History log of /gem5/configs/common/__init__.py
Revision Date Author Comments
# 13774:a1be2a0c55f2 25-Feb-2019 Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>

configs: Use absolute import paths

Use absoluate import paths to be Python 3 compatible. This also
imports absolute_import from __future__ to ensure that Python 2.7
behaves the same way as Python 3.

Change-Id: Ica06ed95814e9cd3e768b3e1785075e36f6e56d0
Signed-off-by: Andreas Sandberg <andreas.sandberg@arm.com>
Reviewed-on: https://gem5-review.googlesource.com/c/public/gem5/+/16708
Reviewed-by: Jason Lowe-Power <jason@lowepower.com>


# 11682:612f75cf36a0 14-Oct-2016 Andreas Hansson <andreas.hansson@arm.com>

config: Make configs/common a Python package

Continue along the same line as the recent patch that made the
Ruby-related config scripts Python packages and make also the
configs/common directory a package.

All affected config scripts are updated (hopefully).

Note that this change makes it apparent that the current organisation
and naming of the config directory and its subdirectories is rather
chaotic. We mix scripts that are directly invoked with scripts that
merely contain convenience functions. While it is not addressed in
this patch we should follow up with a re-organisation of the
config structure, and renaming of some of the packages.


# 11670:6ce719503eae 13-Oct-2016 Andreas Hansson <andreas.hansson@arm.com>

ruby: Fix regressions and make Ruby configs Python packages

This patch moves the addition of network options into the Ruby module
to avoid the regressions all having to add it explicitly. Doing this
exposes an issue in our current config system though, namely the fact
that addtoPath is relative to the Python script being executed. Since
both example and regression scripts use the Ruby module we would end
up with two different (relative) paths being added. Instead we take a
first step at turning the config modules into Python packages, simply
by adding a __init__.py in the configs/ruby, configs/topologies and
configs/network subdirectories.

As a result, we can now add the top-level configs directory to the
Python search path, and then use the package names in the various
modules. The example scripts are also updated, and the messy
path-deducing variations in the scripts are unified.