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authorCoprDistGit <infra@openeuler.org>2023-05-18 03:11:55 +0000
committerCoprDistGit <infra@openeuler.org>2023-05-18 03:11:55 +0000
commit25b833f32cc4100b2e323780ddc7de41fe3a545d (patch)
tree818059a2f907fbe649dd8af6b1fb0b0901c8830f
parent6f479c05bd7e050594528c43c9c28ac9e4855350 (diff)
automatic import of python-rotate-backups
-rw-r--r--.gitignore1
-rw-r--r--python-rotate-backups.spec148
-rw-r--r--sources1
3 files changed, 150 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitignore b/.gitignore
index e69de29..1a2620c 100644
--- a/.gitignore
+++ b/.gitignore
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+/rotate-backups-8.1.tar.gz
diff --git a/python-rotate-backups.spec b/python-rotate-backups.spec
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..1855ae5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python-rotate-backups.spec
@@ -0,0 +1,148 @@
+%global _empty_manifest_terminate_build 0
+Name: python-rotate-backups
+Version: 8.1
+Release: 1
+Summary: Simple command line interface for backup rotation
+License: MIT
+URL: https://github.com/xolox/python-rotate-backups
+Source0: https://mirrors.nju.edu.cn/pypi/web/packages/bd/86/b3921ca2e2f66fc5c347f55f7c4d2bd49292f113cc65713e9337ffb3c6a8/rotate-backups-8.1.tar.gz
+BuildArch: noarch
+
+Requires: python3-coloredlogs
+Requires: python3-executor
+Requires: python3-humanfriendly
+Requires: python3-naturalsort
+Requires: python3-property-manager
+Requires: python3-dateutil
+Requires: python3-simpleeval
+Requires: python3-six
+Requires: python3-update-dotdee
+Requires: python3-verboselogs
+
+%description
+Backups are good for you. Most people learn this the hard way (including me).
+Nowadays my Linux laptop automatically creates a full system snapshot every
+four hours by pushing changed files to an `rsync`_ daemon running on the server
+in my home network and creating a snapshot afterwards using the ``cp -al``
+command (the article `Easy Automated Snapshot-Style Backups with Linux and
+Rsync`_ explains the basic technique). The server has a second disk attached
+which asynchronously copies from the main disk so that a single disk failure
+doesn't wipe all of my backups (the "time delayed replication" aspect has also
+proven to be very useful).
+Okay, cool, now I have backups of everything, up to date and going back in
+time! But I'm running through disk space like crazy... A proper deduplicating
+filesystem would be awesome but I'm running crappy consumer grade hardware and
+e.g. ZFS has not been a good experience in the past. So I'm going to have to
+delete backups...
+Deleting backups is never nice, but an easy and proper rotation scheme can help
+a lot. I wanted to keep things manageable so I wrote a Python script to do it
+for me. Over the years I actually wrote several variants. Because I kept
+copy/pasting these scripts around I decided to bring the main features together
+in a properly documented Python package and upload it to the `Python Package
+Index`_.
+The `rotate-backups` package is currently tested on cPython 2.7, 3.5+ and PyPy
+(2.7). It's tested on Linux and Mac OS X and may work on other unixes but
+definitely won't work on Windows right now.
+
+%package -n python3-rotate-backups
+Summary: Simple command line interface for backup rotation
+Provides: python-rotate-backups
+BuildRequires: python3-devel
+BuildRequires: python3-setuptools
+BuildRequires: python3-pip
+%description -n python3-rotate-backups
+Backups are good for you. Most people learn this the hard way (including me).
+Nowadays my Linux laptop automatically creates a full system snapshot every
+four hours by pushing changed files to an `rsync`_ daemon running on the server
+in my home network and creating a snapshot afterwards using the ``cp -al``
+command (the article `Easy Automated Snapshot-Style Backups with Linux and
+Rsync`_ explains the basic technique). The server has a second disk attached
+which asynchronously copies from the main disk so that a single disk failure
+doesn't wipe all of my backups (the "time delayed replication" aspect has also
+proven to be very useful).
