Python Distutils
Python Distutils
Release 2.7.6
CONTENTS
An Introduction to Distutils
1.1 Concepts & Terminology . .
1.2 A Simple Example . . . . . .
1.3 General Python terminology .
1.4 Distutils-specific terminology
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
3
3
3
4
5
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
7
8
8
8
11
12
12
13
13
15
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
17
19
19
20
20
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
23
24
24
25
26
27
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
29
29
30
30
31
Examples
7.1 Pure Python distribution (by module) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7.2 Pure Python distribution (by package) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
7.3 Single extension module . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
33
33
34
35
Extending Distutils
8.1 Integrating new commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
37
37
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
8.2
9
38
Command Reference
9.1 Installing modules: the install command family . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
39
39
10 API Reference
10.1 distutils.core Core Distutils functionality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.2 distutils.ccompiler CCompiler base class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.3 distutils.unixccompiler Unix C Compiler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.4 distutils.msvccompiler Microsoft Compiler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.5 distutils.bcppcompiler Borland Compiler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.6 distutils.cygwincompiler Cygwin Compiler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.7 distutils.emxccompiler OS/2 EMX Compiler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.8 distutils.archive_util Archiving utilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.9 distutils.dep_util Dependency checking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.10 distutils.dir_util Directory tree operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.11 distutils.file_util Single file operations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.12 distutils.util Miscellaneous other utility functions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.13 distutils.dist The Distribution class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.14 distutils.extension The Extension class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.15 distutils.debug Distutils debug mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.16 distutils.errors Distutils exceptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.17 distutils.fancy_getopt Wrapper around the standard getopt module . . . . . . . . .
10.18 distutils.filelist The FileList class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.19 distutils.log Simple PEP 282-style logging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.20 distutils.spawn Spawn a sub-process . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.21 distutils.sysconfig System configuration information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.22 distutils.text_file The TextFile class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.23 distutils.version Version number classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.24 distutils.cmd Abstract base class for Distutils commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.25 Creating a new Distutils command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.26 distutils.command Individual Distutils commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.27 distutils.command.bdist Build a binary installer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.28 distutils.command.bdist_packager Abstract base class for packagers . . . . . . .
10.29 distutils.command.bdist_dumb Build a dumb installer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.30 distutils.command.bdist_msi Build a Microsoft Installer binary package . . . . . .
10.31 distutils.command.bdist_rpm Build a binary distribution as a Redhat RPM and SRPM
10.32 distutils.command.bdist_wininst Build a Windows installer . . . . . . . . . . .
10.33 distutils.command.sdist Build a source distribution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.34 distutils.command.build Build all files of a package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.35 distutils.command.build_clib Build any C libraries in a package . . . . . . . . . .
10.36 distutils.command.build_ext Build any extensions in a package . . . . . . . . . .
10.37 distutils.command.build_py Build the .py/.pyc files of a package . . . . . . . . . .
10.38 distutils.command.build_scripts Build the scripts of a package . . . . . . . . .
10.39 distutils.command.clean Clean a package build area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.40 distutils.command.config Perform package configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.41 distutils.command.install Install a package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
10.42 distutils.command.install_data Install data files from a package . . . . . . . . .
10.43 distutils.command.install_headers Install C/C++ header files from a package .
10.44 distutils.command.install_lib Install library files from a package . . . . . . . . .
10.45 distutils.command.install_scripts Install script files from a package . . . . . .
10.46 distutils.command.register Register a module with the Python Package Index . . .
10.47 distutils.command.check Check the meta-data of a package . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
41
41
44
49
50
50
50
50
50
51
51
52
52
54
54
54
55
55
56
56
56
56
57
58
58
58
59
59
59
59
59
60
60
60
60
60
60
60
60
60
61
61
61
61
61
61
61
61
A Glossary
63
71
71
ii
73
73
73
76
D Copyright
87
89
Index
91
iii
iv
CONTENTS
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
ONE
AN INTRODUCTION TO DISTUTILS
This document covers using the Distutils to distribute your Python modules, concentrating on the role of developer/distributor: if youre looking for information on installing Python modules, you should refer to the installindex chapter.
most information that you supply to the Distutils is supplied as keyword arguments to the setup() function
those keyword arguments fall into two categories: package metadata (name, version number) and information about whats in the package (a list of pure Python modules, in this case)
modules are specified by module name, not filename (the same will hold true for packages and extensions)
its recommended that you supply a little more metadata, in particular your name, email address and a URL
for the project (see section Writing the Setup Script for an example)
To create a source distribution for this module, you would create a setup script, setup.py, containing the above
code, and run this command from a terminal:
python setup.py sdist
For Windows, open a command prompt windows (Start Accessories) and change the command to:
setup.py sdist
sdist will create an archive file (e.g., tarball on Unix, ZIP file on Windows) containing your setup script
setup.py, and your module foo.py. The archive file will be named foo-1.0.tar.gz (or .zip), and
will unpack into a directory foo-1.0.
If an end-user wishes to install your foo module, all she has to do is download foo-1.0.tar.gz (or .zip),
unpack it, andfrom the foo-1.0 directoryrun
python setup.py install
which will ultimately copy foo.py to the appropriate directory for third-party modules in their Python installation.
This simple example demonstrates some fundamental concepts of the Distutils. First, both developers and installers have the same basic user interface, i.e. the setup script. The difference is which Distutils commands they
use: the sdist command is almost exclusively for module developers, while install is more often for installers
(although most developers will want to install their own code occasionally).
If you want to make things really easy for your users, you can create one or more built distributions for them.
For instance, if you are running on a Windows machine, and want to make things easy for other Windows users,
you can create an executable installer (the most appropriate type of built distribution for this platform) with the
bdist_wininst command. For example:
python setup.py bdist_wininst
will create an executable installer, foo-1.0.win32.exe, in the current directory.
Other useful built distribution formats are RPM, implemented by the bdist_rpm command, Solaris pkgtool
(bdist_pkgtool), and HP-UX swinstall (bdist_sdux). For example, the following command will create an RPM
file called foo-1.0.noarch.rpm:
python setup.py bdist_rpm
(The bdist_rpm command uses the rpm executable, therefore this has to be run on an RPM-based system such as
Red Hat Linux, SuSE Linux, or Mandrake Linux.)
You can find out what distribution formats are available at any time by running
python setup.py bdist --help-formats
pure Python module a module written in Python and contained in a single .py file (and possibly associated
.pyc and/or .pyo files). Sometimes referred to as a pure module.
extension module a module written in the low-level language of the Python implementation: C/C++ for Python,
Java for Jython. Typically contained in a single dynamically loadable pre-compiled file, e.g. a shared object
(.so) file for Python extensions on Unix, a DLL (given the .pyd extension) for Python extensions on
Windows, or a Java class file for Jython extensions. (Note that currently, the Distutils only handles C/C++
extensions for Python.)
package a module that contains other modules; typically contained in a directory in the filesystem and distinguished from other directories by the presence of a file __init__.py.
root package the root of the hierarchy of packages. (This isnt really a package, since it doesnt have an
__init__.py file. But we have to call it something.) The vast majority of the standard library is in
the root package, as are many small, standalone third-party modules that dont belong to a larger module
collection. Unlike regular packages, modules in the root package can be found in many directories: in fact,
every directory listed in sys.path contributes modules to the root package.
CHAPTER
TWO
The Extension class can be imported from distutils.core along with setup(). Thus, the setup script
for a module distribution that contains only this one extension and nothing else might be:
from distutils.core import setup, Extension
setup(name=foo,
version=1.0,
ext_modules=[Extension(foo, [foo.c])],
)
The Extension class (actually, the underlying extension-building machinery implemented by the build_ext
command) supports a great deal of flexibility in describing Python extensions, which is explained in the following
sections.
On some platforms, you can include non-source files that are processed by the compiler and included in your
extension. Currently, this just means Windows message text (.mc) files and resource definition (.rc) files for
Visual C++. These will be compiled to binary resource (.res) files and linked into the executable.
10
>
>=
==
!=
11
These can be combined by using multiple qualifiers separated by commas (and optional whitespace). In this case,
all of the qualifiers must be matched; a logical AND is used to combine the evaluations.
Lets look at a bunch of examples:
Requires Expression
==1.0
>1.0, !=1.5.1, <2.0
Explanation
Only version 1.0 is compatible
Any version after 1.0 and before 2.0 is compatible, except 1.5.1
Now that we can specify dependencies, we also need to be able to specify what we provide that other distributions
can require. This is done using the provides keyword argument to setup(). The value for this keyword is a list
of strings, each of which names a Python module or package, and optionally identifies the version. If the version
is not specified, it is assumed to match that of the distribution.
Some examples:
Provides Expression
mypkg
mypkg (1.1)
Explanation
Provide mypkg, using the distribution version
Provide mypkg version 1.1, regardless of the distribution version
A package can declare that it obsoletes other packages using the obsoletes keyword argument. The value for this
is similar to that of the requires keyword: a list of strings giving module or package specifiers. Each specifier
consists of a module or package name optionally followed by one or more version qualifiers. Version qualifiers
are given in parentheses after the module or package name.
The versions identified by the qualifiers are those that are obsoleted by the distribution being described. If no
qualifiers are given, all versions of the named module or package are understood to be obsoleted.
12
For example, if a package should contain a subdirectory with several data files, the files can be arranged like this
in the source tree:
setup.py
src/
mypkg/
__init__.py
module.py
data/
tables.dat
spoons.dat
forks.dat
The corresponding call to setup() might be:
setup(...,
packages=[mypkg],
package_dir={mypkg: src/mypkg},
package_data={mypkg: [data/*.dat]},
)
New in version 2.4.Changed in version 2.7: All the files that match package_data will be added to the
MANIFEST file if no template is provided. See Specifying the files to distribute.
13
Meta-Data
name
version
author
author_email
maintainer
maintainer_email
url
description
long_description
download_url
classifiers
platforms
license
Description
name of the package
version of this release
package authors name
email address of the package author
package maintainers name
email address of the package maintainer
home page for the package
short, summary description of the package
longer description of the package
location where the package may be downloaded
a list of classifiers
a list of platforms
license for the package
Value
short string
short string
short string
email address
short string
email address
URL
short string
long string
URL
list of strings
list of strings
short string
Notes
(1)
(1)(2)
(3)
(3)
(3)
(3)
(1)
(5)
(4)
(4)
(6)
Notes:
1. These fields are required.
2. It is recommended that versions take the form major.minor[.patch[.sub]].
3. Either the author or the maintainer must be identified. If maintainer is provided, distutils lists it as the author
in PKG-INFO.
4. These fields should not be used if your package is to be compatible with Python versions prior to 2.2.3 or
2.3. The list is available from the PyPI website.
5. The long_description field is used by PyPI when you are registering a package, to build its home
page.
6. The license field is a text indicating the license covering the package where the license is not a selection from the License Trove classifiers. See the Classifier field. Notice that theres a licence
distribution option which is deprecated but still acts as an alias for license.
short string A single line of text, not more than 200 characters.
long string Multiple lines of plain text in reStructuredText format (see http://docutils.sf.net/).
list of strings See below.
None of the string values may be Unicode.
Encoding the version information is an art in itself. Python packages generally adhere to the version format major.minor[.patch][sub]. The major number is 0 for initial, experimental releases of software. It is incremented for
releases that represent major milestones in a package. The minor number is incremented when important new features are added to the package. The patch number increments when bug-fix releases are made. Additional trailing
version information is sometimes used to indicate sub-releases. These are a1,a2,...,aN (for alpha releases, where
functionality and API may change), b1,b2,...,bN (for beta releases, which only fix bugs) and pr1,pr2,...,prN
(for final pre-release release testing). Some examples:
0.1.0 the first, experimental release of a package
1.0.1a2 the second alpha release of the first patch version of 1.0
classifiers are specified in a Python list:
setup(...,
classifiers=[
Development Status :: 4 - Beta,
Environment :: Console,
Environment :: Web Environment,
Intended Audience :: End Users/Desktop,
Intended Audience :: Developers,
Intended Audience :: System Administrators,
License :: OSI Approved :: Python Software Foundation License,
Operating System :: MacOS :: MacOS X,
14
15
16
CHAPTER
THREE
This ideal probably wont be achieved until auto-configuration is fully supported by the Distutils.
