You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
Just wanted to report this in case anyone else encounters it, but I admit it is an edge case. I was doing some testing on a virtual Windows 11 ARM machine in Parallels on MacOS M1. My project is in a directory that's shared with the host, and mounted as the F: drive. Python is installed (via PYENV) on the main C: drive.
If you try to LBUILD in this situation, you get an error:
F:\projs\mombo\boot23\hello>lbuild build
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.9.9\lib\runpy.py", line 197, in _run_module_as_main
return _run_code(code, main_globals, None,
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.9.9\lib\runpy.py", line 87, in _run_code
exec(code, run_globals)
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.9.9\Scripts\lbuild.exe\__main__.py", line 7, in <module>
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.9.9\lib\site-packages\lbuild\main.py", line 543, in main
output = run(args)
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.9.9\lib\site-packages\lbuild\main.py", line 527, in run
builder = Builder(cwd=args.cwd, outpath=args.path, config=args.config,
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.9.9\lib\site-packages\lbuild\api.py", line 65, in __init__
file_config = ConfigNode.from_file(config)
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.9.9\lib\site-packages\lbuild\config.py", line 191, in from_file
config.filename = os.path.relpath(filename)
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.9.9\lib\ntpath.py", line 703, in relpath
raise ValueError("path is on mount %r, start on mount %r" % (
ValueError: path is on mount '\\\\Mac\\files', start on mount 'F:'
This seems to be a known limitation of dealing with relative paths on Windows, where there exists no relative path between drives (that is, there is no root folder). I have no workaround for this, so I just temporarily copied the whole project to the C: drive to test further.
Which led me to this next issue. It might be a Windows 11-only issue, because I'm pretty sure this doesn't happen on a Windows 10 machine (to be confirmed later). When building with Python 3.10.10 active, SCONS fails with this error:
C:\files\projs\mombo\boot23\hello>scons build
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\lib\runpy.py", line 196, in _run_module_as_main
return _run_code(code, main_globals, None,
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\lib\runpy.py", line 86, in _run_code
exec(code, run_globals)
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\Scripts\scons.exe\__main__.py", line 4, in <module>
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\lib\site-packages\SCons\Script\__init__.py", line 85, in <module>
from . import Main
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\lib\site-packages\SCons\Script\Main.py", line 61, in <module>
import SCons.Script.Interactive
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\lib\site-packages\SCons\Script\Interactive.py", line 92, in <module>
import readline
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\lib\site-packages\readline.py", line 34, in <module>
rl = Readline()
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\lib\site-packages\pyreadline\rlmain.py", line 422, in __init__
BaseReadline.__init__(self)
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\lib\site-packages\pyreadline\rlmain.py", line 62, in __init__
mode.init_editing_mode(None)
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\lib\site-packages\pyreadline\modes\emacs.py", line 633, in init_editing_mode
self._bind_key('space', self.self_insert)
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\lib\site-packages\pyreadline\modes\basemode.py", line 162, in _bind_key
if not callable(func):
File "C:\Users\rclott\.pyenv\pyenv-win\versions\3.10.10\lib\site-packages\pyreadline\py3k_compat.py", line 8, in callable
return isinstance(x, collections.Callable)
AttributeError: module 'collections' has no attribute 'Callable'
This error goes away if you drop down to Python 3.9.9 or move up to Python 3.11.6
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
salkinium
changed the title
Building Minor Issues on Windows
lbuild fails when relative paths are on different Windows drives
Dec 4, 2023
Just wanted to report this in case anyone else encounters it, but I admit it is an edge case. I was doing some testing on a virtual Windows 11 ARM machine in Parallels on MacOS M1. My project is in a directory that's shared with the host, and mounted as the F: drive. Python is installed (via PYENV) on the main C: drive.
If you try to LBUILD in this situation, you get an error:
This seems to be a known limitation of dealing with relative paths on Windows, where there exists no relative path between drives (that is, there is no root folder). I have no workaround for this, so I just temporarily copied the whole project to the C: drive to test further.
Which led me to this next issue. It might be a Windows 11-only issue, because I'm pretty sure this doesn't happen on a Windows 10 machine (to be confirmed later). When building with Python 3.10.10 active, SCONS fails with this error:
This error goes away if you drop down to Python 3.9.9 or move up to Python 3.11.6
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: