I am on Windows, so I suspect that this must be the case, although the 
external app.exe.manifest file would not indicate this. However, the 
microsoft specs on manifests does indeed provide for hash checks.

The .exe fails to run even if I simply add a comment to the original .pyx, 
recompile with Cython to ,pyd and replace it in the dist folder, so I 
suspect either a hash check is being done somewhere or at least a timestamp 
is being checked.

Which in the end is good.

Thanks for your reply.


On Sunday, April 12, 2015 at 1:38:59 PM UTC-4, Hartmut Goebel wrote:
>
>  Am 12.04.2015 um 18:29 schrieb Ken Vives:
>  
> I don't need to know any details, but I was wondering if I could verify 
> that pyi is preventing the code from running because of some sort of 
> integrity check.
>
>
> No, this is out of scope. On Windows, the "Manifest" *may* do this, but 
> I'm not a Windows-Guy, so I do not know.
>
> -- 
>  Schönen Gruß 
> Hartmut Goebel 
>  Dipl.-Informatiker (univ), CISSP, CSSLP
> Information Security Management, Security Governance, Secure Software 
> Development 
>
> Goebel Consult, Landshut 
> http://www.goebel-consult.de 
>
> Blog: 
> http://www.goebel-consult.de/blog/digitale-burgerrechte-in-der-ara-snowden 
> Kolumne: http://www.cissp-gefluester.de/2010-09-mut-zur-beschraenkung 
>  

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