Currently there is only one line difference regarding bootstrapped-pip,
but this will change in the future with the whole Python world moving
towards PEP 517.
Since wheel support was introduced in 2015 we always relied on pre-built
wheels for bootstrapping. Now, we can bootstrap directly from the
sources of these packages in git.
The `bootstrapped-pip` packages is used to build `pip`, `setuptools` and `wheel`,
after which those packages are used to build everything else.
Note that when building `bootstrapped-pip` some errors are shown.
These are not important, the build actually does succeed and work as intended.
This commit splits the `buildPythonPackage` into multiple setup hooks.
Generally, Python packages are built from source to wheels using `setuptools`.
The wheels are then installed with `pip`. Tests were often called with
`python setup.py test` but this is less common nowadays. Most projects
now use a different entry point for running tests, typically `pytest`
or `nosetests`.
Since the wheel format was introduced more tools were built to generate these,
e.g. `flit`. Since PEP 517 is provisionally accepted, defining a build-system
independent format (`pyproject.toml`), `pip` can now use that format to
execute the correct build-system.
In the past I've added support for PEP 517 (`pyproject`) to the Python
builder, resulting in a now rather large builder. Furthermore, it was not possible
to reuse components elsewhere. Therefore, the builder is now split into multiple
setup hooks.
The `setuptoolsCheckHook` is included now by default but in time it should
be removed from `buildPythonPackage` to make it easier to use another hook
(curently one has to pass in `dontUseSetuptoolsCheck`).