On 10/28/2013 5:13 PM, Lincoln Clarete wrote:
I've been working on a project called curdling. It's a package manager
for python. It's pretty similar to pip but with a brand new design and
way less lines of code. It uses exciting concurrency technology to
provide a reliable and fast installer for Python packages.

The current feature set includes:

  * Robust Concurrent model: it’s FAST!
  * Really good Error Handling and Report;
  * Conflict resolution for repeated requirements;
  * Distributed Cache System that includes a built-in cache server;
  * Simple command line interface;
  * Usage of bleeding edge technology available in the Python community;
  * Concurrent and Parallel, but Ctrl-C still works;

It's currently a work in progress but I'm pretty excited about its
stability and performance. There's a good amount of documentation
available at

http://clarete.github.io/curdling

This project uses both wheel and distlib packages as part of the
dependency stack. I'm working on an essay about my experience with both
libraries that I'm planning to share on another opportunity. It will
probably be available under the "Design and Implementation" section in
the main website. Feel free to check it out right now if you don't want
to wait:

http://clarete.github.io/curdling/design-and-implementation.html

Any feedback is highly appreciated.

Are you aware that pip has been 'blessed' as the default installer?
See http://python.org/dev/peps/pep-0453/
The intent and hope is that anyone who installs 3.4 will also have pip (1.5, due Dec 1) available.

--
Terry Jan Reedy


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