environment:
matrix:
# For Python versions available on Appveyor, see
# http://www.appveyor.com/docs/installed-software#python
# The list here is complete (excluding Python 2.6, which
# isn't covered by this document) at the time of writing.
- PYTHON: "C:\\Python27"
- PYTHON: "C:\\Python34"
- PYTHON: "C:\\Python35"
- PYTHON: "C:\\Python27-x64"
- PYTHON: "C:\\Python34-x64"
DISTUTILS_USE_SDK: "1"
- PYTHON: "C:\\Python35-x64"
- PYTHON: "C:\\Python36-x64"
install:
# Upgrade to the latest pip.
- '%PYTHON%\\python.exe -m pip install -U pip setuptools wheel'
build: off
test_script:
# Put your test command here.
# If you don't need to build C extensions on 64-bit Python 3.3 or 3.4,
# you can remove "build.cmd" from the front of the command, as it's
# only needed to support those cases.
# Note that you must use the environment variable %PYTHON% to refer to
# the interpreter you're using - Appveyor does not do anything special
# to put the Python version you want to use on PATH.
- "build.cmd %PYTHON%\\python.exe setup.py test"
after_test:
# This step builds your wheels.
# Again, you only need build.cmd if you're building C extensions for
# 64-bit Python 3.3/3.4. And you need to use %PYTHON% to get the correct
# interpreter
- "build.cmd %PYTHON%\\python.exe setup.py bdist_wheel"
artifacts:
# bdist_wheel puts your built wheel in the dist directory
- path: dist\*
#on_success:
# You can use this step to upload your artifacts to a public website.
# See Appveyor's documentation for more details. Or you can simply
# access your wheels from the Appveyor "artifacts" tab for your build.