+Okay, cool, now I have backups of everything, up to date and going back in
+time! But I'm running through disk space like crazy... A proper deduplicating
+filesystem would be awesome but I'm running crappy consumer grade hardware and
+e.g. ZFS has not been a good experience in the past. So I'm going to have to
+delete backups...
+Deleting backups is never nice, but an easy and proper rotation scheme can help
+a lot. I wanted to keep things manageable so I wrote a Python script to do it
+for me. Over the years I actually wrote several variants. Because I kept
+copy/pasting these scripts around I decided to bring the main features together
+in a properly documented Python package and upload it to the `Python Package
+Index`_.
+The `rotate-backups` package is currently tested on cPython 2.7, 3.5+ and PyPy
+(2.7). It's tested on Linux and Mac OS X and may work on other unixes but
+definitely won't work on Windows right now.
+
+%package help
+Summary: Development documents and examples for rotate-backups
+Provides: python3-rotate-backups-doc
+%description help
+Backups are good for you. Most people learn this the hard way (including me).
+Nowadays my Linux laptop automatically creates a full system snapshot every
+four hours by pushing changed files to an `rsync`_ daemon running on the server
+in my home network and creating a snapshot afterwards using the ``cp -al``
+command (the article `Easy Automated Snapshot-Style Backups with Linux and
+Rsync`_ explains the basic technique). The server has a second disk attached
+which asynchronously copies from the main disk so that a single disk failure
+doesn't wipe all of my backups (the "time delayed replication" aspect has also
+proven to be very useful).
+Okay, cool, now I have backups of everything, up to date and going back in
+time! But I'm running through disk space like crazy... A proper deduplicating
+filesystem would be awesome but I'm running crappy consumer grade hardware and
+e.g. ZFS has not been a good experience in the past. So I'm going to have to
+delete backups...
+Deleting backups is never nice, but an easy and proper rotation scheme can help
+a lot. I wanted to keep things manageable so I wrote a Python script to do it
+for me. Over the years I actually wrote several variants. Because I kept
+copy/pasting these scripts around I decided to bring the main features together
+in a properly documented Python package and upload it to the `Python Package
+Index`_.
+The `rotate-backups` package is currently tested on cPython 2.7, 3.5+ and PyPy
+(2.7). It's tested on Linux and Mac OS X and may work on other unixes but
+definitely won't work on Windows right now.
+
+%prep
+%autosetup -n rotate-backups-8.1
+
+%build
+%py3_build
+
+%install
+%py3_install
+install -d -m755 %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}
+if [ -d doc ]; then cp -arf doc %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
+if [ -d docs ]; then cp -arf docs %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
+if [ -d example ]; then cp -arf example %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
+if [ -d examples ]; then cp -arf examples %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
+pushd %{buildroot}
+if [ -d usr/lib ]; then
+ find usr/lib -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
+fi
+if [ -d usr/lib64 ]; then
+ find usr/lib64 -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
+fi
+if [ -d usr/bin ]; then
+ find usr/bin -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
+fi
+if [ -d usr/sbin ]; then
+ find usr/sbin -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
+fi
+touch doclist.lst
+if [ -d usr/share/man ]; then
+ find usr/share/man -type f -printf "/%h/%f.gz\n" >> doclist.lst
+fi
+popd
+mv %{buildroot}/filelist.lst .
+mv %{buildroot}/doclist.lst .
+
+%files -n python3-rotate-backups -f filelist.lst
+%dir %{python3_sitelib}/*
+
+%files help -f doclist.lst
+%{_docdir}/*
+
+%changelog
+* Thu May 18 2023 Python_Bot <Python_Bot@openeuler.org> - 8.1-1
+- Package Spec generated
diff --git a/sources b/sources
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f4e2d90
--- /dev/null
+++ b/sources
@@ -0,0 +1 @@
+60432ec2af228f57202beb42c8f8bcf6 rotate-backups-8.1.tar.gz