Patches item #1739468, was opened at 2007-06-19 13:40 Message generated for change (Comment added) made by ncoghlan You can respond by visiting: https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detail&atid=305470&aid=1739468&group_id=5470
Please note that this message will contain a full copy of the comment thread, including the initial issue submission, for this request, not just the latest update. Category: Core (C code) Group: None Status: Open Resolution: None Priority: 5 Private: No Submitted By: andy-chu (andy-chu) Assigned to: Nick Coghlan (ncoghlan) Summary: Add a -z interpreter flag to execute a zip file Initial Comment: The motivation for this is that distributing a zip file is a very light and easy way to distribute a python program with multiple packages/modules. I have done this on Linux, Mac and Windows and it works very nicely -- except that you need a few extra files to bootstrap it: set PYTHONPATH to the zip file and run the main function. With this small patch, you get rid of the need for extra files. At the bottom is a demo on Linux. On Windows, you can do a similar thing by making a file that is both a zip file and a batch file. The batch file will pass %~f0 (itself) to the -z flag of the Python interpreter. I ran this by Guido and he seemed to think it was a fine idea. At Google, we have numerous platform-specific hacks in a program called "autopar" to solve this problem. I have included the basic patch, but if you guys agree with this, I will add some tests and documentation. And I think it might be useful to include something in the Tools/ directory to do what update_zip.sh does below (add a __zipmain__ module and a shebang/batch file header to a zip file, to make it executable)? I think this may also help to fix a bug with eggs: http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/setuptools#eggsecutable-scripts IMPORTANT NOTE: Eggs with an "eggsecutable" header cannot be renamed, or invoked via symlinks. They must be invoked using their original filename, in order to ensure that, once running, pkg_resources will know what project and version is in use. The header script will check this and exit with an error if the .egg file has been renamed or is invoked via a symlink that changes its base name. andychu testdata$ ls __zipmain__.py foo.py foo.pyc foo.zip foo_exe.zip header.txt update_zip.sh # The main program you're going to run in "development mode" andychu testdata$ ./foo.py foo bar argv: ['./foo.py', 'foo', 'bar'] # Same program, packaged into a zip file andychu testdata$ ./foo_exe.zip foo bar argv: ['-c', 'foo', 'bar'] # Contents of the zip file andychu testdata$ unzip -l foo_exe.zip Archive: foo_exe.zip warning [foo_exe.zip]: 51 extra bytes at beginning or within zipfile (attempting to process anyway) Length Date Time Name -------- ---- ---- ---- 243 06-18-07 20:01 __zipmain__.py 301 06-18-07 19:58 foo.py -------- ------- 544 2 files # Demo script to build an executable zip file. andychu testdata$ cat header.txt #!/usr/local/google/clients/python/trunk/python -z andychu testdata$ cat update_zip.sh #!/bin/bash # Make a regular zip file. zip foo.zip foo.py __zipmain__.py # Add a shebang line to it. cat header.txt foo.zip > foo_exe.zip # Make it executable. chmod 750 foo_exe.zip ---------------------------------------------------------------------- >Comment By: Nick Coghlan (ncoghlan) Date: 2007-07-08 18:15 Message: Logged In: YES user_id=1038590 Originator: NO The new patch looks much better - the only thing is that run_zip needs to do sys.path.pop(0) to correctly remove the zipfile from the front of the path. However, I do see your point about whether or not including the current directory on sys.path is the right thing to do for this case - it may be better to set <zipfile_name>/__zipmain__.py as argv[0] before invoking PySys_SetArgv, and then use __zipmain__ as the module to be executed on the same code path as the -m switch normally uses. Rather than continuing this discussion here on SF, it may be best to post your proposal to python-dev. I personally like the idea, but a new idiom for running Python scripts will need broader support than just me. Getting input from the py2exe and py2app folks that can be found on python-dev would also be good. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Comment By: andy-chu (andy-chu) Date: 2007-07-08 04:33 Message: Logged In: YES user_id=1821575 Originator: YES Nick, have you had a chance to look this over again? I mainly care about the -z flag support. The makepyz.py script is just a demo, though I think it is useful as documentation as well. