On Thu, Feb 06, 2020 at 09:08:20AM +0100, Martin Reindl wrote:
> You are right, py-nose is needed for these tests. I will therefore go
> with this diff.
> Thank you for the help Kurt and Charlene!
One quick nit with this latest version
> -# one test fail:
> -# numpy 1.9.2 - median() don't
On Wed, Feb 05, 2020 at 03:05:40PM -0500, Kurt Mosiejczuk wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 05, 2020 at 09:35:45AM +0100, Martin Reindl wrote:
>
> > > py-nose is needed. It *shouldn't* be, but a number of the tests require
> > > it.
> > > (The tests could be rewritten to just use py-test).
>
> > > Once py-no
On Tue, Feb 04, 2020 at 04:14:14PM -0500, Kurt Mosiejczuk wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 04, 2020 at 09:06:48PM +0100, Martin Reindl wrote:
>
> > Indeed, the py-nose TEST_DEPENDS was unnecessary, thanks for spotting.
> > Surprisingly, with ports-gcc, test_memory_leak does not fail. I wonder
> > how tests be
On Tue, Feb 04, 2020 at 09:06:48PM +0100, Martin Reindl wrote:
> Indeed, the py-nose TEST_DEPENDS was unnecessary, thanks for spotting.
> Surprisingly, with ports-gcc, test_memory_leak does not fail. I wonder
> how tests behave on sparc64, it builds OK there according to the
> packages dir.
py-no
Am 04.02.20 um 14:28 schrieb Charlene Wendling:
> On Tue, 4 Feb 2020 09:11:07 +0100
> Martin Reindl wrote:
>
>> Hello ports@
>>
>> attached diff updates math/py-bottleneck to 1.3.1:
>>
>> - take MAINTAINER
>> - BROKEN-powerpc: there have been some changes in upstream, please
>> retest on powerpc a
On Tue, 4 Feb 2020 09:11:07 +0100
Martin Reindl wrote:
> Hello ports@
>
> attached diff updates math/py-bottleneck to 1.3.1:
>
> - take MAINTAINER
> - BROKEN-powerpc: there have been some changes in upstream, please
> retest on powerpc and sparc64, for now I've added COMPILER but we
> might be a
Hello ports@
attached diff updates math/py-bottleneck to 1.3.1:
- take MAINTAINER
- BROKEN-powerpc: there have been some changes in upstream, please retest on
powerpc and sparc64, for now I've added COMPILER but we might be able to do
without!
- tests all pass on python3, with python2 one tes