2015 Eduardo Naufel Schettino
see LICENSE file
see AUTHORS file
doit is tested on python 3.3, 3.4, 3.5.
The last version supporting python 2 is version 0.29.
$ python setup.py install
- cloudpickle
- pyinotify (linux)
- macfsevents (mac)
Tools required for development:
- git * VCS
- py.test * unit-tests
- mock * unit-tests
- coverage * code coverage
- epydoc * API doc generator
- sphinx * doc tool
- pyflakes * syntax checker
- doit-py * helper to run dev tasks
The best way to setup an environment to develop doit itself is to create a virtualenv...
doit$ virtualenv dev (dev)doit$ dev/bin/activate
install doit
as "editable", and add development dependencies
from dev_requirements.txt:
(dev)doit$ pip install --editable . (dev)doit$ pip install --requirement dev_requirements.txt
Note
Windows developers: Due to a bug in wheel distributions pytest must not be installed from a wheel.
e.g.:
pip install pytest --no-use-wheel
See for more information:
Use py.test - http://pytest.org
$ py.test
doc
folder contains ReST documentation based on Sphinx.
doc$ make html
They are the base for creating the website. The only difference is that the website includes analytics tracking. To create it (after installing doit):
$ doit website
The website will also includes epydoc generated API documentation.
All documentation is spell checked using the task spell:
$ doit spell
It is a bit annoying that code snippets and names always fails the check, these words must be added into the file doc/dictionary.txt.
The spell checker currently uses hunspell, to install it on debian based systems install the hunspell package: apt-get install hunspell.
python -m cProfile -o output.pstats `which doit` list gprof2dot -f pstats output.pstats | dot -Tpng -o output.png
On github create pull requests using a named feature branch.