commit | 3240fdf99e3e62874e862987cd7f8cc1885e613a | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Philipp Hagemeister <phihag@phihag.de> | Fri Oct 18 00:39:52 2019 |
committer | Philipp Hagemeister <phihag@phihag.de> | Fri Oct 18 00:42:47 2019 |
tree | 73065e4dab00f5fc863f34bec0bf4060ee3edac6 | |
parent | 584ac7d2f2e916ecb5393923f4d31334ae98870d [diff] |
Fix building on travis Python 2.6 is only available on trusty, according to https://travis-ci.community/t/issue-with-python-2-6-on-linux/3861/4 .
Python 3.3+'s ipaddress for Python 2.6, 2.7, 3.2.
Note that as in Python 3.3+ you must use character strings and not byte strings for textual IP address representations:
>>> from __future__ import unicode_literals >>> ipaddress.ip_address('1.2.3.4') IPv4Address(u'1.2.3.4')
or
>>> ipaddress.ip_address(u'1.2.3.4') IPv4Address(u'1.2.3.4')
but not:
>>> ipaddress.ip_address(b'1.2.3.4') Traceback (most recent call last): File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module> File "ipaddress.py", line 163, in ip_address ' a unicode object?' % address) ipaddress.AddressValueError: '1.2.3.4' does not appear to be an IPv4 or IPv6 address. Did you pass in a bytes (str in Python 2) instead of a unicode object?