17
Note that an option spelled --foo-bar on the command-line is spelled foo_bar in configuration files. For
example, say you want your extensions to be built in-placethat is, you have an extension pkg.ext, and you
want the compiled extension file (ext.so on Unix, say) to be put in the same source directory as your pure
Python modules pkg.mod1 and pkg.mod2. You can always use the --inplace option on the command-line
to ensure this:
python setup.py build_ext --inplace
But this requires that you always specify the build_ext command explicitly, and remember to provide
--inplace. An easier way is to set and forget this option, by encoding it in setup.cfg, the configuration file for this distribution:
[build_ext]
inplace=1
This will affect all builds of this module distribution, whether or not you explicitly specify build_ext. If you
include setup.cfg in your source distribution, it will also affect end-user buildswhich is probably a bad idea
for this option, since always building extensions in-place would break installation of the module distribution. In
certain peculiar cases, though, modules are built right in their installation directory, so this is conceivably a useful
ability. (Distributing extensions that expect to be built in their installation directory is almost always a bad idea,
though.)
Another example: certain commands take a lot of options that dont change from run to run; for example,
bdist_rpm needs to know everything required to generate a spec file for creating an RPM distribution. Some of
this information comes from the setup script, and some is automatically generated by the Distutils (such as the list
of files installed). But some of it has to be supplied as options to bdist_rpm, which would be very tedious to do
on the command-line for every run. Hence, here is a snippet from the Distutils own setup.cfg:
[bdist_rpm]
release = 1
packager = Greg Ward <[email protected]>
doc_files = CHANGES.txt
README.txt
USAGE.txt
doc/
examples/
Note that the doc_files option is simply a whitespace-separated string split across multiple lines for readability.
See Also:
inst-config-syntax in Installing Python Modules More information on the configuration files is available in
the manual for system administrators.
18
CHAPTER
FOUR
Description
zip file (.zip)
gziped tar file (.tar.gz)
bzip2ed tar file (.tar.bz2)
compressed tar file (.tar.Z)
tar file (.tar)
Notes
(1),(3)
(2)
(4)
Notes:
1. default on Windows
2. default on Unix
3. requires either external zip utility or zipfile module (part of the standard Python library since Python
1.6)
4. requires the compress program.
When using any tar format (gztar, bztar, ztar or tar) under Unix, you can specify the owner and group
names that will be set for each member of the archive.
For example, if you want all files of the archive to be owned by root:
python setup.py sdist --owner=root --group=root
19
anything that looks like a test script: test/test*.py (currently, the Distutils dont do anything with
test scripts except include them in source distributions, but in the future there will be a standard for testing
Python module distributions)
README.txt (or README), setup.py (or whatever you called your setup script), and setup.cfg
all files that matches the package_data metadata. See Installing Package Data.
all files that matches the data_files metadata. See Installing Additional Files.
Sometimes this is enough, but usually you will want to specify additional files to distribute. The typical way to
do this is to write a manifest template, called MANIFEST.in by default. The manifest template is just a list of
instructions for how to generate your manifest file, MANIFEST, which is the exact list of files to include in your
source distribution. The sdist command processes this template and generates a manifest based on its instructions
and what it finds in the filesystem.
If you prefer to roll your own manifest file, the format is simple: one filename per line, regular files (or symlinks to
them) only. If you do supply your own MANIFEST, you must specify everything: the default set of files described
above does not apply in this case. Changed in version 2.7: An existing generated MANIFEST will be regenerated
without sdist comparing its modification time to the one of MANIFEST.in or setup.py.Changed in version
2.7.1: MANIFEST files start with a comment indicating they are generated. Files without this comment are not
overwritten or removed.Changed in version 2.7.3: sdist will read a MANIFEST file if no MANIFEST.in exists,
like it did before 2.7. See The MANIFEST.in template section for a syntax reference.
20
4.3.1 Principle
The manifest template has one command per line, where each command specifies a set of files to include or
exclude from the source distribution. For an example, lets look at the Distutils own manifest template:
include *.txt
recursive-include examples *.txt *.py
prune examples/sample?/build
The meanings should be fairly clear: include all files in the distribution root matching *.txt, all files
anywhere under the examples directory matching *.txt or *.py, and exclude all directories matching
examples/sample?/build. All of this is done after the standard include set, so you can exclude files
from the standard set with explicit instructions in the manifest template. (Or, you can use the --no-defaults
option to disable the standard set entirely.)
The order of commands in the manifest template matters: initially, we have the list of default files as described
above, and each command in the template adds to or removes from that list of files. Once we have fully processed
the manifest template, we remove files that should not be included in the source distribution:
all files in the Distutils build tree (default build/)
all files in directories named RCS, CVS, .svn, .hg, .git, .bzr or _darcs
Now we have our complete list of files, which is written to the manifest for future reference, and then used to build
the source distribution archive(s).
You can disable the default set of included files with the --no-defaults option, and you can disable the
standard exclude set with --no-prune.
Following the Distutils own manifest template, lets trace how the sdist command builds the list of files to include
in the Distutils source distribution:
1. include all Python source files in the distutils and distutils/command subdirectories (because
packages corresponding to those two directories were mentioned in the packages option in the setup
scriptsee section Writing the Setup Script)
2. include README.txt, setup.py, and setup.cfg (standard files)
3. include test/test*.py (standard files)
4. include *.txt in the distribution root (this will find README.txt a second time, but such redundancies
are weeded out later)
5. include anything matching *.txt or *.py in the sub-tree under examples,
6. exclude all files in the sub-trees starting at directories matching examples/sample?/buildthis may
exclude files included by the previous two steps, so its important that the prune command in the manifest
template comes after the recursive-include command
7. exclude the entire build tree, and any RCS, CVS, .svn, .hg, .git, .bzr and _darcs directories
Just like in the setup script, file and directory names in the manifest template should always be slash-separated; the
Distutils will take care of converting them to the standard representation on your platform. That way, the manifest
template is portable across operating systems.
4.3.2 Commands
The manifest template commands are:
21
Command
include pat1 pat2 ...
exclude pat1 pat2 ...
recursive-include dir pat1
pat2 ...
recursive-exclude dir pat1
pat2 ...
global-include pat1 pat2 ...
global-exclude pat1 pat2 ...
prune dir
graft dir
Description
include all files matching any of the listed patterns
exclude all files matching any of the listed patterns
include all files under dir matching any of the listed patterns
exclude all files under dir matching any of the listed patterns
include all files anywhere in the source tree matching & any of the
listed patterns
exclude all files anywhere in the source tree matching & any of the
listed patterns
exclude all files under dir
include all files under dir
The patterns here are Unix-style glob patterns: * matches any sequence of regular filename characters, ?
matches any single regular filename character, and [range] matches any of the characters in range (e.g., a-z,
a-zA-Z, a-f0-9_.). The definition of regular filename character is platform-specific: on Unix it is anything
except slash; on Windows anything except backslash or colon.
22
CHAPTER
FIVE
23
Format
gztar
ztar
tar
zip
rpm
pkgtool
sdux
wininst
msi
Description
gzipped tar file (.tar.gz)
compressed tar file (.tar.Z)
tar file (.tar)
zip file (.zip)
RPM
Solaris pkgtool
HP-UX swinstall
self-extracting ZIP file for Windows
Microsoft Installer.
Notes
(1),(3)
(3)
(3)
(2),(4)
(5)
(4)
Notes:
1. default on Unix
2. default on Windows
3. requires external utilities: tar and possibly one of gzip, bzip2, or compress
4. requires either external zip utility or zipfile module (part of the standard Python library since Python
1.6)
5. requires external rpm utility, version 3.0.4 or better (use rpm --version to find out which version you
have)
You dont have to use the bdist command with the --formats option; you can also use the command that
directly implements the format youre interested in. Some of these bdist sub-commands actually generate
several similar formats; for instance, the bdist_dumb command generates all the dumb archive formats (tar,
ztar, gztar, and zip), and bdist_rpm generates both binary and source RPMs. The bdist sub-commands,
and the formats generated by each, are:
Command
bdist_dumb
bdist_rpm
bdist_wininst
bdist_msi
Formats
tar, ztar, gztar, zip
rpm, srpm
wininst
msi
24
Creating RPM packages is driven by a .spec file, much as using the Distutils is driven by the setup script.
To make your life easier, the bdist_rpm command normally creates a .spec file based on the information you
supply in the setup script, on the command line, and in any Distutils configuration files. Various options and
sections in the .spec file are derived from options in the setup script as follows:
RPM .spec file option or
section
Name
Summary (in preamble)
Version
Vendor
Copyright
Url
%description (section)
Additionally, there are many options in .spec files that dont have corresponding options in the setup script.
Most of these are handled through options to the bdist_rpm command as follows:
RPM .spec file option or section
Release
Group
Vendor
Packager
Provides
Requires
Conflicts
Obsoletes
Distribution
BuildRequires
Icon
bdist_rpm option
release
group
vendor
packager
provides
requires
conflicts
obsoletes
distribution_name
build_requires
icon
default value
1
Development/Libraries
(see above)
(none)
(none)
(none)
(none)
(none)
(none)
(none)
(none)
Obviously, supplying even a few of these options on the command-line would be tedious and error-prone, so its
usually best to put them in the setup configuration file, setup.cfgsee section Writing the Setup Configuration
File. If you distribute or package many Python module distributions, you might want to put options that apply to
all of them in your personal Distutils configuration file (~/.pydistutils.cfg). If you want to temporarily
disable this file, you can pass the no-user-cfg option to setup.py.
There are three steps to building a binary RPM package, all of which are handled automatically by the Distutils:
1. create a .spec file, which describes the package (analogous to the Distutils setup script; in fact, much of
the information in the setup script winds up in the .spec file)
2. create the source RPM
3. create the binary RPM (which may or may not contain binary code, depending on whether your module
distribution contains Python extensions)
Normally, RPM bundles the last two steps together; when you use the Distutils, all three steps are typically bundled
together.
If you wish, you can separate these three steps. You can use the --spec-only option to make bdist_rpm
just create the .spec file and exit; in this case, the .spec file will be written to the distribution directory
normally dist/, but customizable with the --dist-dir option. (Normally, the .spec file winds up deep in
the build tree, in a temporary directory created by bdist_rpm.)
25
Since the metadata is taken from the setup script, creating Windows installers is usually as easy as running:
python setup.py bdist_wininst
or the bdist command with the --formats option:
python setup.py bdist --formats=wininst
If you have a pure module distribution (only containing pure Python modules and packages), the resulting installer
will be version independent and have a name like foo-1.0.win32.exe. These installers can even be created
on Unix platforms or Mac OS X.
If you have a non-pure distribution, the extensions can only be created on a Windows platform, and will be Python
version dependent. The installer filename will reflect this and now has the form foo-1.0.win32-py2.0.exe.
You have to create a separate installer for every Python version you want to support.
The installer will try to compile pure modules into bytecode after installation on the target system in normal and
optimizing mode. If you dont want this to happen for some reason, you can run the bdist_wininst command with
the --no-target-compile and/or the --no-target-optimize option.
By default the installer will display the cool Python Powered logo when it is run, but you can also supply your
own 152x261 bitmap which must be a Windows .bmp file with the --bitmap option.
The installer will also display a large title on the desktop background window when it is run, which is constructed
from the name of your distribution and the version number. This can be changed to another text by using the
--title option.
The installer file will be written to the distribution directory normally dist/, but customizable with the
--dist-dir option.
26
This script will be run at installation time on the target system after all the files have been copied, with argv[1]
set to -install, and again at uninstallation time before the files are removed with argv[1] set to -remove.
The installation script runs embedded in the windows installer, every output (sys.stdout, sys.stderr) is
redirected into a buffer and will be displayed in the GUI after the script has finished.
Some functions especially useful in this context are available as additional built-in functions in the installation
script.
directory_created(path)
file_created(path)
These functions should be called when a directory or file is created by the postinstall script at installation
time. It will register path with the uninstaller, so that it will be removed when the distribution is uninstalled.
