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![Brad Solomon](/assets/img/avatar_default.png)
* Move most CI to GitHub Actions * Build sdist * Build manylinux1 wheels with libyaml ext (also tested with 2010 and 2014) * Build MacOS x86_64 wheels with libyaml ext * Windows wheel builds remain on AppVeyor until we drop 2.7 support in 6.0 * Smoke tests of all post-build artifacts * Add PEP517/518 build declaration (pyproject.toml with setuptools backend) * Fully move build to setuptools * Drop Python 3.5 support * Declare Python 3.9 support * Update PyPI metadata now that setuptools lets it flow through Co-authored-by: Matt Davis <mrd@redhat.com>
PyYAML - The next generation YAML parser and emitter for Python. To install, type 'python setup.py install'. By default, the setup.py script checks whether LibYAML is installed and if so, builds and installs LibYAML bindings. To skip the check and force installation of LibYAML bindings, use the option '--with-libyaml': 'python setup.py --with-libyaml install'. To disable the check and skip building and installing LibYAML bindings, use '--without-libyaml': 'python setup.py --without-libyaml install'. When LibYAML bindings are installed, you may use fast LibYAML-based parser and emitter as follows: >>> yaml.load(stream, Loader=yaml.CLoader) >>> yaml.dump(data, Dumper=yaml.CDumper) If you don't trust the input stream, you should use: >>> yaml.safe_load(stream) PyYAML includes a comprehensive test suite. To run the tests, type 'python setup.py test'. For more information, check the PyYAML homepage: 'https://github.com/yaml/pyyaml'. For PyYAML tutorial and reference, see: 'http://pyyaml.org/wiki/PyYAMLDocumentation'. Discuss PyYAML with the maintainers in IRC #pyyaml irc.freenode.net. You may also use the YAML-Core mailing list: 'http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/yaml-core'. Submit bug reports and feature requests to the PyYAML bug tracker: 'https://github.com/yaml/pyyaml/issues'. The PyYAML module was written by Kirill Simonov <xi@resolvent.net>. It is currently maintained by the YAML and Python communities. PyYAML is released under the MIT license. See the file LICENSE for more details.
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