from __future__ import print_function import os, subprocess, sys import subprocess import itertools import platform def validate_pair(ob): try: if not (len(ob) == 2): print("Unexpected result:", ob, file=sys.stderr) raise ValueError except: return False return True def consume(iter): try: while True: next(iter) except StopIteration: pass # See http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1214496/how-to-get-environment-from-a-subprocess-in-python def get_environment_from_batch_command(env_cmd, opts = None, initial=None): """ Take a command (either a single command or list of arguments) and return the environment created after running that command. Note that if the command must be a batch file or .cmd file, or the changes to the environment will not be captured. If initial is supplied, it is used as the initial environment passed to the child process. """ if not isinstance(env_cmd, (list, tuple)): env_cmd = [env_cmd] # construct the command that will alter the environment env_cmd = subprocess.list2cmdline(env_cmd) # create a tag so we can tell in the output when the proc is done tag = 'Done running command' # construct a cmd.exe command to do accomplish this cmd = 'cmd.exe /s /c "{env_cmd} {opts} && echo "{tag}" && set"'.format(**vars()) # launch the process proc = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, shell = True, env=initial) if proc.returncode == 0: return None # parse the output sent to stdout lines = proc.stdout # consume whatever output occurs until the tag is reached consume(itertools.takewhile(lambda l: tag not in l, lines)) # define a way to handle each KEY=VALUE line handle_line = lambda l: l.rstrip().split('=',1) # parse key/values into pairs pairs = map(handle_line, lines) # make sure the pairs are valid valid_pairs = filter(validate_pair, pairs) # Upper case for the pair for i in range(len(valid_pairs)): valid_pairs[i][0] = valid_pairs[i][0].upper() # construct a dictionary of the pairs result = dict(valid_pairs) # let the process finish proc.communicate() return result def find_VS_installations(): # Only on windows if platform.system() != 'Windows': return None installations = [] # Use environmental variables to file candidate program files folders on this system program_file_paths = set([os.environ[k] for k in ['PROGRAMFILES','PROGRAMFILES(X86)','ProgramW6432']]) for ver in ['8.0','9.0','10.0','11.0','12.0','13.0','14.0','15.0']: for PF_path in program_file_paths: for bitness in ['x86','amd64']: bat_path = os.path.join(PF_path,'Microsoft Visual Studio '+ver,'VC','vcvarsall.bat') bin_path = os.path.join(PF_path,'Microsoft Visual Studio '+ver,'VC','bin') # Skip if this compiler bat file doesn't exist if not os.path.exists(bat_path): continue env = get_environment_from_batch_command(bat_path, opts = bitness) if 'LIB' not in env: continue if bitness =='x86': bits = 32 elif bitness == 'amd64': bits = 64 installations.append(dict(ver = ver, bits = bits, bin_path = bin_path, env = env)) return installations def find_cpp_sources(root = os.path.join('..','..','src'), extensions = ['.cpp'], skip_files = None): file_listing = [] for path, dirs, files in os.walk(root): for file in files: n,ext = os.path.splitext(file) fname = os.path.relpath(os.path.join(path, file)) if skip_files is not None and fname in skip_files: continue if ext in extensions: file_listing.append(fname) return file_listing if __name__=='__main__': print("don't run me")