To be safe, directories are only removed if they are empty.
get_special_folder_path(csidl_string)
This function can be used to retrieve special folder locations on Windows like the Start Menu or the Desktop.
It returns the full path to the folder. csidl_string must be one of the following strings:
"CSIDL_APPDATA"
"CSIDL_COMMON_STARTMENU"
"CSIDL_STARTMENU"
"CSIDL_COMMON_DESKTOPDIRECTORY"
"CSIDL_DESKTOPDIRECTORY"
"CSIDL_COMMON_STARTUP"
"CSIDL_STARTUP"
"CSIDL_COMMON_PROGRAMS"
"CSIDL_PROGRAMS"
"CSIDL_FONTS"
If the folder cannot be retrieved, OSError is raised.
Which folders are available depends on the exact Windows version, and probably also the configuration.
For details refer to Microsofts documentation of the SHGetSpecialFolderPath() function.
create_shortcut(target, description, filename[, arguments[, workdir[, iconpath[, iconindex ]]]])
This function creates a shortcut. target is the path to the program to be started by the shortcut. description is
the description of the shortcut. filename is the title of the shortcut that the user will see. arguments specifies
the command line arguments, if any. workdir is the working directory for the program. iconpath is the file
containing the icon for the shortcut, and iconindex is the index of the icon in the file iconpath. Again, for
details consult the Microsoft documentation for the IShellLink interface.
27
28
CHAPTER
SIX
29
30
password: <password>
[other]
repository: http://example.com/pypi
username: <username>
password: <password>
register can then be called with the -r option to point the repository to work with:
python setup.py register -r http://example.com/pypi
For convenience, the name of the section that describes the repository may also be used:
python setup.py register -r other
31
32
CHAPTER
SEVEN
EXAMPLES
This chapter provides a number of basic examples to help get started with distutils. Additional information about
using distutils can be found in the Distutils Cookbook.
See Also:
Distutils Cookbook Collection of recipes showing how to achieve more control over distutils.
33
You can put module source files into another directory, but if you have enough modules to do that, its probably
easier to specify modules by package rather than listing them individually.
foo.py
bar.py
then you would still specify the root package, but you have to tell the Distutils where source files in the root
package live:
from distutils.core import setup
setup(name=foobar,
version=1.0,
package_dir={: src},
packages=[],
)
More typically, though, you will want to distribute multiple modules in the same package (or in sub-packages).
For example, if the foo and bar modules belong in package foobar, one way to layout your source tree is
<root>/
setup.py
foobar/
__init__.py
foo.py
bar.py
This is in fact the default layout expected by the Distutils, and the one that requires the least work to describe in
your setup script:
from distutils.core import setup
setup(name=foobar,
version=1.0,
packages=[foobar],
)
If you want to put modules in directories not named for their package, then you need to use the package_dir
option again. For example, if the src directory holds modules in the foobar package:
<root>/
setup.py
src/
__init__.py
34
Chapter 7. Examples
foo.py
bar.py
an appropriate setup script would be
from distutils.core import setup
setup(name=foobar,
version=1.0,
package_dir={foobar: src},
packages=[foobar],
)
Or, you might put modules from your main package right in the distribution root:
<root>/
setup.py
__init__.py
foo.py
bar.py
in which case your setup script would be
from distutils.core import setup
setup(name=foobar,
version=1.0,
package_dir={foobar: },
packages=[foobar],
)
(The empty string also stands for the current directory.)
If you have sub-packages, they must be explicitly listed in packages, but any entries in package_dir automatically extend to sub-packages. (In other words, the Distutils does not scan your source tree, trying to figure
out which directories correspond to Python packages by looking for __init__.py files.) Thus, if the default
layout grows a sub-package:
<root>/
setup.py
foobar/
__init__.py
foo.py
bar.py
subfoo/
__init__.py
blah.py
then the corresponding setup script would be
from distutils.core import setup
setup(name=foobar,
version=1.0,
packages=[foobar, foobar.subfoo],
)
(Again, the empty string in package_dir stands for the current directory.)
35
<root>/
setup.py
foo.c
If the foo extension belongs in the root package, the setup script for this could be
from distutils.core import setup
from distutils.extension import Extension
setup(name=foobar,
version=1.0,
ext_modules=[Extension(foo, [foo.c])],
)
If the extension actually belongs in a package, say foopkg, then
With exactly the same source tree layout, this extension can be put in the foopkg package simply by changing
the name of the extension:
from distutils.core import setup
from distutils.extension import Extension
setup(name=foobar,
version=1.0,
ext_modules=[Extension(foopkg.foo, [foo.c])],
)
36
Chapter 7. Examples
CHAPTER
EIGHT
EXTENDING DISTUTILS
Distutils can be extended in various ways. Most extensions take the form of new commands or replacements
for existing commands. New commands may be written to support new types of platform-specific packaging, for
example, while replacements for existing commands may be made to modify details of how the command operates
on a package.
Most extensions of the distutils are made within setup.py scripts that want to modify existing commands; many
simply add a few file extensions that should be copied into packages in addition to .py files as a convenience.
Most distutils command implementations are subclasses of the distutils.cmd.Command class. New commands may directly inherit from Command, while replacements often derive from Command indirectly, directly
subclassing the command they are replacing. Commands are required to derive from Command.
37
This new option can be used to add any number of packages to the list of packages searched for command implementations; multiple package names should be separated by commas. When not specified, the
search is only performed in the distutils.command package. When setup.py is run with the option --command-packages distcmds,buildcmds, however, the packages distutils.command,
distcmds, and buildcmds will be searched in that order. New commands are expected to be implemented in modules of the same name as the command by classes sharing the same name. Given the
example command line option above, the command bdist_openpkg could be implemented by the class
distcmds.bdist_openpkg.bdist_openpkg or buildcmds.bdist_openpkg.bdist_openpkg.
38
CHAPTER
NINE
COMMAND REFERENCE
9.1 Installing modules: the install command family
The install command ensures that the build commands have been run and then runs the subcommands install_lib,
install_data and install_scripts.
9.1.1 install_data
This command installs all data files provided with the distribution.
9.1.2 install_scripts
This command installs all (Python) scripts in the distribution.
39
40
CHAPTER
TEN
API REFERENCE
10.1 distutils.core Core Distutils functionality
The distutils.core module is the only module that needs to be installed to use the Distutils. It provides the
setup() (which is called from the setup script). Indirectly provides the distutils.dist.Distribution
and distutils.cmd.Command class.
distutils.core.setup(arguments)
The basic do-everything function that does most everything you could ever ask for from a Distutils method.
The setup function takes a large number of arguments. These are laid out in the following table.
41
argument name
name
version
url
download_url
packages
py_modules
scripts
ext_modules
value
The name of the package
The version number of the package; see
distutils.version
A single line describing the package
Longer description of the package
The name of the package author
The email address of the package author
The name of the current maintainer, if different from the
author. Note that if the maintainer is provided, distutils
will use it as the author in PKG-INFO
The email address of the current maintainer, if different
from the author
A URL for the package (homepage)
A URL to download the package
A list of Python packages that distutils will manipulate
A list of Python modules that distutils will manipulate
A list of standalone script files to be built and installed
A list of Python extensions to be built
classifiers
distclass
script_name
description
long_description
author
author_email
maintainer
maintainer_email
script_args
options
license
keywords
platforms
cmdclass
data_files
package_dir
type
a string
a string
a string
a string
a string
a string
a string
a string
a string
a string
a list of strings
a list of strings
a list of strings
a list of instances of
distutils.core.Extension
a list of strings; valid
classifiers are listed
on PyPI.
a subclass of
distutils.core.Distribution
a string
a list of strings
a dictionary
a string
a list of strings or a
comma-separated
string
a list of strings or a
comma-separated
string
a dictionary
a list
a dictionary
42
value
init
config
commandline
run
description
Stop after the Distribution instance has been created and populated with the
keyword arguments to setup()
Stop after config files have been parsed (and their data stored in the Distribution
instance)
Stop after the command-line (sys.argv[1:] or script_args) have been parsed (and
the data stored in the Distribution instance.)
Stop after all commands have been run (the same as if setup() had been called in
the usual way). This is the default value.
In addition, the distutils.core module exposed a number of classes that live elsewhere.
Extension from distutils.extension
Command from distutils.cmd
Distribution from distutils.dist
A short description of each of these follows, but see the relevant module for the full reference.
class distutils.core.Extension
The Extension class describes a single C or C++extension module in a setup script. It accepts the following
keyword arguments in its constructor
43
argument name
name
sources
include_dirs
define_macros
undef_macros
library_dirs
libraries
runtime_library_dirs
extra_objects
extra_compile_args
extra_link_args
export_symbols
depends
language
value
the full name of the extension, including any packages ie.
not a filename or pathname, but Python dotted name
list of source filenames, relative to the distribution root
(where the setup script lives), in Unix form (slash- separated)
for portability. Source files may be C, C++, SWIG (.i),
platform-specific resource files, or whatever else is
recognized by the build_ext command as source for a Python
extension.
list of directories to search for C/C++ header files (in Unix
form for portability)
list of macros to define; each macro is defined using a 2-tuple
(name, value), where value is either the string to define
it to or None to define it without a particular value
(equivalent of #define FOO in source or -DFOO on Unix
C compiler command line)
list of macros to undefine explicitly
list of directories to search for C/C++ libraries at link time
list of library names (not filenames or paths) to link against
list of directories to search for C/C++ libraries at run time
(for shared extensions, this is when the extension is loaded)
list of extra files to link with (eg. object files not implied by
sources, static library that must be explicitly specified,
binary resource files, etc.)
any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use
when compiling the source files in sources. For platforms
and compilers where a command line makes sense, this is
typically a list of command-line arguments, but for other
platforms it could be anything.
any extra platform- and compiler-specific information to use
when linking object files together to create the extension (or
to create a new static Python interpreter). Similar
interpretation as for extra_compile_args.
list of symbols to be exported from a shared extension. Not
used on all platforms, and not generally necessary for Python
extensions, which typically export exactly one symbol: init
+ extension_name.
list of files that the extension depends on
extension language (i.e. c, c++, objc). Will be
detected from the source extensions if not provided.
type
a string
a list of strings
a list of strings
a list of tuples
a list of strings
a list of strings
a list of strings
a list of strings
a list of strings
a list of strings
a list of strings
a list of strings
a list of strings
a string
class distutils.core.Distribution
A Distribution describes how to build, install and package up a Python software package.
See the setup() function for a list of keyword arguments accepted by the Distribution constructor.
setup() creates a Distribution instance.
class distutils.core.Command
A Command class (or rather, an instance of one of its subclasses) implement a single distutils command.
44
45
itself: the actual filename will be inferred by the linker, the compiler, or the compiler class (depending
on the platform).
The linker will be instructed to link against libraries in the order they were supplied to
add_library() and/or set_libraries(). It is perfectly valid to duplicate library names;
the linker will be instructed to link against libraries as many times as they are mentioned.
set_libraries(libnames)
Set the list of libraries to be included in all links driven by this compiler object to libnames (a list of
strings). This does not affect any standard system libraries that the linker may include by default.
add_library_dir(dir)
Add dir to the list of directories that will be searched for libraries specified to add_library()
and set_libraries(). The linker will be instructed to search for libraries in the order they are
supplied to add_library_dir() and/or set_library_dirs().
set_library_dirs(dirs)
Set the list of library search directories to dirs (a list of strings). This does not affect any standard
library search path that the linker may search by default.
add_runtime_library_dir(dir)
Add dir to the list of directories that will be searched for shared libraries at runtime.
set_runtime_library_dirs(dirs)
Set the list of directories to search for shared libraries at runtime to dirs (a list of strings). This does
not affect any standard search path that the runtime linker may search by default.
define_macro(name[, value=None ])
Define a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by this compiler object. The optional parameter value should be a string; if it is not supplied, then the macro will be defined without an explicit
value and the exact outcome depends on the compiler used.
undefine_macro(name)
Undefine a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by this compiler object. If the same macro
is defined by define_macro() and undefined by undefine_macro() the last call takes precedence (including multiple redefinitions or undefinitions). If the macro is redefined/undefined on a
per-compilation basis (ie. in the call to compile()), then that takes precedence.
add_link_object(object)
Add object to the list of object files (or analogues, such as explicitly named library files or the output
of resource compilers) to be included in every link driven by this compiler object.
set_link_objects(objects)
Set the list of object files (or analogues) to be included in every link to objects. This does not affect
any standard object files that the linker may include by default (such as system libraries).
