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Joshua Harlow 4eb0ca21b3 Use condition variables using 'with'
Instead of doing [acquire, try, finally, release]
just use the condition variable as a context manager
to achieve the same effect with less code and with
less verbosity.

Change-Id: I0a3bb80a932a3dc6623ba2378afa0341e9e06e5a
2014-12-08 01:21:15 +00:00
2013-11-22 11:25:03 +04:00
2014-01-07 18:10:43 +00:00
2014-02-07 20:45:32 +00:00
2013-09-17 13:27:27 -07:00
2013-05-07 10:49:44 -07:00
2013-07-07 21:46:32 -07:00
2014-09-09 10:36:55 -07:00
2014-01-02 10:38:15 -08:00
2014-05-01 12:43:52 +00:00

TaskFlow

A library to do [jobs, tasks, flows] in a highly available, easy to understand and declarative manner (and more!) to be used with OpenStack and other projects.

Join us

Testing and requirements

Requirements

Because TaskFlow has many optional (pluggable) parts like persistence backends and engines, we decided to split our requirements into two parts: - things that are absolutely required by TaskFlow (you can't use TaskFlow without them) are put into requirements-pyN.txt (N being the Python major version number used to install the package); - things that are required by some optional part of TaskFlow (you can use TaskFlow without them) are put into optional-requirements.txt; if you want to use the feature in question, you should add that requirements to your project or environment; - as usual, things that required only for running tests are put into test-requirements.txt.

Tox.ini

Our tox.ini file describes several test environments that allow to test TaskFlow with different python versions and sets of requirements installed. Please refer to the tox documentation to understand how to make these test environments work for you.

Developer documentation

We also have sphinx documentation in docs/source.

To build it, run:

$ python setup.py build_sphinx
Description
RETIRED, further work has moved to Debian project infrastructure
Readme 4.8 MiB