python-pbr 5.11.0-0ubuntu1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

python-pbr (5.11.0-0ubuntu1) lunar; urgency=medium

  * New upstream release for OpenStack Antelope.

 -- Corey Bryant <email address hidden>  Thu, 15 Dec 2022 14:32:31 -0500

Upload details

Uploaded by:
Corey Bryant
Uploaded to:
Lunar
Original maintainer:
Ubuntu Developers
Architectures:
all
Section:
python
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

See full publishing history Publishing

Series Pocket Published Component Section

Builds

Lunar: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

Downloads

File Size SHA-256 Checksum
python-pbr_5.11.0.orig.tar.gz 124.5 KiB b97bc6695b2aff02144133c2e7399d5885223d42b7912ffaec2ca3898e673bfe
python-pbr_5.11.0-0ubuntu1.debian.tar.xz 9.9 KiB 2274273092a9d3b5b2340300210efb43408492b93e06a04920e97bd35f92efe2
python-pbr_5.11.0-0ubuntu1.dsc 2.9 KiB 8397e61ec9444975eefa8ce3a7106fb2f9d5af9e0790abf0b4177c54622a2d8b

View changes file

Binary packages built by this source

python-pbr-doc: inject useful and sensible default behaviors into setuptools - doc

 PBR (Python Build Reasonableness) is a library that injects some useful and
 sensible default behaviors into your setuptools run. PBR can:
  * Manage version number based on git revisions and tags (Version file).
  * Generate AUTHORS file from git log
  * Generate ChangeLog from git log
  * Generate Sphinx autodoc stub files for your whole module
  * Store your dependencies in a pip requirements file
  * Use your README file as a long_description
  * Smartly find packages under your root package
 .
 PBR is only mildly configurable. The basic idea is that there's a decent way
 to run things and if you do, you should reap the rewards, because then it's
 simple and repeatable. If you want to do things differently, cool! But you've
 already got the power of Python at your fingertips, so you don't really need
 PBR.
 .
 PBR builds on top of the work that d2to1 started to provide for declarative
 configuration. d2to1 is itself an implementation of the ideas behind
 distutils2. Although distutils2 is now abandoned in favor of work towards PEP
 426 and Metadata 2.0, declarative config is still a great idea and
 specifically important in trying to distribute setup code as a library when
 that library itself will alter how the setup is processed. As Metadata 2.0 and
 other modern Python packaging PEPs come out, PBR aims to support them as
 quickly as possible.
 .
 This package provides the documentation.

python3-pbr: inject useful and sensible default behaviors into setuptools - Python 3.x

 PBR (Python Build Reasonableness) is a library that injects some useful and
 sensible default behaviors into your setuptools run. PBR can:
  * Manage version number based on git revisions and tags (Version file).
  * Generate AUTHORS file from git log
  * Generate ChangeLog from git log
  * Generate Sphinx autodoc stub files for your whole module
  * Store your dependencies in a pip requirements file
  * Use your README file as a long_description
  * Smartly find packages under your root package
 .
 PBR is only mildly configurable. The basic idea is that there's a decent way
 to run things and if you do, you should reap the rewards, because then it's
 simple and repeatable. If you want to do things differently, cool! But you've
 already got the power of Python at your fingertips, so you don't really need
 PBR.
 .
 PBR builds on top of the work that d2to1 started to provide for declarative
 configuration. d2to1 is itself an implementation of the ideas behind
 distutils2. Although distutils2 is now abandoned in favor of work towards PEP
 426 and Metadata 2.0, declarative config is still a great idea and
 specifically important in trying to distribute setup code as a library when
 that library itself will alter how the setup is processed. As Metadata 2.0 and
 other modern Python packaging PEPs come out, PBR aims to support them as
 quickly as possible.
 .
 This package provides support for Python 3.x.