The following methods implement methods for autodetection of compiler options, providing some functionality similar to GNU autoconf.
detect_language(sources)
Detect the language of a given file, or list of files. Uses the instance attributes language_map (a
dictionary), and language_order (a list) to do the job.
find_library_file(dirs, lib[, debug=0 ])
Search the specified list of directories for a static or shared library file lib and return the full path to
that file. If debug is true, look for a debugging version (if that makes sense on the current platform).
Return None if lib wasnt found in any of the specified directories.
has_function(funcname[,
includes=None,
include_dirs=None,
libraries=None,
library_dirs=None ])
Return a boolean indicating whether funcname is supported on the current platform. The optional
arguments can be used to augment the compilation environment by providing additional include files
and paths and libraries and paths.
library_dir_option(dir)
Return the compiler option to add dir to the list of directories searched for libraries.
46
library_option(lib)
Return the compiler option to add dir to the list of libraries linked into the shared library or executable.
runtime_library_dir_option(dir)
Return the compiler option to add dir to the list of directories searched for runtime libraries.
set_executables(**args)
Define the executables (and options for them) that will be run to perform the various stages of compilation. The exact set of executables that may be specified here depends on the compiler class (via the
executables class attribute), but most will have:
attribute
compiler
linker_so
linker_exe
archiver
description
the C/C++ compiler
linker used to create shared objects and libraries
linker used to create binary executables
static library creator
On platforms with a command-line (Unix, DOS/Windows), each of these is a string that will be split
into executable name and (optional) list of arguments. (Splitting the string is done similarly to how
Unix shells operate: words are delimited by spaces, but quotes and backslashes can override this. See
distutils.util.split_quoted().)
The following methods invoke stages in the build process.
compile(sources[, output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None ])
Compile one or more source files. Generates object files (e.g. transforms a .c file to a .o file.)
sources must be a list of filenames, most likely C/C++ files, but in reality anything that can be handled by a particular compiler and compiler class (eg. MSVCCompiler can handle resource files in
sources). Return a list of object filenames, one per source filename in sources. Depending on the implementation, not all source files will necessarily be compiled, but all corresponding object filenames
will be returned.
If output_dir is given, object files will be put under it, while retaining their original path component.
That is, foo/bar.c normally compiles to foo/bar.o (for a Unix implementation); if output_dir
is build, then it would compile to build/foo/bar.o.
macros, if given, must be a list of macro definitions. A macro definition is either a (name,
value) 2-tuple or a (name,) 1-tuple. The former defines a macro; if the value is None, the
macro is defined without an explicit value. The 1-tuple case undefines a macro. Later definitions/redefinitions/undefinitions take precedence.
include_dirs, if given, must be a list of strings, the directories to add to the default include file search
path for this compilation only.
debug is a boolean; if true, the compiler will be instructed to output debug symbols in (or alongside)
the object file(s).
extra_preargs and extra_postargs are implementation-dependent. On platforms that have the notion
of a command-line (e.g. Unix, DOS/Windows), they are most likely lists of strings: extra commandline arguments to prepend/append to the compiler command line. On other platforms, consult the
implementation class documentation. In any event, they are intended as an escape hatch for those
occasions when the abstract compiler framework doesnt cut the mustard.
depends, if given, is a list of filenames that all targets depend on. If a source file is older than any file
in depends, then the source file will be recompiled. This supports dependency tracking, but only at a
coarse granularity.
Raises CompileError on failure.
create_static_lib(objects, output_libname[, output_dir=None, debug=0, target_lang=None
])
Link a bunch of stuff together to create a static library file. The bunch of stuff consists of the list
of object files supplied as objects, the extra object files supplied to add_link_object()
47
add_library()
and/or
output_libname should be a library name, not a filename; the filename will be inferred from the library
name. output_dir is the directory where the library file will be put.
debug is a boolean; if true, debugging information will be included in the library (note that on most
platforms, it is the compile step where this matters: the debug flag is included here just for consistency).
target_lang is the target language for which the given objects are being compiled. This allows specific
linkage time treatment of certain languages.
Raises LibError on failure.
link(target_desc,
objects,
output_filename[,
output_dir=None,
libraries=None,
brary_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None, debug=0,
tra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None, target_lang=None ])
Link a bunch of stuff together to create an executable or shared library file.
liex-
The bunch of stuff consists of the list of object files supplied as objects. output_filename should be
a filename. If output_dir is supplied, output_filename is relative to it (i.e. output_filename can provide
directory components if needed).
libraries is a list of libraries to link against. These are library names, not filenames, since theyre translated into filenames in a platform-specific way (eg. foo becomes libfoo.a on Unix and foo.lib
on DOS/Windows). However, they can include a directory component, which means the linker will
look in that specific directory rather than searching all the normal locations.
library_dirs, if supplied, should be a list of directories to search for libraries that were specified as
bare library names (ie. no directory component). These are on top of the system default and those
supplied to add_library_dir() and/or set_library_dirs(). runtime_library_dirs is a list
of directories that will be embedded into the shared library and used to search for other shared libraries
that *it* depends on at run-time. (This may only be relevant on Unix.)
export_symbols is a list of symbols that the shared library will export. (This appears to be relevant
only on Windows.)
debug is as for compile() and create_static_lib(), with the slight distinction that it actually matters on most platforms (as opposed to create_static_lib(), which includes a debug
flag mostly for forms sake).
extra_preargs and extra_postargs are as for compile() (except of course that they supply commandline arguments for the particular linker being used).
target_lang is the target language for which the given objects are being compiled. This allows specific
linkage time treatment of certain languages.
Raises LinkError on failure.
link_executable(objects,
output_progname[,
output_dir=None,
libraries=None,
library_dirs=None,
runtime_library_dirs=None,
debug=0,
extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, target_lang=None ])
Link an executable. output_progname is the name of the file executable, while objects are a list of
object filenames to link in. Other arguments are as for the link() method.
link_shared_lib(objects,
output_libname[,
output_dir=None,
libraries=None,
library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None,
debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, build_temp=None,
target_lang=None ])
Link a shared library. output_libname is the name of the output library, while objects is a list of object
filenames to link in. Other arguments are as for the link() method.
link_shared_object(objects, output_filename[, output_dir=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None, runtime_library_dirs=None, export_symbols=None,
debug=0,
extra_preargs=None,
extra_postargs=None,
build_temp=None, target_lang=None ])
48
Link a shared object. output_filename is the name of the shared object that will be created, while
objects is a list of object filenames to link in. Other arguments are as for the link() method.
preprocess(source[,
output_file=None,
macros=None,
include_dirs=None,
extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None ])
Preprocess a single C/C++ source file, named in source. Output will be written to file named output_file, or stdout if output_file not supplied. macros is a list of macro definitions as for compile(),
which will augment the macros set with define_macro() and undefine_macro(). include_dirs is a list of directory names that will be added to the default list, in the same way as
add_include_dir().
Raises PreprocessError on failure.
The following utility methods are defined by the CCompiler class, for use by the various concrete subclasses.
executable_filename(basename[, strip_dir=0, output_dir= ])
Returns the filename of the executable for the given basename. Typically for non-Windows platforms
this is the same as the basename, while Windows will get a .exe added.
library_filename(libname[, lib_type=static, strip_dir=0, output_dir= ])
Returns the filename for the given library name on the current platform. On Unix a library with lib_type
of static will typically be of the form liblibname.a, while a lib_type of dynamic will
be of the form liblibname.so.
object_filenames(source_filenames[, strip_dir=0, output_dir= ])
Returns the name of the object files for the given source files. source_filenames should be a list of
filenames.
shared_object_filename(basename[, strip_dir=0, output_dir= ])
Returns the name of a shared object file for the given file name basename.
execute(func, args[, msg=None, level=1 ])
Invokes distutils.util.execute(). This method invokes a Python function func with the
given arguments args, after logging and taking into account the dry_run flag.
spawn(cmd)
Invokes distutils.util.spawn(). This invokes an external process to run the given command.
mkpath(name[, mode=511 ])
Invokes distutils.dir_util.mkpath(). This creates a directory and any missing ancestor
directories.
move_file(src, dst)
Invokes distutils.file_util.move_file(). Renames src to dst.
announce(msg[, level=1 ])
Write a message using distutils.log.debug().
warn(msg)
Write a warning message msg to standard error.
debug_print(msg)
If the debug flag is set on this CCompiler instance, print msg to standard output, otherwise do
nothing.
49
50
51
to dst. Return the list of files that were copied or might have been copied, using their output name. The
return value is unaffected by update or dry_run: it is simply the list of all files under src, with the names
changed to be under dst.
preserve_mode and preserve_times are the same as for distutils.file_util.copy_file(); note
that they only apply to regular files, not to directories. If preserve_symlinks is true, symlinks will be copied
as symlinks (on platforms that support them!); otherwise (the default), the destination of the symlink will
be copied. update and verbose are the same as for copy_file().
Files in src that begin with .nfs are skipped (more information on these files is available in answer D2 of
the NFS FAQ page. Changed in version 2.7.4: NFS files are ignored.
distutils.dir_util.remove_tree(directory[, verbose=0, dry_run=0 ])
Recursively remove directory and all files and directories underneath it. Any errors are ignored (apart from
being reported to sys.stdout if verbose is true).
52
linux-alpha
solaris-2.6-sun4u
irix-5.3
irix64-6.2
For non-POSIX platforms, currently just returns sys.platform.
For Mac OS X systems the OS version reflects the minimal version on which binaries will run (that is, the
value of MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET during the build of Python), not the OS version of the current
system.
For universal binary builds on Mac OS X the architecture value reflects the univeral binary status instead of
the architecture of the current processor. For 32-bit universal binaries the architecture is fat, for 64-bit universal binaries the architecture is fat64, and for 4-way universal binaries the architecture is universal.
Starting from Python 2.7 and Python 3.2 the architecture fat3 is used for a 3-way universal build (ppc,
i386, x86_64) and intel is used for a univeral build with the i386 and x86_64 architectures
Examples of returned values on Mac OS X:
macosx-10.3-ppc
macosx-10.3-fat
macosx-10.5-universal
macosx-10.6-intel
distutils.util.convert_path(pathname)
Return pathname as a name that will work on the native filesystem, i.e. split it on / and put it back
together again using the current directory separator. Needed because filenames in the setup script are always
supplied in Unix style, and have to be converted to the local convention before we can actually use them
in the filesystem. Raises ValueError on non-Unix-ish systems if pathname either starts or ends with a
slash.
distutils.util.change_root(new_root, pathname)
Return pathname with new_root prepended.
If pathname is relative, this is equivalent to
os.path.join(new_root,pathname) Otherwise, it requires making pathname relative and then
joining the two, which is tricky on DOS/Windows.
distutils.util.check_environ()
Ensure that os.environ has all the environment variables we guarantee that users can use in config files,
command-line options, etc. Currently this includes:
HOME - users home directory (Unix only)
PLAT - description of the current platform, including hardware and OS (see get_platform())
distutils.util.subst_vars(s, local_vars)
Perform shell/Perl-style variable substitution on s. Every occurrence of $ followed by a name is considered
a variable, and variable is substituted by the value found in the local_vars dictionary, or in os.environ
if its not in local_vars. os.environ is first checked/augmented to guarantee that it contains certain values: see check_environ(). Raise ValueError for any variables not found in either local_vars or
os.environ.