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Comment By: Nick Coghlan (ncoghlan) Date: 2007-06-30 00:40 Message: Logged In: YES user_id=1038590 Originator: NO I'm going to be off the net for a few days - I'll have a look at the updated patch when I get back late next week, ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Comment By: andy-chu (andy-chu) Date: 2007-06-28 15:17 Message: Logged In: YES user_id=1821575 Originator: YES Here is a script that documents how to make such files. I think the important part is just documenting the format. Then people can write whatever tools they need around it. Many people could get by with this simple tool, but others might want something more elaborate. Demo: andychu testprog$ find . ./__init__.py ./package1 ./package1/__init__.py ./package1/foo.py ./package1/lib.py ./package1/__init__.pyc ./package1/lib.pyc ./package1/foo.pyc andychu testprog$ find -name "*.py" | xargs ../Tools/scripts/makepyz.py -a zip,pyz,unix -z foo.zip -p package1 -m foo -y /usr/local/google/clients/python/trunk/python Added ./__init__.py to foo.zip Added ./package1/__init__.py to foo.zip Added ./package1/foo.py to foo.zip Added ./package1/lib.py to foo.zip Added __zipmain__.py to foo.zip Prepended #!/usr/local/google/clients/python/trunk/python -z to foo.zip. chmod foo.zip 0700 andychu testprog$ ./foo.zip lib module here argv: ['-c'] andychu testprog$ echo $? 3 File Added: makepyz.py ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Comment By: andy-chu (andy-chu) Date: 2007-06-27 15:35 Message: Logged In: YES user_id=1821575 Originator: YES Nick, I've updated the code to use a new runpy.run_zip function, which calls run_module. This does make it a bit cleaner. Let me know what you think. If the code is good I'll write some tests and documentation. Also, I'm not sure if the '-c' is really appropriate in sys.argv, but that seems to be what the -m flag uses. It seems like it might make sense to have sys.argv[0] be the zip file, if it is really a first class executable. And I think a script to build one of these files would be appropriate, which I can add. You could pass it the main module and main function, and it would generate a __zipmain__ stub and add it to the zip file. And it is a good idea if the file is cross platform, so a .pyz extension would work. Sorry the delayed response, I was a bit busy at work this week... but I'll respond sooner this time. : ) Example: andychu trunk$ testdata/foo_exe.zip foo bar __name__: __main__ argv: ['-c', 'foo', 'bar'] andychu trunk$ echo $? 3 File Added: runzip7.diff ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Comment By: andy-chu (andy-chu) Date: 2007-06-21 10:54 Message: Logged In: YES user_id=1821575 Originator: YES Nick, you're right, I think it can use run_module and be in the runpy module. Let me make those changes and send you another patch. ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Comment By: Nick Coghlan (ncoghlan) Date: 2007-06-19 21:21 Message: Logged In: YES user_id=1038590 Originator: NO I like the general idea, but it should be possible to use runpy.run_module to get __name__ set correctly (as that is what happens when you execute a module from a zipfile with -m). Another advantage of using run_module is that it would allow runzip() to take a second argument (possibly defaulting to "__zipmain__") which would specify the module to be executed from the zipfile (the remaining 3 run_module arguments could also be passed in, and set appropriately from main.c). Adding the new function as runpy.run_zip() (instead of adding a new module) would also be good. For Windows, an alternative to making the zip file both a batch and a zip file would be to adopt a .pyz extension convention for these files - the file associations can then be set up to invoke the script appropriately with python -z (similar to the way that .pyw files are associated with pythonw instead of the standard python executable). That way the same file could be executed on both Linux (via an embedded shebang line) and on Windows (via filename association), as is the case with standard .py Python scripts. My final question is whether the change to sys.path should be reverted once the module execution is complete - my suspicion is that it should, but I need to look into it a bit more before giving a definite answer (for the command line flag case, this behaviour obviously doesn't matter - it is only significant if the Python method is invoked directly in the context of a larger program). ---------------------------------------------------------------------- You can respond by visiting: https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?func=detail&atid=305470&aid=1739468&group_id=5470 _______________________________________________ Patches mailing list Patches@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/patches