In article mailman.344.1258083604.2873.python-l...@python.org,
Ryan Kelly r...@rfk.id.au wrote:
Esky is an auto-update framework for frozen python apps, built on top of
bbfreeze. It provides a simple API through which apps can find, fetch
and install updates, and a bootstrapping mechanism that
Recently I was looking into distribution mechanisms, and I passed over
bbfreeze because I saw no indication that Python 2.6 was supported.
Not sure if it's officially supported, but I do most of my development
on Python 2.6 and bbfreeze hasn't given me any problems as yet.
Also,
In article mailman.391.1258154934.2873.python-l...@python.org,
Ryan Kelly r...@rfk.id.au wrote:
Out of curiosity, what freezer package did you settle on in the end?
I'm curious it see if esky could easily switch between different
freezers (although it currently depends on some rather deep
In article mailman.23.1257600051.2873.python-l...@python.org,
Ryan Kelly r...@rfk.id.au wrote:
Esky is an auto-update framework for frozen python apps, built on top of
bbfreeze. It provides a simple API through which apps can find, fetch
and install updates, and a bootstrapping mechanism that
Esky is an auto-update framework for frozen python apps, built on top of
bbfreeze. It provides a simple API through which apps can find, fetch
and install updates, and a bootstrapping mechanism that keeps the app
safe in the face of failed or partial updates.
Recently I was looking into
I'm pleased to announce the latest release of esky, a tool for keeping
your frozen apps fresh:
Downloads:http://pypi.python.org/pypi/esky/
Latest Version: 0.2.1
License: BSD
Esky is an auto-update framework for frozen python apps, built on top of
bbfreeze. It provides