Note that this is not a fully-fledged string interpolation function. A valid $variable can consist only of
upper and lower case letters, numbers and an underscore. No { } or ( ) style quoting is available.
distutils.util.split_quoted(s)
Split a string up according to Unix shell-like rules for quotes and backslashes. In short: words are delimited
by spaces, as long as those spaces are not escaped by a backslash, or inside a quoted string. Single and
double quotes are equivalent, and the quote characters can be backslash-escaped. The backslash is stripped
from any two-character escape sequence, leaving only the escaped character. The quote characters are
stripped from any quoted string. Returns a list of words.
53
54
55
56
the platform-dependent include directory is returned; if false or omitted, the platform-independent directory
is returned. If prefix is given, it is used as either the prefix instead of PREFIX, or as the exec-prefix instead
of EXEC_PREFIX if plat_specific is true. If standard_lib is true, the directory for the standard library is
returned rather than the directory for the installation of third-party extensions.
The following function is only intended for use within the distutils package.
distutils.sysconfig.customize_compiler(compiler)
Do any platform-specific customization of a distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler instance.
This function is only needed on Unix at this time, but should be called consistently to support forwardcompatibility. It inserts the information that varies across Unix flavors and is stored in Pythons Makefile.
This information includes the selected compiler, compiler and linker options, and the extension used by the
linker for shared objects.
This function is even more special-purpose, and should only be used from Pythons own build procedures.
distutils.sysconfig.set_python_build()
Inform the distutils.sysconfig module that it is being used as part of the build process for Python.
This changes a lot of relative locations for files, allowing them to be located in the build area rather than in
an installed Python.
join_lines
collapse_join
description
strip from # to end-of- line, as well as any whitespace leading up to
the #unless it is escaped by a backslash
strip leading whitespace from each line before returning it
strip trailing whitespace (including line terminator!) from each line
before returning it.
skip lines that are empty *after* stripping comments and whitespace. (If
both lstrip_ws and rstrip_ws are false, then some lines may consist of
solely whitespace: these will *not* be skipped, even if skip_blanks is
true.)
if a backslash is the last non-newline character on a line after stripping
comments and whitespace, join the following line to it to form one
logical line; if N consecutive lines end with a backslash, then N+1
physical lines will be joined to form one logical line.
strip leading whitespace from lines that are joined to their predecessor;
only matters if (join_lines and not lstrip_ws)
default
true
false
true
true
false
false
57
Note that since rstrip_ws can strip the trailing newline, the semantics of readline() must differ from
those of the built-in file objects readline() method! In particular, readline() returns None for
end-of-file: an empty string might just be a blank line (or an all-whitespace line), if rstrip_ws is true but
skip_blanks is not.
open(filename)
Open a new file filename. This overrides any file or filename constructor arguments.
close()
Close the current file and forget everything we know about it (including the filename and the current
line number).
warn(msg[, line=None ])
Print (to stderr) a warning message tied to the current logical line in the current file. If the current
logical line in the file spans multiple physical lines, the warning refers to the whole range, such as
"lines 3-5". If line is supplied, it overrides the current line number; it may be a list or tuple to
indicate a range of physical lines, or an integer for a single physical line.
readline()
Read and return a single logical line from the current file (or from an internal buffer if lines have
previously been unread with unreadline()). If the join_lines option is true, this may involve
reading multiple physical lines concatenated into a single string. Updates the current line number, so
calling warn() after readline() emits a warning about the physical line(s) just read. Returns
None on end-of-file, since the empty string can occur if rstrip_ws is true but strip_blanks is not.
readlines()
Read and return the list of all logical lines remaining in the current file. This updates the current line
number to the last line of the file.
unreadline(line)
Push line (a string) onto an internal buffer that will be checked by future readline() calls. Handy
for implementing a parser with line-at-a-time lookahead. Note that lines that are unread with
unreadline() are not subsequently re-cleansed (whitespace stripped, or whatever) when read with
readline(). If multiple calls are made to unreadline() before a call to readline(), the
lines will be returned most in most recent first order.
A new command lives in a module in the distutils.command package. There is a sample template in
that directory called command_template. Copy this file to a new module with the same name as the new
command youre implementing. This module should implement a class with the same name as the module (and
the command). So, for instance, to create the command peel_banana (so that users can run setup.py
peel_banana), youd copy command_template to distutils/command/peel_banana.py, then
edit it so that its implementing the class peel_banana, a subclass of distutils.cmd.Command.
Subclasses of Command must define the following methods.
Command.initialize_options()
Set default values for all the options that this command supports. Note that these defaults may be overridden
by other commands, by the setup script, by config files, or by the command-line. Thus, this is not the place
to code dependencies between options; generally, initialize_options() implementations are just a
bunch of self.foo = None assignments.
Command.finalize_options()
Set final values for all the options that this command supports. This is always called as late as possible, ie.
after any option assignments from the command-line or from other commands have been done. Thus, this
is the place to code option dependencies: if foo depends on bar, then it is safe to set foo from bar as long as
foo still has the same value it was assigned in initialize_options().
Command.run()
A commands raison detre: carry out the action it exists to perform, controlled by the options initialized
in initialize_options(), customized by other commands, the setup script, the command-line, and
config files, and finalized in finalize_options(). All terminal output and filesystem interaction
should be done by run().
Command.sub_commands
sub_commands formalizes the notion of a family of commands, e.g. install as the parent with subcommands install_lib, install_headers, etc. The parent of a family of commands defines
sub_commands as a class attribute; its a list of 2-tuples (command_name, predicate), with command_name a string and predicate a function, a string or None. predicate is a method of the parent command that determines whether the corresponding command is applicable in the current situation. (E.g.
install_headers is only applicable if we have any C header files to install.) If predicate is None, that
command is always applicable.
sub_commands is usually defined at the end of a class, because predicates can be methods of the class, so
they must already have been defined. The canonical example is the install command.
59
In most cases, the bdist_msi installer is a better choice than the bdist_wininst installer, because it
provides better support for Win64 platforms, allows administrators to perform non-interactive installations,
and allows installation through group policies.
60
61
62
APPENDIX
GLOSSARY
>>> The default Python prompt of the interactive shell. Often seen for code examples which can be executed
interactively in the interpreter.
... The default Python prompt of the interactive shell when entering code for an indented code block or within
a pair of matching left and right delimiters (parentheses, square brackets or curly braces).
2to3 A tool that tries to convert Python 2.x code to Python 3.x code by handling most of the incompatibilities
which can be detected by parsing the source and traversing the parse tree.
2to3 is available in the standard library as lib2to3; a standalone entry point is provided as
Tools/scripts/2to3. See 2to3-reference.
abstract base class Abstract base classes complement duck-typing by providing a way to define interfaces when
other techniques like hasattr() would be clumsy or subtly wrong (for example with magic methods).
ABCs introduce virtual subclasses, which are classes that dont inherit from a class but are still recognized
by isinstance() and issubclass(); see the abc module documentation. Python comes with many
built-in ABCs for data structures (in the collections module), numbers (in the numbers module), and
streams (in the io module). You can create your own ABCs with the abc module.
argument A value passed to a function (or method) when calling the function. There are two types of arguments:
keyword argument: an argument preceded by an identifier (e.g. name=) in a function call or passed
as a value in a dictionary preceded by **. For example, 3 and 5 are both keyword arguments in the
following calls to complex():
complex(real=3, imag=5)
complex(**{real: 3, imag: 5})
positional argument: an argument that is not a keyword argument. Positional arguments can appear
at the beginning of an argument list and/or be passed as elements of an iterable preceded by *. For
example, 3 and 5 are both positional arguments in the following calls:
complex(3, 5)
complex(*(3, 5))
Arguments are assigned to the named local variables in a function body. See the calls section for the rules
governing this assignment. Syntactically, any expression can be used to represent an argument; the evaluated
value is assigned to the local variable.
See also the parameter glossary entry and the FAQ question on the difference between arguments and
parameters.
attribute A value associated with an object which is referenced by name using dotted expressions. For example,
if an object o has an attribute a it would be referenced as o.a.
BDFL Benevolent Dictator For Life, a.k.a. Guido van Rossum, Pythons creator.
bytes-like object An object that supports the buffer protocol, like str, bytearray or memoryview. Byteslike objects can be used for various operations that expect binary data, such as compression, saving to a
binary file or sending over a socket. Some operations need the binary data to be mutable, in which case not
all bytes-like objects can apply.
63
bytecode Python source code is compiled into bytecode, the internal representation of a Python program in
the CPython interpreter. The bytecode is also cached in .pyc and .pyo files so that executing the same
file is faster the second time (recompilation from source to bytecode can be avoided). This intermediate
language is said to run on a virtual machine that executes the machine code corresponding to each bytecode.
Do note that bytecodes are not expected to work between different Python virtual machines, nor to be stable
between Python releases.
A list of bytecode instructions can be found in the documentation for the dis module.
class A template for creating user-defined objects. Class definitions normally contain method definitions which
operate on instances of the class.
classic class Any class which does not inherit from object. See new-style class. Classic classes have been
removed in Python 3.
coercion The implicit conversion of an instance of one type to another during an operation which involves
two arguments of the same type. For example, int(3.15) converts the floating point number to the
integer 3, but in 3+4.5, each argument is of a different type (one int, one float), and both must be
converted to the same type before they can be added or it will raise a TypeError. Coercion between
two operands can be performed with the coerce built-in function; thus, 3+4.5 is equivalent to calling operator.add(*coerce(3, 4.5)) and results in operator.add(3.0, 4.5). Without
coercion, all arguments of even compatible types would have to be normalized to the same value by the
programmer, e.g., float(3)+4.5 rather than just 3+4.5.
complex number An extension of the familiar real number system in which all numbers are expressed as a sum
of a real part and an imaginary part. Imaginary numbers are real multiples of the imaginary unit (the square
root of -1), often written i in mathematics or j in engineering. Python has built-in support for complex
numbers, which are written with this latter notation; the imaginary part is written with a j suffix, e.g., 3+1j.
To get access to complex equivalents of the math module, use cmath. Use of complex numbers is a fairly
advanced mathematical feature. If youre not aware of a need for them, its almost certain you can safely
ignore them.
context manager An object which controls the environment seen in a with statement by defining
__enter__() and __exit__() methods. See PEP 343.
CPython The canonical implementation of the Python programming language, as distributed on python.org. The
term CPython is used when necessary to distinguish this implementation from others such as Jython or
IronPython.
decorator A function returning another function, usually applied as a function transformation using the
@wrapper syntax. Common examples for decorators are classmethod() and staticmethod().
The decorator syntax is merely syntactic sugar, the following two function definitions are semantically
equivalent:
def f(...):
...
f = staticmethod(f)
@staticmethod
def f(...):
...
The same concept exists for classes, but is less commonly used there. See the documentation for function
definitions and class definitions for more about decorators.
descriptor Any new-style object which defines the methods __get__(), __set__(), or __delete__().
When a class attribute is a descriptor, its special binding behavior is triggered upon attribute lookup. Normally, using a.b to get, set or delete an attribute looks up the object named b in the class dictionary for a,
but if b is a descriptor, the respective descriptor method gets called. Understanding descriptors is a key to
a deep understanding of Python because they are the basis for many features including functions, methods,
properties, class methods, static methods, and reference to super classes.
For more information about descriptors methods, see descriptors.
64
Appendix A. Glossary
dictionary An associative array, where arbitrary keys are mapped to values. The keys can be any object with
__hash__() and __eq__() methods. Called a hash in Perl.
docstring A string literal which appears as the first expression in a class, function or module. While ignored
when the suite is executed, it is recognized by the compiler and put into the __doc__ attribute of the
enclosing class, function or module. Since it is available via introspection, it is the canonical place for
documentation of the object.
duck-typing A programming style which does not look at an objects type to determine if it has the right interface; instead, the method or attribute is simply called or used (If it looks like a duck and quacks like
a duck, it must be a duck.) By emphasizing interfaces rather than specific types, well-designed code improves its flexibility by allowing polymorphic substitution. Duck-typing avoids tests using type() or
isinstance(). (Note, however, that duck-typing can be complemented with abstract base classes.)
Instead, it typically employs hasattr() tests or EAFP programming.
