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Julien Danjou c02406601a builddoc: uses the new Sphinx 1.6 code for multiple builder
As noted by stephenfin, Sphinx 1.6 provides its own code to build doc with
multiple builders. The one provided by pbr so far for Sphinx < 1.6 is not even
compatible with 1.6. This patch fixes that by running the native Sphinx code
for Sphinx > 1.6 and falling back to the old code for older Sphinx versions.

Closes-Bug: #1691129
Change-Id: I5224235b1056a248b246c54e2d99eea94d53c4eb
2017-05-17 12:11:18 +02:00
doc/source Merge "Make oslosphinx optional" 2017-04-27 13:44:13 +00:00
pbr builddoc: uses the new Sphinx 1.6 code for multiple builder 2017-05-17 12:11:18 +02:00
tools Add Constraints support 2017-01-03 19:27:57 +01:00
.coveragerc Update .coveragerc after the removal of openstack directory 2016-10-19 15:16:29 +05:30
.gitignore Move to oslosphinx 2016-06-22 13:18:59 +10:00
.gitreview Rename back to PBR. 2013-03-17 23:27:50 -07:00
.mailmap Clean up hacking and path issues with d2to1 2013-07-11 15:02:12 -04:00
.testr.conf Parallelise integration tests. 2015-05-02 09:05:54 +12:00
CONTRIBUTING.rst Workflow documentation is now in infra-manual 2014-12-05 03:30:42 +00:00
LICENSE Split out oslo.packaging. 2013-03-10 18:02:43 -04:00
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README.rst

Introduction

Latest Version

Downloads

PBR is a library that injects some useful and sensible default behaviors into your setuptools run. It started off life as the chunks of code that were copied between all of the OpenStack projects. Around the time that OpenStack hit 18 different projects each with at least 3 active branches, it seemed like a good time to make that code into a proper reusable library.

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.