1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
|
import os.path, sys
class ConfigurationError(Exception):
def __init__(self, reason):
Exception.__init__(self, "Configuration failed: %s" % reason)
env = Environment()
# sunos, aix, hpux, irix, sunos appear to be platforms known by SCons, assuming they're POSIX compliant
Posix = ("linux", "darwin", "sunos", "aix", "hpux", "irix", "sunos", "netbsd")
Windows = ("win32", "cygwin")
if env["PLATFORM"] == "posix":
if sys.platform[:5] == "linux":
Platform = "linux"
elif sys.platform[:6] == "netbsd":
Platform = "netbsd"
else:
raise ConfigurationError("Unknown platform %s" % sys.platform)
else:
if not env["PLATFORM"] in ("win32", "cygwin") + Posix:
raise ConfigurationError("Unknown platform %s" % env["PLATFORM"])
Platform = env["PLATFORM"]
# Inspired by the versioning scheme followed by Qt, it seems sensible enough. There are three components: major, minor
# and micro. Major changes with each subtraction from the API (backward-incompatible, i.e. V19 vs. V18), minor changes
# with each addition to the API (backward-compatible), micro changes with each revision of the source code.
ApiVer = "2.0.0"
Export("Platform", "Posix", "ConfigurationError", "ApiVer")
|