EAFP Easier to ask for forgiveness than permission. This common Python coding style assumes the existence
of valid keys or attributes and catches exceptions if the assumption proves false. This clean and fast style
is characterized by the presence of many try and except statements. The technique contrasts with the
LBYL style common to many other languages such as C.
expression A piece of syntax which can be evaluated to some value. In other words, an expression is an accumulation of expression elements like literals, names, attribute access, operators or function calls which
all return a value. In contrast to many other languages, not all language constructs are expressions. There
are also statements which cannot be used as expressions, such as print or if. Assignments are also
statements, not expressions.
extension module A module written in C or C++, using Pythons C API to interact with the core and with user
code.
file object An object exposing a file-oriented API (with methods such as read() or write()) to an underlying
resource. Depending on the way it was created, a file object can mediate access to a real on-disk file or to
another type of storage or communication device (for example standard input/output, in-memory buffers,
sockets, pipes, etc.). File objects are also called file-like objects or streams.
There are actually three categories of file objects: raw binary files, buffered binary files and text files. Their
interfaces are defined in the io module. The canonical way to create a file object is by using the open()
function.
file-like object A synonym for file object.
finder An object that tries to find the loader for a module.
find_module(). See PEP 302 for details.
floor division Mathematical division that rounds down to nearest integer. The floor division operator is //. For
example, the expression 11 // 4 evaluates to 2 in contrast to the 2.75 returned by float true division.
Note that (-11) // 4 is -3 because that is -2.75 rounded downward. See PEP 238.
function A series of statements which returns some value to a caller. It can also be passed zero or more arguments
which may be used in the execution of the body. See also parameter, method, and the function section.
__future__ A pseudo-module which programmers can use to enable new language features which are not compatible with the current interpreter. For example, the expression 11/4 currently evaluates to 2. If the
module in which it is executed had enabled true division by executing:
from __future__ import division
the expression 11/4 would evaluate to 2.75. By importing the __future__ module and evaluating its
variables, you can see when a new feature was first added to the language and when it will become the
default:
>>> import __future__
>>> __future__.division
_Feature((2, 2, 0, alpha, 2), (3, 0, 0, alpha, 0), 8192)
65
garbage collection The process of freeing memory when it is not used anymore. Python performs garbage
collection via reference counting and a cyclic garbage collector that is able to detect and break reference
cycles.
generator A function which returns an iterator. It looks like a normal function except that it contains yield
statements for producing a series a values usable in a for-loop or that can be retrieved one at a time with
the next() function. Each yield temporarily suspends processing, remembering the location execution
state (including local variables and pending try-statements). When the generator resumes, it picks-up where
it left-off (in contrast to functions which start fresh on every invocation).
generator expression An expression that returns an iterator. It looks like a normal expression followed by a
for expression defining a loop variable, range, and an optional if expression. The combined expression
generates values for an enclosing function:
>>> sum(i*i for i in range(10))
285
66
Appendix A. Glossary
(possibly by selecting it from your computers main menu). It is a very powerful way to test out new ideas
or inspect modules and packages (remember help(x)).
interpreted Python is an interpreted language, as opposed to a compiled one, though the distinction can be
blurry because of the presence of the bytecode compiler. This means that source files can be run directly
without explicitly creating an executable which is then run. Interpreted languages typically have a shorter
development/debug cycle than compiled ones, though their programs generally also run more slowly. See
also interactive.
iterable An object capable of returning its members one at a time. Examples of iterables include all sequence
types (such as list, str, and tuple) and some non-sequence types like dict and file and objects
of any classes you define with an __iter__() or __getitem__() method. Iterables can be used in
a for loop and in many other places where a sequence is needed (zip(), map(), ...). When an iterable
object is passed as an argument to the built-in function iter(), it returns an iterator for the object. This
iterator is good for one pass over the set of values. When using iterables, it is usually not necessary to call
iter() or deal with iterator objects yourself. The for statement does that automatically for you, creating
a temporary unnamed variable to hold the iterator for the duration of the loop. See also iterator, sequence,
and generator.
iterator An object representing a stream of data. Repeated calls to the iterators next() method return successive items in the stream. When no more data are available a StopIteration exception is raised
instead. At this point, the iterator object is exhausted and any further calls to its next() method just raise
StopIteration again. Iterators are required to have an __iter__() method that returns the iterator
object itself so every iterator is also iterable and may be used in most places where other iterables are accepted. One notable exception is code which attempts multiple iteration passes. A container object (such
as a list) produces a fresh new iterator each time you pass it to the iter() function or use it in a for
loop. Attempting this with an iterator will just return the same exhausted iterator object used in the previous
iteration pass, making it appear like an empty container.
More information can be found in typeiter.
key function A key function or collation function is a callable that returns a value used for sorting or ordering.
For example, locale.strxfrm() is used to produce a sort key that is aware of locale specific sort
conventions.
A number of tools in Python accept key functions to control how elements are ordered or grouped. They include min(), max(), sorted(), list.sort(), heapq.nsmallest(), heapq.nlargest(),
and itertools.groupby().
There are several ways to create a key function. For example. the str.lower() method can serve as a
key function for case insensitive sorts. Alternatively, an ad-hoc key function can be built from a lambda
expression such as lambda r: (r[0], r[2]). Also, the operator module provides three key
function constructors: attrgetter(), itemgetter(), and methodcaller(). See the Sorting
HOW TO for examples of how to create and use key functions.
keyword argument See argument.
lambda An anonymous inline function consisting of a single expression which is evaluated when the function is
called. The syntax to create a lambda function is lambda [arguments]: expression
LBYL Look before you leap. This coding style explicitly tests for pre-conditions before making calls or lookups.
This style contrasts with the EAFP approach and is characterized by the presence of many if statements.
In a multi-threaded environment, the LBYL approach can risk introducing a race condition between the looking and the leaping. For example, the code, if key in mapping: return
mapping[key] can fail if another thread removes key from mapping after the test, but before the lookup.
This issue can be solved with locks or by using the EAFP approach.
list A built-in Python sequence. Despite its name it is more akin to an array in other languages than to a linked
list since access to elements are O(1).
list comprehension A compact way to process all or part of the elements in a sequence and return a list with
the results. result = ["0x%02x" % x for x in range(256) if x % 2 == 0] generates
a list of strings containing even hex numbers (0x..) in the range from 0 to 255. The if clause is optional. If
omitted, all elements in range(256) are processed.
67
loader An object that loads a module. It must define a method named load_module(). A loader is typically
returned by a finder. See PEP 302 for details.
mapping A container object that supports arbitrary key lookups and implements the methods specified in the Mapping or MutableMapping abstract base classes. Examples include dict,
collections.defaultdict, collections.OrderedDict and collections.Counter.
metaclass The class of a class. Class definitions create a class name, a class dictionary, and a list of base classes.
The metaclass is responsible for taking those three arguments and creating the class. Most object oriented
programming languages provide a default implementation. What makes Python special is that it is possible
to create custom metaclasses. Most users never need this tool, but when the need arises, metaclasses can
provide powerful, elegant solutions. They have been used for logging attribute access, adding thread-safety,
tracking object creation, implementing singletons, and many other tasks.
More information can be found in metaclasses.
method A function which is defined inside a class body. If called as an attribute of an instance of that class, the
method will get the instance object as its first argument (which is usually called self). See function and
nested scope.
method resolution order Method Resolution Order is the order in which base classes are searched for a member
during lookup. See The Python 2.3 Method Resolution Order.
module An object that serves as an organizational unit of Python code. Modules have a namespace containing
arbitrary Python objects. Modules are loaded into Python by the process of importing.
See also package.
MRO See method resolution order.
mutable Mutable objects can change their value but keep their id(). See also immutable.
named tuple Any tuple-like class whose indexable elements are also accessible using named attributes (for
example, time.localtime() returns a tuple-like object where the year is accessible either with an
index such as t[0] or with a named attribute like t.tm_year).
A named tuple can be a built-in type such as time.struct_time, or it can be created with a
regular class definition. A full featured named tuple can also be created with the factory function
collections.namedtuple(). The latter approach automatically provides extra features such as a
self-documenting representation like Employee(name=jones, title=programmer).
namespace The place where a variable is stored. Namespaces are implemented as dictionaries. There are the
local, global and built-in namespaces as well as nested namespaces in objects (in methods). Namespaces
support modularity by preventing naming conflicts. For instance, the functions __builtin__.open()
and os.open() are distinguished by their namespaces. Namespaces also aid readability and maintainability by making it clear which module implements a function. For instance, writing random.seed()
or itertools.izip() makes it clear that those functions are implemented by the random and
itertools modules, respectively.
nested scope The ability to refer to a variable in an enclosing definition. For instance, a function defined inside
another function can refer to variables in the outer function. Note that nested scopes work only for reference
and not for assignment which will always write to the innermost scope. In contrast, local variables both read
and write in the innermost scope. Likewise, global variables read and write to the global namespace.
new-style class Any class which inherits from object. This includes all built-in types like list and dict.
Only new-style classes can use Pythons newer, versatile features like __slots__, descriptors, properties,
and __getattribute__().
More information can be found in newstyle.
object Any data with state (attributes or value) and defined behavior (methods). Also the ultimate base class of
any new-style class.
package A Python module which can contain submodules or recursively, subpackages. Technically, a package
is a Python module with an __path__ attribute.
68
Appendix A. Glossary
parameter A named entity in a function (or method) definition that specifies an argument (or in some cases,
arguments) that the function can accept. There are four types of parameters:
positional-or-keyword: specifies an argument that can be passed either positionally or as a keyword
argument. This is the default kind of parameter, for example foo and bar in the following:
def func(foo, bar=None): ...
positional-only: specifies an argument that can be supplied only by position. Python has no syntax for
defining positional-only parameters. However, some built-in functions have positional-only parameters (e.g. abs()).
var-positional: specifies that an arbitrary sequence of positional arguments can be provided (in addition to any positional arguments already accepted by other parameters). Such a parameter can be
defined by prepending the parameter name with *, for example args in the following:
def func(*args, **kwargs): ...
var-keyword: specifies that arbitrarily many keyword arguments can be provided (in addition to any
keyword arguments already accepted by other parameters). Such a parameter can be defined by
prepending the parameter name with **, for example kwargs in the example above.
Parameters can specify both optional and required arguments, as well as default values for some optional
arguments.
See also the argument glossary entry, the FAQ question on the difference between arguments and parameters, and the function section.
positional argument See argument.
Python 3000 Nickname for the Python 3.x release line (coined long ago when the release of version 3 was
something in the distant future.) This is also abbreviated Py3k.
Pythonic An idea or piece of code which closely follows the most common idioms of the Python language,
rather than implementing code using concepts common to other languages. For example, a common idiom
in Python is to loop over all elements of an iterable using a for statement. Many other languages dont
have this type of construct, so people unfamiliar with Python sometimes use a numerical counter instead:
for i in range(len(food)):
print food[i]
As opposed to the cleaner, Pythonic method:
for piece in food:
print piece
reference count The number of references to an object. When the reference count of an object drops to zero,
it is deallocated. Reference counting is generally not visible to Python code, but it is a key element of the
CPython implementation. The sys module defines a getrefcount() function that programmers can
call to return the reference count for a particular object.
