%global _empty_manifest_terminate_build 0 Name: python-adodbapi Version: 2.6.2.0 Release: 1 Summary: A pure Python package implementing PEP 249 DB-API using Microsoft ADO. License: LGPL URL: http://sourceforge.net/projects/adodbapi Source0: https://mirrors.nju.edu.cn/pypi/web/packages/40/fc/914289fdaf33352ab3412fc1fdc96c4c902715601bc603859bc533b51f5c/adodbapi-2.6.2.0.zip BuildArch: noarch %description adodbapi A Python DB-API 2.0 (PEP-249) module that makes it easy to use Microsoft ADO for connecting with databases and other data sources using either CPython or IronPython. Home page: Features: * 100% DB-API 2.0 (PEP-249) compliant (including most extensions and recommendations). * Includes pyunit testcases that describe how to use the module. * Fully implemented in Python. -- runs in Python 2.5+ Python 3.0+ and IronPython 2.6+ * Licensed under the LGPL license, which means that it can be used freely even in commercial programs subject to certain restrictions. * The user can choose between paramstyles: 'qmark' 'named' 'format' 'pyformat' 'dynamic' * Supports data retrieval by column name e.g.: for row in myCurser.execute("select name,age from students"): print("Student", row.name, "is", row.age, "years old.") * Supports user-definable system-to-Python data conversion functions (selected by ADO data type, or by column) Prerequisites: * C Python 2.7 or 3.5 or higher and pywin32 (Mark Hammond's python for windows extensions.) or Iron Python 2.7 or higher. (works in IPy2.0 for all data types except BUFFER) Installation: * (C-Python on Windows): Install pywin32 ("pip install pywin32") which includes adodbapi. * (IronPython on Windows): Download adodbapi from http://sf.net/projects/adodbapi. Unpack the zip. Open a command window as an administrator. CD to the folder containing the unzipped files. Run "setup.py install" using the IronPython of your choice. NOTE: ........... If you do not like the new default operation of returning Numeric columns as decimal.Decimal, you can select other options by the user defined conversion feature. Try: adodbapi.apibase.variantConversions[adodbapi.ado_consts.adNumeric] = adodbapi.apibase.cvtString or: adodbapi.apibase.variantConversions[adodbapi.ado_consts.adNumeric] = adodbapi.apibase.cvtFloat or: adodbapi.apibase.variantConversions[adodbapi.ado_consts.adNumeric] = write_your_own_convertion_function notes for 2.6.2: The definitive source has been moved to https://github.com/mhammond/pywin32/tree/master/adodbapi. Remote has proven too hard to configure and test with Pyro4. I am moving it to unsupported status until I can change to a different connection method. whats new in version 2.6 A cursor.prepare() method and support for prepared SQL statements. Lots of refactoring, especially of the Remote and Server modules (still to be treated as Beta code). The quick start document 'quick_reference.odt' will export as a nice-looking pdf. Added paramstyles 'pyformat' and 'dynamic'. If your 'paramstyle' is 'named' you _must_ pass a dictionary of parameters to your .execute() method. If your 'paramstyle' is 'format' 'pyformat' or 'dynamic', you _may_ pass a dictionary of parameters -- provided your SQL operation string is formatted correctly. whats new in version 2.5 Remote module: (works on Linux!) allows a Windows computer to serve ADO databases via PyRO Server module: PyRO server for ADO. Run using a command like= C:>python -m adodbapi.server (server has simple connection string macros: is64bit, getuser, sql_provider, auto_security) Brief documentation included. See adodbapi/examples folder adodbapi.rtf New connection method conn.get_table_names() --> list of names of tables in database Vastly refactored. Data conversion things have been moved to the new adodbapi.apibase module. Many former module-level attributes are now class attributes. (Should be more thread-safe) Connection objects are now context managers for transactions and will commit or rollback. Cursor objects are context managers and will automatically close themselves. Autocommit can be switched on and off. Keyword and positional arguments on the connect() method work as documented in PEP 249. Keyword arguments from the connect call can be formatted into the connection string. New keyword arguments defined, such as: autocommit, paramstyle, remote_proxy, remote_port. *** Breaking change: variantConversion lookups are simplified: the following will raise KeyError: oldconverter=adodbapi.variantConversions[adodbapi.adoStringTypes] Refactor as: