# Always prefer setuptools over distutils from setuptools import setup, find_packages # To use a consistent encoding from codecs import open from os import path here = path.abspath(path.dirname(__file__)) # Get the long description from the README file with open(path.join(here, 'README.md'), encoding='utf-8') as f: long_description = f.read() setup( name='eda-rds', version='1.0.0', description='RDF-oriented for for EDA (electronic design automation)', long_description=long_description, # The project's main homepage. url='https://trygvis.io/git/2016/12/eda-rdf', author='Trygve Laugstøl', author_email='trygvis@inamo.no', # Choose your license license='MIT', # See https://pypi.python.org/pypi?%3Aaction=list_classifiers classifiers=[ 'Development Status :: 3 - Alpha', 'Intended Audience :: Developers', 'Intended Audience :: Manufacturing', 'Topic :: Software Development :: Build Tools', 'Topic :: Database', 'Topic :: Internet', 'Topic :: Scientific/Engineering :: Electronic Design Automation (EDA)', 'Topic :: Software Development :: Quality Assurance', 'Environment :: Console', 'License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License', 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3', 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4', 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5', 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6', 'Operating System :: OS Independent', ], keywords='EDA KiCAD RDF Digi-Key', packages=find_packages(exclude=['docs', 'tests']), # List run-time dependencies here. These will be installed by pip when # your project is installed. For an analysis of "install_requires" vs pip's # requirements files see: # https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/requirements.html install_requires=[ "bsddb3>=6.2.1", "CacheControl>=0.11.7", "html5lib>=0.999999999", "isodate>=0.5.4", "lockfile>=0.12.2", "lxml>=3.7.0", "mechanize>=0.2.5", "pyparsing>=2.1.10", "rdflib>=4.2.1", "requests>=2.12.4", "six>=1.10.0", "SPARQLWrapper>=1.8.0", "webencodings>=0.5", ], # List additional groups of dependencies here (e.g. development # dependencies). You can install these using the following syntax, # for example: # $ pip install -e .[dev,test] extras_require={ # 'dev': ['check-manifest'], # 'test': ['coverage'], }, # If there are data files included in your packages that need to be # installed, specify them here. If using Python 2.6 or less, then these # have to be included in MANIFEST.in as well. package_data={ # 'sample': ['package_data.dat'], }, # Although 'package_data' is the preferred approach, in some case you may # need to place data files outside of your packages. See: # http://docs.python.org/3.4/distutils/setupscript.html#installing-additional-files # noqa # In this case, 'data_file' will be installed into '/my_data' # data_files=[('my_data', ['data/data_file'])], # To provide executable scripts, use entry points in preference to the # "scripts" keyword. Entry points provide cross-platform support and allow # pip to create the appropriate form of executable for the target platform. entry_points={ 'console_scripts': [ 'eda-rdf=trygvis.eda.cli.eda_rdf:main', ], }, )