__slots__ A declaration inside a new-style class that saves memory by pre-declaring space for instance attributes
and eliminating instance dictionaries. Though popular, the technique is somewhat tricky to get right and is
best reserved for rare cases where there are large numbers of instances in a memory-critical application.
sequence An iterable which supports efficient element access using integer indices via the __getitem__()
special method and defines a len() method that returns the length of the sequence. Some built-in sequence types are list, str, tuple, and unicode. Note that dict also supports __getitem__()
and __len__(), but is considered a mapping rather than a sequence because the lookups use arbitrary
immutable keys rather than integers.
slice An object usually containing a portion of a sequence. A slice is created using the subscript notation,
[] with colons between numbers when several are given, such as in variable_name[1:3:5]. The
bracket (subscript) notation uses slice objects internally (or in older versions, __getslice__() and
__setslice__()).
69
special method A method that is called implicitly by Python to execute a certain operation on a type, such as
addition. Such methods have names starting and ending with double underscores. Special methods are
documented in specialnames.
statement A statement is part of a suite (a block of code). A statement is either an expression or one of several
constructs with a keyword, such as if, while or for.
struct sequence A tuple with named elements. Struct sequences expose an interface similiar to named tuple
in that elements can either be accessed either by index or as an attribute. However, they do not have
any of the named tuple methods like _make() or _asdict(). Examples of struct sequences include
sys.float_info and the return value of os.stat().
triple-quoted string A string which is bound by three instances of either a quotation mark () or an apostrophe
(). While they dont provide any functionality not available with single-quoted strings, they are useful for a
number of reasons. They allow you to include unescaped single and double quotes within a string and they
can span multiple lines without the use of the continuation character, making them especially useful when
writing docstrings.
type The type of a Python object determines what kind of object it is; every object has a type. An objects type
is accessible as its __class__ attribute or can be retrieved with type(obj).
universal newlines A manner of interpreting text streams in which all of the following are recognized as ending
a line: the Unix end-of-line convention \n, the Windows convention \r\n, and the old Macintosh
convention \r. See PEP 278 and PEP 3116, as well as str.splitlines() for an additional use.
view The objects returned from dict.viewkeys(), dict.viewvalues(), and dict.viewitems()
are called dictionary views. They are lazy sequences that will see changes in the underlying dictionary. To
force the dictionary view to become a full list use list(dictview). See dict-views.
virtual machine A computer defined entirely in software. Pythons virtual machine executes the bytecode emitted by the bytecode compiler.
Zen of Python Listing of Python design principles and philosophies that are helpful in understanding and using
the language. The listing can be found by typing import this at the interactive prompt.
70
Appendix A. Glossary
APPENDIX
71
72
APPENDIX
Derived from
n/a
1.2
1.5.2
1.6
1.6
2.0+1.6.1
2.0+1.6.1
2.1+2.0.1
2.1.1
2.1.2
2.1.1
Year
1991-1995
1995-1999
2000
2000
2001
2001
2001
2001
2002
2002
2001-now
Owner
CWI
CNRI
CNRI
BeOpen.com
CNRI
PSF
PSF
PSF
PSF
PSF
PSF
GPL compatible?
yes
yes
no
no
no
no
yes
yes
yes
yes
yes
Note: GPL-compatible doesnt mean that were distributing Python under the GPL. All Python licenses, unlike
the GPL, let you distribute a modified version without making your changes open source. The GPL-compatible
licenses make it possible to combine Python with other software that is released under the GPL; the others dont.
Thanks to the many outside volunteers who have worked under Guidos direction to make these releases possible.
73
1. This LICENSE AGREEMENT is between the Python Software Foundation (PSF), and the Individual or
Organization (Licensee) accessing and otherwise using Python 2.7.6 software in source or binary form
and its associated documentation.
2. Subject to the terms and conditions of this License Agreement, PSF hereby grants Licensee a nonexclusive,
royalty-free, world-wide license to reproduce, analyze, test, perform and/or display publicly, prepare derivative works, distribute, and otherwise use Python 2.7.6 alone or in any derivative version, provided, however,
that PSFs License Agreement and PSFs notice of copyright, i.e., Copyright 2001-2014 Python Software
Foundation; All Rights Reserved are retained in Python 2.7.6 alone or in any derivative version prepared
by Licensee.
3. In the event Licensee prepares a derivative work that is based on or incorporates Python 2.7.6 or any part
thereof, and wants to make the derivative work available to others as provided herein, then Licensee hereby
agrees to include in any such work a brief summary of the changes made to Python 2.7.6.
4. PSF is making Python 2.7.6 available to Licensee on an AS IS basis. PSF MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. BY WAY OF EXAMPLE, BUT NOT LIMITATION, PSF MAKES NO AND DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR THAT THE USE OF PYTHON
2.7.6 WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY THIRD PARTY RIGHTS.
5. PSF SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO LICENSEE OR ANY OTHER USERS OF PYTHON 2.7.6 FOR ANY
INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR LOSS AS A RESULT OF MODIFYING, DISTRIBUTING, OR OTHERWISE USING PYTHON 2.7.6, OR ANY DERIVATIVE THEREOF,
EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY THEREOF.
6. This License Agreement will automatically terminate upon a material breach of its terms and conditions.
7. Nothing in this License Agreement shall be deemed to create any relationship of agency, partnership, or
joint venture between PSF and Licensee. This License Agreement does not grant permission to use PSF
trademarks or trade name in a trademark sense to endorse or promote products or services of Licensee, or
any third party.
8. By copying, installing or otherwise using Python 2.7.6, Licensee agrees to be bound by the terms and
conditions of this License Agreement.
BEOPEN.COM LICENSE AGREEMENT FOR PYTHON 2.0
BEOPEN PYTHON OPEN SOURCE LICENSE AGREEMENT VERSION 1
1. This LICENSE AGREEMENT is between BeOpen.com (BeOpen), having an office at 160 Saratoga
Avenue, Santa Clara, CA 95051, and the Individual or Organization (Licensee) accessing and otherwise
using this software in source or binary form and its associated documentation (the Software).
2. Subject to the terms and conditions of this BeOpen Python License Agreement, BeOpen hereby grants Licensee a non-exclusive, royalty-free, world-wide license to reproduce, analyze, test, perform and/or display
publicly, prepare derivative works, distribute, and otherwise use the Software alone or in any derivative
version, provided, however, that the BeOpen Python License is retained in the Software, alone or in any
derivative version prepared by Licensee.
3. BeOpen is making the Software available to Licensee on an AS IS basis. BEOPEN MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. BY WAY OF EXAMPLE, BUT NOT
LIMITATION, BEOPEN MAKES NO AND DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY
OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR THAT THE USE OF
THE SOFTWARE WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY THIRD PARTY RIGHTS.
4. BEOPEN SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO LICENSEE OR ANY OTHER USERS OF THE SOFTWARE
FOR ANY INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR LOSS AS A RESULT
OF USING, MODIFYING OR DISTRIBUTING THE SOFTWARE, OR ANY DERIVATIVE THEREOF,
EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY THEREOF.
5. This License Agreement will automatically terminate upon a material breach of its terms and conditions.
6. This License Agreement shall be governed by and interpreted in all respects by the law of the State of
California, excluding conflict of law provisions. Nothing in this License Agreement shall be deemed to
create any relationship of agency, partnership, or joint venture between BeOpen and Licensee. This License
74
Agreement does not grant permission to use BeOpen trademarks or trade names in a trademark sense to
endorse or promote products or services of Licensee, or any third party. As an exception, the BeOpen
Python logos available at http://www.pythonlabs.com/logos.html may be used according to the permissions
granted on that web page.
7. By copying, installing or otherwise using the software, Licensee agrees to be bound by the terms and
conditions of this License Agreement.
CNRI LICENSE AGREEMENT FOR PYTHON 1.6.1
1. This LICENSE AGREEMENT is between the Corporation for National Research Initiatives, having an
office at 1895 Preston White Drive, Reston, VA 20191 (CNRI), and the Individual or Organization (Licensee) accessing and otherwise using Python 1.6.1 software in source or binary form and its associated
documentation.
2. Subject to the terms and conditions of this License Agreement, CNRI hereby grants Licensee a nonexclusive, royalty-free, world-wide license to reproduce, analyze, test, perform and/or display publicly, prepare
derivative works, distribute, and otherwise use Python 1.6.1 alone or in any derivative version, provided,
however, that CNRIs License Agreement and CNRIs notice of copyright, i.e., Copyright 1995-2001
Corporation for National Research Initiatives; All Rights Reserved are retained in Python 1.6.1 alone
or in any derivative version prepared by Licensee. Alternately, in lieu of CNRIs License Agreement,
Licensee may substitute the following text (omitting the quotes): Python 1.6.1 is made available subject to the terms and conditions in CNRIs License Agreement. This Agreement together with Python
1.6.1 may be located on the Internet using the following unique, persistent identifier (known as a handle):
1895.22/1013. This Agreement may also be obtained from a proxy server on the Internet using the following
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1895.22/1013.
3. In the event Licensee prepares a derivative work that is based on or incorporates Python 1.6.1 or any part
thereof, and wants to make the derivative work available to others as provided herein, then Licensee hereby
agrees to include in any such work a brief summary of the changes made to Python 1.6.1.
4. CNRI is making Python 1.6.1 available to Licensee on an AS IS basis. CNRI MAKES NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED. BY WAY OF EXAMPLE, BUT NOT LIMITATION, CNRI MAKES NO AND DISCLAIMS ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PARTICULAR PURPOSE OR THAT THE USE OF PYTHON
1.6.1 WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY THIRD PARTY RIGHTS.
5. CNRI SHALL NOT BE LIABLE TO LICENSEE OR ANY OTHER USERS OF PYTHON 1.6.1 FOR ANY
INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR LOSS AS A RESULT OF MODIFYING, DISTRIBUTING, OR OTHERWISE USING PYTHON 1.6.1, OR ANY DERIVATIVE THEREOF,
EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY THEREOF.
6. This License Agreement will automatically terminate upon a material breach of its terms and conditions.
7. This License Agreement shall be governed by the federal intellectual property law of the United States, including without limitation the federal copyright law, and, to the extent such U.S. federal law does not apply,
by the law of the Commonwealth of Virginia, excluding Virginias conflict of law provisions. Notwithstanding the foregoing, with regard to derivative works based on Python 1.6.1 that incorporate non-separable
material that was previously distributed under the GNU General Public License (GPL), the law of the Commonwealth of Virginia shall govern this License Agreement only as to issues arising under or with respect
to Paragraphs 4, 5, and 7 of this License Agreement. Nothing in this License Agreement shall be deemed to
create any relationship of agency, partnership, or joint venture between CNRI and Licensee. This License
Agreement does not grant permission to use CNRI trademarks or trade name in a trademark sense to endorse
or promote products or services of Licensee, or any third party.
8. By clicking on the ACCEPT button where indicated, or by copying, installing or otherwise using Python
1.6.1, Licensee agrees to be bound by the terms and conditions of this License Agreement.
ACCEPT
CWI LICENSE AGREEMENT FOR PYTHON 0.9.0 THROUGH 1.2
Copyright 1991 - 1995, Stichting Mathematisch Centrum Amsterdam, The Netherlands. All rights reserved.
75
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its documentation for any purpose and without fee
is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that both that copyright notice
and this permission notice appear in supporting documentation, and that the name of Stichting Mathematisch
Centrum or CWI not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to distribution of the software without specific,
written prior permission.
STICHTING MATHEMATISCH CENTRUM DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS
SOFTWARE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO
EVENT SHALL STICHTING MATHEMATISCH CENTRUM BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT
OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF
USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS
SOFTWARE.
C.3.2 Sockets
The socket module uses the functions, getaddrinfo(), and getnameinfo(), which are coded in separate
source files from the WIDE Project, http://www.wide.ad.jp/.
Copyright (C) 1995, 1996, 1997, and 1998 WIDE Project.
All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
are met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
3. Neither the name of the project nor the names of its contributors
may be used to endorse or promote products derived from this software
without specific prior written permission.
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE PROJECT AND CONTRIBUTORS AS IS AND
GAI_ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE PROJECT OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
FOR GAI_ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON GAI_ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN GAI_ANY WAY
OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
SUCH DAMAGE.
77
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
/
78
79
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this Python software and
its associated documentation for any purpose without fee is hereby
granted, provided that the above copyright notice appears in all copies,
and that both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in
supporting documentation, and that the name of neither Automatrix,
Bioreason or Mojam Media be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to
distribution of the software without specific, written prior permission.
80
C.3.10 test_epoll
The test_epoll contains the following notice:
Copyright (c) 2001-2006 Twisted Matrix Laboratories.
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
"Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
81
82
C.3.13 OpenSSL
The modules hashlib, posix, ssl, crypt use the OpenSSL library for added performance if made available
by the operating system. Additionally, the Windows installers for Python include a copy of the OpenSSL libraries,
so we include a copy of the OpenSSL license here:
LICENSE ISSUES
==============
The OpenSSL toolkit stays under a dual license, i.e. both the conditions of
the OpenSSL License and the original SSLeay license apply to the toolkit.
