diff options
| author | Lex Neva <github.com@lexneva.name> | 2020-03-06 22:39:25 -0500 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Lex Neva <github.com@lexneva.name> | 2020-03-06 22:39:25 -0500 |
| commit | a4277d19a60f1611658897c18d2548fedf52e8f5 (patch) | |
| tree | 6e7b4257e8dce94deff60574a69438c5b8d229b6 /stub.py | |
| parent | 7cc8b0c14e91d2e68212248b8ce66797ade7bb65 (diff) | |
remove stub
Diffstat (limited to 'stub.py')
| -rw-r--r-- | stub.py | 69 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 69 deletions
diff --git a/stub.py b/stub.py deleted file mode 100644 index c4627891..00000000 --- a/stub.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,69 +0,0 @@ -#!/usr/bin/env python - -import os -import subprocess -import sys -import traceback - -# ink/stitch -# -# stub.py: pyinstaller execution stub -# -# pyinstaller packages the inkstitch extensions into nice tidy executables. -# That's great, but Inkscape can't execute a plain binary as an extension(!). -# -# This Python script exists only to execute the actual extension binary. It -# can be copied to, e.g., "embroider_params.py", in which case it will look -# for a binary at inkstitch/bin/embroider_params. -script_name = os.path.basename(__file__) - -if script_name.endswith('.py'): - binary_name = script_name[:-3] -else: - # Probably not right, but we can at least try. - binary_name = script_name - -binary_path = os.path.join("inkstitch", "bin", binary_name) - -args = sys.argv[:] -args[0] = binary_path - -# os.execve works here for Linux, but only this seems to get the -# extension output to Inkscape on Windows -try: - extension = subprocess.Popen(args, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE) - stdout, stderr = extension.communicate() -except BaseException: - print >> sys.stderr, "Unexpected error launching Ink/Stitch." - print >> sys.stderr, "If you're having trouble, please file an issue here, including the text below:" - print >> sys.stderr, " https://github.com/inkstitch/inkstitch/issues\n" - print >> sys.stderr, "Tried to launch:", binary_path - print >> sys.stderr, "Arguments:", args - print >> sys.stderr, "Debugging information:\n" - print >> sys.stderr, traceback.format_exc() - sys.exit(1) - -if sys.platform == "win32": - import msvcrt - - msvcrt.setmode(sys.stdout.fileno(), os.O_BINARY) - -try: - # In Python 3, we need to use sys.stdout.buffer to write binary data to stdout. - sys.stdout.buffer.write(stdout) - sys.stdout.buffer.flush() -except AttributeError: - # Python 2 doesn't have sys.stdout.buffer but we can write binary data to stdout by default. - sys.stdout.write(stdout) - sys.stdout.flush() - -stderr = stderr.strip() -if stderr: - try: - sys.stderr.buffer.write(stderr) - sys.stderr.buffer.flush() - except AttributeError: - sys.stderr.write(stderr) - sys.stderr.flush() - -sys.exit(extension.returncode) |
