File: pyedit-products/unzipped/build/build-app-exe/build3.0/macosx/include-full-stdlib.py
#!/usr/bin/env python3 """ ========================================================================= Collects all standard modules with paths, and inserts them into the config file for py2app, so app users can run near-arbitrary Python code. Everything added here will be "baked in" to the app bundle's Python. Else, frozen apps/exes include _only_ modules used by the frozen script. Run me from a build.py or other script to expand setup.py's includes line. Inspired by ideas and derived from initial code (modified much here) at: http://grokbase.com/t/python/pythonmac-sig/07a3r5s1k2/ was-py2app-how-to-include-the-entire-standard-library-of-modules CAVEAT: this adds only modules in the install's Lib (lib) source dir. It may miss any others among standard-lib zipfiles, built-in or other modules coded in C, and any elsewhere. See PyDoc for all the many sources of modules in a Python. Builtin modules on sys.builtin_module_names are likely okay, as they should be present in the bundle's Python (they are statically linked in, presumably). Other C mods in lib-dynload were added here, and the stdlib zip file is absent in 3.5 on Mac. Skipping site-packages underscores the OTHER ISSUE here: even if the frozen app/exe includes all of Python's stdlib, it cannot include any extension libraries users may have installed on their own local machine. Hence, users should also be able to fall back on a separately-installed Python and module search-path settings if needed. PyEdit does this by allowing both to be configured in textConfig.py. This file's path settings will be required for nontrivial programs, because PyEdit cannot push the user's PYTHONPATH env setting down to spawned code portably. IDLE can avoid this mess by assuming it's installed with a full Python: its app starts up with the frozen app's minimal Python, but then restarts itself with the full/general Python which was installed alongside it. Other IDEs like Eclipse+PyDev require users to specify installed Python interpreters and import paths in their configuration GUIs. Lots of programs need to run arbitrary Python code given at runtime. This should really be a switchable option in py2App and PyInstaller... ========================================================================= """ import os import os.path import sys import pprint path = '/Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.5/lib/python3.5' traceonly = False modules = [] skip = ['site-packages', # skip local extensions (but see caveat above) 'test', # skip py selftest and idle dev gui 'idlelib'] # dropped lib-tk (why? + PyEdit adds tkinter anyhow) skip += ['lib2to3', # added: skip the 2.X=>3.X converter utility 'tests', # added: skip individual package tests 'config-3.5m'] # added: seems irrelevant, and bombs in code here print('Building full stdlib list') for root, dirs, files in os.walk(path): # prune skips: the odd nesting order avoids a dirs.copy() for item in skip: if item in dirs: print('Omitting:', os.path.join(root, item)) dirs.remove(item) # process files in this root for f in files: d = root.replace(path, '') full_path = os.path.join(d, f) # Fix up slashes if '\\' in full_path: full_path = full_path.replace('\\', '.') if '/' in full_path: full_path = full_path.replace('/', '.') if full_path[0] == '.': full_path = full_path[1:] # Collapse some auto-visible subdirs (on sys.path) """ if full_path.startswith('plat-mac.'): # defunct? full_path = full_path[9:] if full_path.startswith('lib-scriptpackages.'): # defunct? full_path = full_path[18:] """ if full_path.startswith('plat-darwin.'): # still present full_path = full_path[12:] # but 12 (not 11) if full_path.startswith('lib-dynload.'): # added (new?) full_path = full_path[12:] if full_path.startswith('.'): # what for, this? continue # don't drop here # Ignore .pyc and .pyo files (added: .so for lib-dynload) if f.endswith(('.py', '.so')) and not f.startswith('_'): # added unportable .so hack: fix me cmodprefix = '.cpython-35m-darwin.so' if f.endswith(cmodprefix): full_path = full_path[:-len(cmodprefix)] else: full_path = full_path[:-3] # Save each part of the file path as part of the module name: # foo.foo1.foo2.py has a package foo, a sub-package foo1, # and a module foo2. Save foo, foo.foo1, and foo.foo1.foo2.py. section_total = full_path.count('.') start = 0 for x in range(section_total): stop = full_path.find('.', start) if stop != -1: package = full_path[:stop] if package and package not in modules: modules.append(package) start = stop + 1 if full_path and full_path not in modules: modules.append(full_path) # modules.remove('anydbm') # This module fails for some reason. (Now moot.) print('The number of modules is', len(modules)) for mod in modules: print(mod) if traceonly: sys.exit() # Replace includes line in setup.py (via base-setup.py) mac_file = open('setup-base.py', 'r', encoding='utf8') # added utf8: ©, etc. lines = mac_file.readlines() mac_file.close() for x in range(len(lines)): if lines[x].startswith('INCLUDES ='): formatmodules = pprint.pformat(modules) # not one giant line: lines[x] = 'INCLUDES = ' + formatmodules # else IDLE etc choke! lines.insert(x, '# Generated by %s\n' % __file__) break mac_file = open('setup.py', 'w', encoding='utf8') # allow copyright, etc. mac_file.writelines(lines) mac_file.close()