See below for the actual license texts. Actually both licenses are BSD-style
Open Source licenses. In case of any license issues related to OpenSSL
please contact [email protected].
OpenSSL License
--------------/*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
====================================================================
Copyright (c) 1998-2008 The OpenSSL Project. All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
are met:
1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in
the documentation and/or other materials provided with the
distribution.
3. All advertising materials mentioning features or use of this
software must display the following acknowledgment:
"This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project
for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit. (http://www.openssl.org/)"
4. The names "OpenSSL Toolkit" and "OpenSSL Project" must not be used to
endorse or promote products derived from this software without
prior written permission. For written permission, please contact
[email protected].
5. Products derived from this software may not be called "OpenSSL"
nor may "OpenSSL" appear in their names without prior written
permission of the OpenSSL Project.
6. Redistributions of any form whatsoever must retain the following
acknowledgment:
"This product includes software developed by the OpenSSL Project
for use in the OpenSSL Toolkit (http://www.openssl.org/)"
THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE OpenSSL PROJECT AS IS AND ANY
83
84
C.3.14 expat
The pyexpat extension is built using an included copy of the expat sources unless the build is configured
--with-system-expat:
Copyright (c) 1998, 1999, 2000 Thai Open Source Software Center Ltd
and Clark Cooper
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
"Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included
in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
C.3.15 libffi
The _ctypes extension is built using an included copy of the libffi sources unless the build is configured
--with-system-libffi:
Copyright (c) 1996-2008
85
C.3.16 zlib
The zlib extension is built using an included copy of the zlib sources if the zlib version found on the system is
too old to be used for the build:
Copyright (C) 1995-2010 Jean-loup Gailly and Mark Adler
This software is provided as-is, without any express or implied
warranty. In no event will the authors be held liable for any damages
arising from the use of this software.
Permission is granted to anyone to use this software for any purpose,
including commercial applications, and to alter it and redistribute it
freely, subject to the following restrictions:
1. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must not
claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this software
in a product, an acknowledgment in the product documentation would be
appreciated but is not required.
2. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be
misrepresented as being the original software.
3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution.
Jean-loup Gailly
[email protected]
86
Mark Adler
[email protected]
APPENDIX
COPYRIGHT
Python and this documentation is:
Copyright 2001-2014 Python Software Foundation. All rights reserved.
Copyright 2000 BeOpen.com. All rights reserved.
Copyright 1995-2000 Corporation for National Research Initiatives. All rights reserved.
Copyright 1991-1995 Stichting Mathematisch Centrum. All rights reserved.
See History and License for complete license and permissions information.
87
88
Appendix D. Copyright
d
distutils.archive_util, 50
distutils.bcppcompiler, 50
distutils.ccompiler, 44
distutils.cmd, 58
distutils.command, 59
distutils.command.bdist, 59
distutils.command.bdist_dumb, 59
distutils.command.bdist_msi, 59
distutils.command.bdist_packager, 59
distutils.command.bdist_rpm, 60
distutils.command.bdist_wininst, 60
distutils.command.build, 60
distutils.command.build_clib, 60
distutils.command.build_ext, 60
distutils.command.build_py, 60
distutils.command.build_scripts, 60
distutils.command.check, 61
distutils.command.clean, 60
distutils.command.config, 61
distutils.command.install, 61
distutils.command.install_data, 61
distutils.command.install_headers, 61
distutils.command.install_lib, 61
distutils.command.install_scripts, 61
distutils.command.register, 61
distutils.command.sdist, 60
distutils.core, 41
distutils.cygwinccompiler, 50
distutils.debug, 54
distutils.dep_util, 51
distutils.dir_util, 51
distutils.dist, 54
distutils.emxccompiler, 50
distutils.errors, 55
distutils.extension, 54
distutils.fancy_getopt, 55
distutils.file_util, 52
distutils.filelist, 56
distutils.log, 56
distutils.msvccompiler, 50
distutils.spawn, 56
distutils.sysconfig, 56
distutils.text_file, 57
distutils.unixccompiler, 49
distutils.util, 52
distutils.version, 58
89
90
INDEX
Symbols
..., 63
.pypirc file, 30
__future__, 65
__slots__, 69
>>>, 63
2to3, 63
A
abstract base class, 63
add_include_dir()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 45
add_library() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method),
45
add_library_dir()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 46
add_link_object()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 46
add_runtime_library_dir()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method), 46
announce() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method), 49
argument, 63
attribute, 63
B
BDFL, 63
bdist_msi (class in distutils.command.bdist_msi), 59
byte_compile() (in module distutils.util), 54
bytecode, 63
bytes-like object, 63
C
CCompiler (class in distutils.ccompiler), 45
change_root() (in module distutils.util), 53
check_environ() (in module distutils.util), 53
class, 64
classic class, 64
close() (distutils.text_file.TextFile method), 58
coercion, 64
Command (class in distutils.cmd), 58
Command (class in distutils.core), 44
compile() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method), 47
complex number, 64
context manager, 64
convert_path() (in module distutils.util), 53
D
debug_print() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method),
49
decorator, 64
define_macro()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 46
descriptor, 64
detect_language()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 46
dictionary, 64
directory_created() (built-in function), 27
Distribution (class in distutils.core), 44
distutils.archive_util (module), 50
distutils.bcppcompiler (module), 50
distutils.ccompiler (module), 44
distutils.cmd (module), 58
distutils.command (module), 59
distutils.command.bdist (module), 59
distutils.command.bdist_dumb (module), 59
distutils.command.bdist_msi (module), 59
distutils.command.bdist_packager (module), 59
distutils.command.bdist_rpm (module), 60
distutils.command.bdist_wininst (module), 60
distutils.command.build (module), 60
distutils.command.build_clib (module), 60
distutils.command.build_ext (module), 60
distutils.command.build_py (module), 60
distutils.command.build_scripts (module), 60
distutils.command.check (module), 61
distutils.command.clean (module), 60
distutils.command.config (module), 61
distutils.command.install (module), 61
distutils.command.install_data (module), 61
distutils.command.install_headers (module), 61
distutils.command.install_lib (module), 61
distutils.command.install_scripts (module), 61
91
distutils.command.register (module), 61
distutils.command.sdist (module), 60
distutils.core (module), 41
distutils.cygwinccompiler (module), 50
distutils.debug (module), 54
distutils.dep_util (module), 51
distutils.dir_util (module), 51
distutils.dist (module), 54
distutils.emxccompiler (module), 50
distutils.errors (module), 55
distutils.extension (module), 54
distutils.fancy_getopt (module), 55
distutils.file_util (module), 52
distutils.filelist (module), 56
distutils.log (module), 56
distutils.msvccompiler (module), 50
distutils.spawn (module), 56
distutils.sysconfig (module), 56
distutils.text_file (module), 57
distutils.unixccompiler (module), 49
distutils.util (module), 52
distutils.version (module), 58
DISTUTILS_DEBUG, 15
docstring, 65
duck-typing, 65
E
EAFP, 65
environment variable
DISTUTILS_DEBUG, 15
HOME, 53
PATH, 30
PLAT, 53
EXEC_PREFIX (in module distutils.sysconfig), 56
executable_filename() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 49
execute() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method), 49
execute() (in module distutils.util), 53
expression, 65
Extension (class in distutils.core), 43
extension module, 65
F
fancy_getopt() (in module distutils.fancy_getopt), 55
FancyGetopt (class in distutils.fancy_getopt), 55
file object, 65
file-like object, 65
file_created() (built-in function), 27
finalize_options() (distutils.cmd.Command method), 59
find_library_file()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 46
finder, 65
floor division, 65
function, 65
G
garbage collection, 65
gen_lib_options() (in module distutils.ccompiler), 44
92
gen_preprocess_options()
(in
module
distutils.ccompiler), 45
generate_help()
(distutils.fancy_getopt.FancyGetopt
method), 55
generator, 66
generator expression, 66
get_config_h_filename()
(in
module
distutils.sysconfig), 56
get_config_var() (in module distutils.sysconfig), 56
get_config_vars() (in module distutils.sysconfig), 56
get_default_compiler() (in module distutils.ccompiler),
45
get_makefile_filename()
(in
module
distutils.sysconfig), 56
get_option_order() (distutils.fancy_getopt.FancyGetopt
method), 55
get_platform() (in module distutils.util), 52
get_python_inc() (in module distutils.sysconfig), 56
get_python_lib() (in module distutils.sysconfig), 56
get_special_folder_path() (built-in function), 27
getopt() (distutils.fancy_getopt.FancyGetopt method),
55
GIL, 66
global interpreter lock, 66
H
has_function()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 46
hashable, 66
HOME, 53
I
IDLE, 66
immutable, 66
importer, 66
importing, 66
initialize_options() (distutils.cmd.Command method),
59
integer division, 66
interactive, 66
interpreted, 67
iterable, 67
iterator, 67
K
key function, 67
keyword argument, 67
L
lambda, 67
LBYL, 67
library_dir_option()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 46
library_filename()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 49
library_option()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 46
link() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method), 48
Index
link_executable()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 48
link_shared_lib()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 48
link_shared_object() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 48
list, 67
list comprehension, 67
loader, 67
M
make_archive() (in module distutils.archive_util), 50
make_tarball() (in module distutils.archive_util), 50
make_zipfile() (in module distutils.archive_util), 51
mapping, 68
metaclass, 68
method, 68
method resolution order, 68
mkpath() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method), 49
mkpath() (in module distutils.dir_util), 51
module, 68
move_file() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method),
49
move_file() (in module distutils.file_util), 52
MRO, 68
mutable, 68
N
named tuple, 68
namespace, 68
nested scope, 68
new-style class, 68
new_compiler() (in module distutils.ccompiler), 45
newer() (in module distutils.dep_util), 51
newer_group() (in module distutils.dep_util), 51
newer_pairwise() (in module distutils.dep_util), 51
O
object, 68
object_filenames()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 49
open() (distutils.text_file.TextFile method), 58
P
package, 68
parameter, 68
PATH, 30
PLAT, 53
positional argument, 69
PREFIX (in module distutils.sysconfig), 56
preprocess() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method),
49
PyPI
(see Python Package Index (PyPI)), 27
Python 3000, 69
Python Enhancement Proposals
PEP 238, 65
PEP 278, 70
Index
PEP 301, 61
PEP 302, 65, 68
PEP 3116, 70
PEP 314, 42
PEP 343, 64
Python Package Index (PyPI), 27
.pypirc file, 30
Pythonic, 69
R
readline() (distutils.text_file.TextFile method), 58
readlines() (distutils.text_file.TextFile method), 58
reference count, 69
remove_tree() (in module distutils.dir_util), 52
RFC
RFC 822, 54
rfc822_escape() (in module distutils.util), 54
run() (distutils.cmd.Command method), 59
run_setup() (in module distutils.core), 42
runtime_library_dir_option()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method), 47
S
sequence, 69
set_executables()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 47
set_include_dirs()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 45
set_libraries() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method),
46
set_library_dirs()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 46
set_link_objects()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 46
set_python_build() (in module distutils.sysconfig), 57
set_runtime_library_dirs()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method), 46
setup() (in module distutils.core), 41
shared_object_filename()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method), 49
show_compilers() (in module distutils.ccompiler), 45
slice, 69
spawn() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method), 49
special method, 69
split_quoted() (in module distutils.util), 53
statement, 70
strtobool() (in module distutils.util), 54
struct sequence, 70
sub_commands (distutils.cmd.Command attribute), 59
subst_vars() (in module distutils.util), 53
T
TextFile (class in distutils.text_file), 57
triple-quoted string, 70
type, 70
93
U
undefine_macro()
(distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler
method), 46
universal newlines, 70
unreadline() (distutils.text_file.TextFile method), 58
V
view, 70
virtual machine, 70
W
warn() (distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler method), 49
warn() (distutils.text_file.TextFile method), 58
wrap_text() (in module distutils.fancy_getopt), 55
write_file() (in module distutils.file_util), 52
Z
Zen of Python, 70
94
Index