either because they themselves are not ready or because a
dependency isn't. This is annotated by
PYTHON_VERSIONS_INCOMPATIBLE= 33 # not yet ported as of x.y.z
or
PYTHON_VERSIONS_INCOMPATIBLE= 33 # py-foo, py-bar
respectively, please use the same style for other packages,
and check during updates.
Use versioned_dependencies.mk where applicable.
Use REPLACE_PYTHON instead of handcoded alternatives, where applicable.
Reorder Makefile sections into standard order, where applicable.
Remove PYTHON_VERSIONS_INCLUDE_3X lines since that will be default
with the next commit.
Whitespace cleanups and other nits corrected, where necessary.
Fabric is an incredible tool to automate administration of remote machines.
As Fabric's functions are rather low-level, you'll probably quickly see a need
for more high-level functions such as add/remove users and groups,
install/upgrade packages, etc.
Cuisine is a small set of functions that sit on top of Fabric, to abstract
common administration operations such as file/dir operations, user/group
creation, package install/upgrade, making it easier to write portable
administration and deployment scripts.
Cuisine's features are:
* Small, easy to read, a single file API:
<object>_<operation>() e.g. dir_exists(location) tells if there is a
remote directory at the given location.
* Covers file/dir operations, user/group operations, package operations
* Text processing and template functions
* All functions are lazy: they will actually only do things when the change
is required.