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Mail Archives: cygwin/2005/04/19/10:37:45

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From: Steve Ward <ward AT csail DOT mit DOT edu>
To: jason AT tishler DOT net
CC: cygwin AT cygwin DOT com
In-reply-to: <20050419124816.GB2772@tishler.net> (message from Jason Tishler on Tue, 19 Apr 2005 08:48:16 -0400)
Subject: Re: Symlinks don't work in python???
Reply-to: ward AT mit DOT edu
References: <20050411142112 DOT GA3796 AT tishler DOT net> <E1DMWth-0006CJ-J0 AT cag DOT csail DOT mit DOT edu> <20050416021255 DOT GA2624 AT tishler DOT net> <20050419124816 DOT GB2772 AT tishler DOT net>
Message-Id: <E1DNtqR-0007O6-Vb@cag.csail.mit.edu>
Date: Tue, 19 Apr 2005 10:36:55 -0400

Jason -

Thanks for all the good work.  The PYTHONCASEOK workaround
indeed seems to solve the problem.  From your description,
it seems that the trouble is that the real name (the name
of the symlink target) is used rather than the name of the
symlink; I should be able to circumvent naming problems,
including case problems on Windows, via appropriately-named
symlinks.  It seems that this should be a straightforward
fix to the case-insensitive code hack ... but, of course,
I haven't looked at that code.

Again, thanks for the insight!

- Steve


   Date: Tue, 19 Apr 2005 08:48:16 -0400
   From: Jason Tishler <jason AT tishler DOT net>
   Mail-Followup-To: cygwin AT cygwin DOT com, ward AT mit DOT edu
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   Steve,

   On Fri, Apr 15, 2005 at 10:12:56PM -0400, Jason Tishler wrote:
   > On Fri, Apr 15, 2005 at 03:54:37PM -0400, Steve Ward wrote:
   > > Can you try my failing experiment (symlink bar.py to file foo.py in
   > > same directory)?
   > 
   > I was able reproduce your problem on my way out of work today.
   > 
   > > It seems using a different name for the symlink may cause the
   > > trouble... I have no idea why.
   > 
   > Can you strace the issue and report back to the list?  If not, then I
   > will try when I'm back at work on Monday.

   AFAICT, symlinking bar.py to foo.py never worked or at least since
   case-insensitive file system support was added to Python in 2/2001:

       http://www.amk.ca/python/2.1/index.html#SECTION0001000000000000000000

   The problem is Cygwin specific code is invoked during imports to make
   sure one imports a module using the same case as the file stored in the
   file system.  For example, "foo" will match "foo.py" but not "FoO.py",
   etc.  When you import bar (i.e., bar.py) which is symlinked to foo.py
   the case checking code fails (because "bar" != "foo") and the module is
   skipped.

   You can workaround the problem by defining PYTHONCASEOK:

       $ PYTHONCASEOK= python -c 'import bar'
       $

   I will work with the Python developers to try to come up with a better
   long term solution.

   Jason

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