pyenv-win
libguestfs
pyenv-win | libguestfs | |
---|---|---|
37 | 10 | |
4,034 | 598 | |
4.1% | 0.8% | |
6.8 | 8.2 | |
3 days ago | 10 days ago | |
VBScript | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
pyenv-win
- Windows 上利用 VBScript 取得 junction point 的真實路徑
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Managing python projects like a pro!
Run the below command in the powershell, if you find this blog post to be too old, please follow the steps in the official repository of pyenv-win.
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My PATH got messed up and not sure how to fix it
Looks like it’s an open issue with pyenv-win https://github.com/pyenv-win/pyenv-win/issues/469
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Dev Stuff Distracting Me From Article Writing
What made this weird was the inconsistency between *NIX and Windows systems. On Windows the Python Launcher is used. This allows you to switch between different Python versions which are registered in the Windows Registry via PEP514 logic. Unfortunately, one of the popular implementations, PyPy, didn't have great support for it. On *NIX systems pyenv made this easy, while on Windows pyenv-win exists but it's currently not able to pull the PyPy mirrors. I wanted a more simplistic way to integrate PyPy into Windows for easy Python Launcher integration. So I started to do something really crazy: write Powershell.
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Getting started with Python and Playwright
We then use pyenv which is a command line tool used to manage multiple versions of Python. This is useful if you are working on multiple projects that use different versions of Python. Check out the GitHub readme of the 'pyenv' project for more information on how to install it on your operating system. For windows check out pyenv-win or you can use venv Python's Built-in Virtual Environment.
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Script does...nothing
I have tried my best to research this issue and have not come up with much. It is obvious that its a backend issue right? The guides that I used https://github.com/bmaltais/kohya_ss and https://github.com/pyenv-win/pyenv-win/
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Installing Python via Windows Store
IMO I prefer pyenv. There is a pywinenv https://github.com/pyenv-win/pyenv-win. Lets you set up multiple python installs with less probability of screwing then up
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How to Install AnkiBrain
The problem seemed to be that powershell won't run scripts by default. https://github.com/pyenv-win/pyenv-win/issues/289 This person had the same issue as me when installing pyenv. After fixing the execution policy the windows installer ran fine. However when I run anki it crashes after a few seconds.
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Why not tell people to “simply” use pyenv, poetry or anaconda
I've had success using pyenv on Mac and Linux. If I had to use Windows, I'd probably try pyenv-win [0].
I have run into issues trying to use packages that were available for one platform but not another, due to native code, etc. Most of the time I could find a pure Python alternative, but not always. This can lead to using containers, which adds complexity, which is a drawback because one of the advantages of Python to me is the simplicity (assuming you have something like pyenv).
I've used Poetry in the past, but it added enough complexity/overhead that I probably won't again.
I've had some success putting a line in a README for an internal tool that other devs can use to pip install from a Git repo. Again, assuming you have pyenv or the like, starting from a clean venv and pip install from Git seems to be pretty straightforward.
[0] - https://github.com/pyenv-win/pyenv-win
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Is it safe to update Python to 3.8 for automatic1111? I have other things require 3.8
Or https://github.com/pyenv-win/pyenv-win
libguestfs
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From xz to ibus: more questionable tarballs
We started off doing this, but you end up with enormous diffs which are themselves confusing. Example, only about 5% of this change is non-generated:
https://github.com/libguestfs/libguestfs/commit/5186251f8f68...
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Microsoft: Windows 10 22H2 is the final version of Windows 10
And inside the registry. The apparently correct way to distinguish them is using the build ID:
https://github.com/libguestfs/libguestfs/commit/824c74574893...
- Python 3.12.0 is to remove long-deprecated items
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Is chroot possible through a VM
NDB works great but another option is libguestfs. https://libguestfs.org/
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Is there any way to access the files of a Windows 10 backup from Linux?
Have a look here
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How to extract a virtual disk image without mounting to filesystem.?
Consider using libguestfs.
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QEMU Version 6.0.0 Released
There's a lot of useful command-line tooling for KVM and QEMU-based virt. Here's a small selection of useful tools:
• virsh — This[1] is libvirt's shell interface; and gives you access to the rich set of libvirt APIs.
• virt-builder — Use this for rapidly building minimal or customized virtual machines; it's greatly flexible; check out its man page[2]. And here's[3] a quick example that connects both virt-builder and virsh together.
• virt-install — Use this if you don't like the default build of the template images from virt-builder; it lets you create "headless" servers via 'kickstart' and Linux OS trees from the command-line.
• guestfish and libguestfs suite[4] — This rich set of tools help you in a variety of use-cases: repairing your broken disk images, editing, cloning, debugging disk images, and more. It has saved my behind a lot of times.
• qemu-img[5] – This Swiss Army knife lets you powerfully manipulate disk images (QCOW2, raw, et al) offline. Example operations include: create images, backing chains, offline snapshots, disk image merging, and convert disk images from one format to another, and more.
[1] https://libvirt.org/manpages/virsh.html
[2] https://libguestfs.org/virt-builder.1.html
[3] https://developer.fedoraproject.org/tools/virt-builder/about...
[4] http://libguestfs.org/
[5] https://qemu.readthedocs.io/en/latest/tools/qemu-img.html
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How to use Python libraries effectively when they aren't in PyPI?
That's a good point. As long as the project has a setup.py or pyproject.toml available, it can usually be installed from the repo. For libguestfs it looks like they do some pre-processing on their setup.py so that wouldn't work, it's lucky that they had this alternative set up already. :)
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Probably the Simplest Way to Install Debian/Ubuntu in QEMU
Nah, this virt-install preseed script is faster, or even just run virt-builder debian-10 and they're both libvirt not hacky qemu scripts
What are some alternatives?
pyenv-virtualenv - a pyenv plugin to manage virtualenv (a.k.a. python-virtualenv)
guestfs-tools - Tools for accessing and modifying guest disk images
pyenv - Simple Python version management
UTM - Virtual machines for iOS and macOS
mise - dev tools, env vars, task runner
bcc - BCC - Tools for BPF-based Linux IO analysis, networking, monitoring, and more
Poetry - Python packaging and dependency management made easy
terraform-provider-libvirt - Terraform provider to provision infrastructure with Linux's KVM using libvirt
hygeia - Python toolchain manager 🐍
libguestfs-common - Common code shared between libguestfs and tools
flakehell - Flake8 wrapper to make it nice, legacy-friendly, configurable.
nix-config