oldconverter=adodbapi.variantConversions[adodbapi.adoStringTypes[0]] %package -n python3-adodbapi Summary: A pure Python package implementing PEP 249 DB-API using Microsoft ADO. Provides: python-adodbapi BuildRequires: python3-devel BuildRequires: python3-setuptools BuildRequires: python3-pip %description -n python3-adodbapi adodbapi A Python DB-API 2.0 (PEP-249) module that makes it easy to use Microsoft ADO for connecting with databases and other data sources using either CPython or IronPython. Home page: Features: * 100% DB-API 2.0 (PEP-249) compliant (including most extensions and recommendations). * Includes pyunit testcases that describe how to use the module. * Fully implemented in Python. -- runs in Python 2.5+ Python 3.0+ and IronPython 2.6+ * Licensed under the LGPL license, which means that it can be used freely even in commercial programs subject to certain restrictions. * The user can choose between paramstyles: 'qmark' 'named' 'format' 'pyformat' 'dynamic' * Supports data retrieval by column name e.g.: for row in myCurser.execute("select name,age from students"): print("Student", row.name, "is", row.age, "years old.") * Supports user-definable system-to-Python data conversion functions (selected by ADO data type, or by column) Prerequisites: * C Python 2.7 or 3.5 or higher and pywin32 (Mark Hammond's python for windows extensions.) or Iron Python 2.7 or higher. (works in IPy2.0 for all data types except BUFFER) Installation: * (C-Python on Windows): Install pywin32 ("pip install pywin32") which includes adodbapi. * (IronPython on Windows): Download adodbapi from http://sf.net/projects/adodbapi. Unpack the zip. Open a command window as an administrator. CD to the folder containing the unzipped files. Run "setup.py install" using the IronPython of your choice. NOTE: ........... If you do not like the new default operation of returning Numeric columns as decimal.Decimal, you can select other options by the user defined conversion feature. Try: adodbapi.apibase.variantConversions[adodbapi.ado_consts.adNumeric] = adodbapi.apibase.cvtString or: adodbapi.apibase.variantConversions[adodbapi.ado_consts.adNumeric] = adodbapi.apibase.cvtFloat or: adodbapi.apibase.variantConversions[adodbapi.ado_consts.adNumeric] = write_your_own_convertion_function notes for 2.6.2: The definitive source has been moved to https://github.com/mhammond/pywin32/tree/master/adodbapi. Remote has proven too hard to configure and test with Pyro4. I am moving it to unsupported status until I can change to a different connection method. whats new in version 2.6 A cursor.prepare() method and support for prepared SQL statements. Lots of refactoring, especially of the Remote and Server modules (still to be treated as Beta code). The quick start document 'quick_reference.odt' will export as a nice-looking pdf. Added paramstyles 'pyformat' and 'dynamic'. If your 'paramstyle' is 'named' you _must_ pass a dictionary of parameters to your .execute() method. If your 'paramstyle' is 'format' 'pyformat' or 'dynamic', you _may_ pass a dictionary of parameters -- provided your SQL operation string is formatted correctly. whats new in version 2.5 Remote module: (works on Linux!) allows a Windows computer to serve ADO databases via PyRO Server module: PyRO server for ADO. Run using a command like= C:>python -m adodbapi.server (server has simple connection string macros: is64bit, getuser, sql_provider, auto_security) Brief documentation included. See adodbapi/examples folder adodbapi.rtf New connection method conn.get_table_names() --> list of names of tables in database Vastly refactored. Data conversion things have been moved to the new adodbapi.apibase module. Many former module-level attributes are now class attributes. (Should be more thread-safe) Connection objects are now context managers for transactions and will commit or rollback. Cursor objects are context managers and will automatically close themselves. Autocommit can be switched on and off. Keyword and positional arguments on the connect() method work as documented in PEP 249. Keyword arguments from the connect call can be formatted into the connection string. New keyword arguments defined, such as: autocommit, paramstyle, remote_proxy, remote_port. *** Breaking change: variantConversion lookups are simplified: the following will raise KeyError: oldconverter=adodbapi.variantConversions[adodbapi.adoStringTypes] Refactor as: oldconverter=adodbapi.variantConversions[adodbapi.adoStringTypes[0]] %package help Summary: Development