As shown in section 1.2, you use the
sdist
command to create a source distribution. In the
simplest case,
python setup.py sdist
(assuming you haven't specified any sdist
options in the setup
script or config file), sdist
creates the archive of the
default format for the current platform. The default format is a gzip'ed
tar file (.tar.gz) on Unix, and ZIP file on Windows.
no Mac OS support here
You can specify as many formats as you like using the --formats option, for example:
python setup.py sdist --formats=gztar,zip
to create a gzipped tarball and a zip file. The available formats are:
Format | Description | Notes |
---|---|---|
zip |
zip file (.zip) | (1),(3) |
gztar |
gzip'ed tar file (.tar.gz) | (2),(4) |
bztar |
bzip2'ed tar file (.tar.bz2) | (4) |
ztar |
compressed tar file (.tar.Z) | (4) |
tar |
tar file (.tar) | (4) |
Notes: