from distutils.core import setup from distutils.extension import Extension setup( name = 'python-spdylay', # Also update __version__ in spdylay.pyx version = '0.1.2', description = 'Python SPDY library on top of Spdylay C library', author = 'Tatsuhiro Tsujikawa', author_email = 'tatsuhiro.t@gmail.com', url = 'http://spdylay.sourceforge.net/', keywords = [], ext_modules = [Extension("spdylay", ["spdylay.c"], libraries=['spdylay'])], long_description="""\ Python-spdylay is a Python SPDY library on top of Spdylay C library. It supports SPDY/2 and SPDY/3 protocol. It does not perform any I/O operations. When the library needs them, it calls the callback functions provided by the application. It also does not include any event polling mechanism, so the application can freely choose the way of handling events. It provides almost all API Spdylay provides with Pythonic fashion. The core library API works with Python 2 and 3. But ``ThreadedSPDYServer`` requires Python 3.3 because it uses TLS NPN extension. Installation ============ First install Spdylay library. You can grab a source distribution from `sf.net download page `_ or `clone git repository `_. See `Spdylay documentation `_ for the required packages and how to build Spdylay from git repository. After Spdylay is installed, run ``build_ext`` command to build extension module:: $ python setup.py build_ext If you installed Spdylay library in other than standard location, use ``--include-dirs`` and ``--library-dirs`` to specify header file and library locations respectively. Documentation ============= See `python-spdylay documentation `_. Samples ======= Here is a simple SPDY server:: #!/usr/bin/env python # The example SPDY server. Python 3.3 or later is required because TLS # NPN is used in spdylay.ThreadedSPDYServer. Put private key and # certificate file in the current working directory. import spdylay # private key file KEY_FILE='server.key' # certificate file CERT_FILE='server.crt' class MySPDYRequestHandler(spdylay.BaseSPDYRequestHandler): def do_GET(self): self.send_response(200) self.send_header('content-type', 'text/html; charset=UTF-8') content = '''\ SPDY FTW

SPDY FTW

The age of HTTP/1.1 is over. The time of SPDY has come.

'''.encode('UTF-8') self.wfile.write(content) if __name__ == "__main__": HOST, PORT = "localhost", 3000 server = spdylay.ThreadedSPDYServer((HOST, PORT), MySPDYRequestHandler, cert_file=CERT_FILE, key_file=KEY_FILE) server.start() Here is a simple SPDY client:: #!/usr/bin/env python # The example SPDY client. You need Python 3.3 or later because we # use TLS NPN. # # Usage: spdyclient.py URL... # import sys import spdylay class MyStreamHandler(spdylay.BaseSPDYStreamHandler): def on_header(self, nv): sys.stdout.write('Stream#{}\\n'.format(self.stream_id)) for k, v in nv: sys.stdout.write('{}: {}\\n'.format(k, v)) def on_data(self, data): sys.stdout.write('Stream#{}\\n'.format(self.stream_id)) sys.stdout.buffer.write(data) def on_close(self, status_code): sys.stdout.write('Stream#{} closed\\n'.format(self.stream_id)) if __name__ == '__main__': uris = sys.argv[1:] spdylay.urlfetch(uris, MyStreamHandler) """, classifiers = [ 'Development Status :: 4 - Beta', 'Intended Audience :: Developers', 'License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License', 'Operating System :: OS Independent', 'Programming Language :: Cython', 'Programming Language :: Python', 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3', 'Topic :: Internet :: WWW/HTTP', 'Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules' ] )