documents and examples for adodbapi Provides: python3-adodbapi-doc %description help adodbapi A Python DB-API 2.0 (PEP-249) module that makes it easy to use Microsoft ADO for connecting with databases and other data sources using either CPython or IronPython. Home page: Features: * 100% DB-API 2.0 (PEP-249) compliant (including most extensions and recommendations). * Includes pyunit testcases that describe how to use the module. * Fully implemented in Python. -- runs in Python 2.5+ Python 3.0+ and IronPython 2.6+ * Licensed under the LGPL license, which means that it can be used freely even in commercial programs subject to certain restrictions. * The user can choose between paramstyles: 'qmark' 'named' 'format' 'pyformat' 'dynamic' * Supports data retrieval by column name e.g.: for row in myCurser.execute("select name,age from students"): print("Student", row.name, "is", row.age, "years old.") * Supports user-definable system-to-Python data conversion functions (selected by ADO data type, or by column) Prerequisites: * C Python 2.7 or 3.5 or higher and pywin32 (Mark Hammond's python for windows extensions.) or Iron Python 2.7 or higher. (works in IPy2.0 for all data types except BUFFER) Installation: * (C-Python on Windows): Install pywin32 ("pip install pywin32") which includes adodbapi. * (IronPython on Windows): Download adodbapi from http://sf.net/projects/adodbapi. Unpack the zip. Open a command window as an administrator. CD to the folder containing the unzipped files. Run "setup.py install" using the IronPython of your choice. NOTE: ........... If you do not like the new default operation of returning Numeric columns as decimal.Decimal, you can select other options by the user defined conversion feature. Try: adodbapi.apibase.variantConversions[adodbapi.ado_consts.adNumeric] = adodbapi.apibase.cvtString or: adodbapi.apibase.variantConversions[adodbapi.ado_consts.adNumeric] = adodbapi.apibase.cvtFloat or: adodbapi.apibase.variantConversions[adodbapi.ado_consts.adNumeric] = write_your_own_convertion_function notes for 2.6.2: The definitive source has been moved to https://github.com/mhammond/pywin32/tree/master/adodbapi. Remote has proven too hard to configure and test with Pyro4. I am moving it to unsupported status until I can change to a different connection method. whats new in version 2.6 A cursor.prepare() method and support for prepared SQL statements. Lots of refactoring, especially of the Remote and Server modules (still to be treated as Beta code). The quick start document 'quick_reference.odt' will export as a nice-looking pdf. Added paramstyles 'pyformat' and 'dynamic'. If your 'paramstyle' is 'named' you _must_ pass a dictionary of parameters to your .execute() method. If your 'paramstyle' is 'format' 'pyformat' or 'dynamic', you _may_ pass a dictionary of parameters -- provided your SQL operation string is formatted correctly. whats new in version 2.5 Remote module: (works on Linux!) allows a Windows computer to serve ADO databases via PyRO Server module: PyRO server for ADO. Run using a command like= C:>python -m adodbapi.server (server has simple connection string macros: is64bit, getuser, sql_provider, auto_security) Brief documentation included. See adodbapi/examples folder adodbapi.rtf New connection method conn.get_table_names() --> list of names of tables in database Vastly refactored. Data conversion things have been moved to the new adodbapi.apibase module. Many former module-level attributes are now class attributes. (Should be more thread-safe) Connection objects are now context managers for transactions and will commit or rollback. Cursor objects are context managers and will automatically close themselves. Autocommit can be switched on and off. Keyword and positional arguments on the connect() method work as documented in PEP 249. Keyword arguments from the connect call can be formatted into the connection string. New keyword arguments defined, such as: autocommit, paramstyle, remote_proxy, remote_port. *** Breaking change: variantConversion lookups are simplified: the following will raise KeyError: oldconverter=adodbapi.variantConversions[adodbapi.adoStringTypes] Refactor as: oldconverter=adodbapi.variantConversions[adodbapi.adoStringTypes[0]] %prep %autosetup -n adodbapi-2.6.2.0 %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-adodbapi -f filelist.lst %dir %{python3_sitelib}/* %files help -f doclist.lst %{_docdir}/* %changelog * Sun Apr 23 2023 Python_Bot - 2.6.2.0-1 - Package Spec generated