#!/usr/bin/env bash # Modern Linux and macOS systems commonly only have a thing called `python3` and # not `python`, while Windows commonly does not have `python3`, so we cannot # directly use python in the shebang and have it consistently work. Instead we # embed some bash to look for a python to run the rest of the script. # # On Windows, `py -3` sometimes works. We need to try it first because `python3` # sometimes tries to launch the app store on Windows. '''': for PYTHON in "py -3" python3 python python2; do if command -v $PYTHON >/dev/null; then exec $PYTHON "$0" "$@" break fi done echo "$0: error: did not find python installed" >&2 exit 1 ''' # The rest of this file is Python. # # This file is only a "symlink" to bootstrap.py, all logic should go there. import os import sys # If this is python2, check if python3 is available and re-execute with that # interpreter. # # `./x.py` would not normally benefit from this because the bash above tries # python3 before 2, but this matters if someone ran `python x.py` and their # system's `python` is python2. if sys.version_info.major < 3: try: os.execvp("py", ["py", "-3"] + sys.argv) except OSError: try: os.execvp("python3", ["python3"] + sys.argv) except OSError: # Python 3 isn't available, fall back to python 2 pass rust_dir = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)) sys.path.append(os.path.join(rust_dir, "src", "bootstrap")) import bootstrap bootstrap.main()