I made a couple of changes before pushing the patch On Sun, Nov 08, 2020 at 10:13:16AM +0100, Adam Kandur via Guix-patches via wrote: > > > From 40a037719317f943e4d311e6c03b1398feaffe7b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 > From: Adam > Date: Sun, 8 Nov 2020 12:10:32 +0300 > Subject: [PATCH] gnu: Add python-telethon. > > * gnu/packages/python-xyz.scm (python-telethon): New variable. > --- > gnu/packages/python-xyz.scm | 23 +++++++++++++++++++++++ > 1 file changed, 23 insertions(+) > > diff --git a/gnu/packages/python-xyz.scm b/gnu/packages/python-xyz.scm > index 5bbd547..d7dfaf2 100644 > --- a/gnu/packages/python-xyz.scm > +++ b/gnu/packages/python-xyz.scm > @@ -22560,6 +22560,29 @@ a Python library to convert RELAX NG schemata in Compact syntax (rnc) to > equivalent schemata in the XML-based default RELAX NG syntax.") > (license license:expat))) > > +(define-public python-telethon > + (package > + (name "python-telethon") We normally put this after the source, so I moved it there. > + (build-system python-build-system) > + (propagated-inputs > + `(("python-rsa" ,python-rsa) > + ("python-pyaes" ,python-pyaes) > + ("python-pytest" ,python-pytest))) pytest should be a native-input. I also added python-pytest-asyncio and python-pytest-trio to native-inputs. > + (version "v1.17.5") the 'v' isn't part of the version string. Instead the 'commit' as part of the source becomes '(commit (string-apend "v" version))' > + (source > + (origin > + (method git-fetch) > + (uri (git-reference > + (url "https://github.com/LonamiWebs/Telethon") > + (commit version))) I see you noticed the pypi release didn't come with tests :) > + (file-name (git-file-name name version)) > + (sha256 > + (base32 "0l9fhdrq576vllgi9aam45xzw5xi6jhgdv5zz8i4ygssdp7cm8jl")))) I replaced the 'check phase with a phase which runs (invoke "py.test" "-v") > + (home-page "https://docs.telethon.dev") > + (synopsis "Telethon is an asyncio Python 3 MTProto library to interact with Telegram's API as a user or through a bot account (bot API alternative).") > + (description "Telegram is a popular messaging application. This library is meant to make it easy for you to write Python programs that can interact with Telegram. Think of it as a wrapper that has already done the heavy job for you, so you can focus on developing an application.") > + (license license:expat))) I wasn't a fan of the synopsis or description, so I took the synopsis which came from 'guix import pypi pypi telethon' and I shortened the description to mostly just include that it interacts with Telegram. > + > (define-public python-citeproc-py > (package > (name "python-citeproc-py") > -- > 2.28.0 > Thanks for the patch! Pushed. -- Efraim Flashner אפרים פלשנר GPG key = A28B F40C 3E55 1372 662D 14F7 41AA E7DC CA3D 8351 Confidentiality cannot be guaranteed on emails sent or received unencrypted