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Guido van Rossum946805d1995-01-10 10:51:08 +00001\section{Built-in module \sectcode{imp}}
2\bimodindex{imp}
3\index{import}
4
5This module provides an interface to the mechanisms use to implement
6the \code{import} statement. It defines the following constants and
7functions:
8
9\renewcommand{\indexsubitem}{(in module struct)}
10
11\begin{funcdesc}{get_magic}{}
12Return the magic string used to recognize value byte-compiled code
13files (``\code{.pyc} files'').
14\end{funcdesc}
15
16\begin{funcdesc}{get_suffixes}{}
17Return a list of triples, each describing a particular type of file.
18Each triple has the form \code{(\var{suffix}, \var{mode},
19\var{type})}, where \var{suffix} is a string to be appended to the
20module name to form the filename to search for, \var{mode} is the mode
21string to pass to the built-in \code{open} function to open the file
22(this can be \code{'r'} for text files or \code{'rb'} for binary
23files), and \var{type} is the file type, which has one of the values
24\code{PY_SOURCE}, \code{PY_COMPILED} or \code{C_EXTENSION}, defined
25below.
26\end{funcdesc}
27
28\begin{funcdesc}{find_module}{name\, \optional{path}}
29Try to find the module \var{name} on the search path \var{path}. The
30default \var{path} is \code{sys.path}. The return value is a triple
31\code{(\var{file}, \var{pathname}, \var{description})} where
32\var{file} is an open file object positioned at the beginning
33corresponding to the file found, \var{pathname} is the pathname of the
34file found, and \var{description} is a triple as contained in the list
35returned by \code{get_suffixes} describing the kind of file found.
36\end{funcdesc}
37
38\begin{funcdesc}{init_builtin}{name}
39Initialize the built-in module called \var{name} and return its module
40object. If the module was already initialized, it will be initialized
41{\em again}. A few modules cannot be initialized twice -- attempting
42to initialize these again will raise an exception. If there is no
43built-in module called \var{name}, \code{None} is returned.
44\end{funcdesc}
45
46\begin{funcdesc}{init_frozen}{name}
47Initialize the frozen module called \var{name} and return its module
48object. If the module was already initialized, it will be initialized
49{\em again}. If there is no frozen module called \var{name},
50\code{None} is returned. (Frozen modules are modules written in
51Python whose compiled byte-code object is incorporated into a
52custom-built Python interpreter by Python's \code{freeze} utility.
53See \code{Demo/freeze} for now.)
54\end{funcdesc}
55
56\begin{funcdesc}{is_builtin}{name}
57Return \code{1} if there is a built-in module called \var{name} which can be
58initialized again. Return \code{-1} if there is a built-in module
59called \var{name} which cannot be initialized again (see
60\code{init_builtin}). Return \code{0} if there is no built-in module
61called \var{name}.
62\end{funcdesc}
63
64\begin{funcdesc}{is_frozen}{name}
65Return \code{1} if there is a frozen module (see \code{init_frozen})
66called \var{name}, \code{0} if there is no such module.
67\end{funcdesc}
68
69\begin{funcdesc}{load_compiled}{name\, pathname\, \optional{file}}
70Load and initialize a module implemented as a byte-compiled code file
71and return its module object. If the module was already initialized,
72it will be initialized {\em again}. The \var{name} argument is used
73to create or access a module object. The \var{pathname} argument
74points to the byte-compiled code file. The optional \var{file}
75argument is the byte-compiled code file, open for reading in binary
76mode, from the beginning -- if not given, the function opens
77\var{pathname}. It must currently be a real file object, not a
78user-defined class emulating a file.
79\end{funcdesc}
80
81\begin{funcdesc}{load_dynamic}{name\, pathname\, \optional{file}}
82Load and initialize a module implemented as a dynamically loadable
83shared library and return its module object. If the module was
84already initialized, it will be initialized {\em again}. Some modules
85don't like that and may raise an exception. The \var{pathname}
86argument must point to the shared library. The \var{name} argument is
87used to construct the name of the initialization function: an external
88C function called \code{init\var{name}()} in the shared library is
89called. The optional \var{file} argment is ignored. (Note: using
90shared libraries is highly system dependent, and not all systems
91support it.)
92\end{funcdesc}
93
94\begin{funcdesc}{load_source}{name\, pathname\, \optional{file}}
95Load and initialize a module implemented as a Python source file and
96return its module object. If the module was already initialized, it
97will be initialized {\em again}. The \var{name} argument is used to
98create or access a module object. The \var{pathname} argument points
99to the source file. The optional \var{file} argument is the source
100file, open for reading as text, from the beginning -- if not given,
101the function opens \var{pathname}. It must currently be a real file
102object, not a user-defined class emulating a file. Note that if a
103properly matching byte-compiled file (with suffix \code{.pyc}) exists,
104it will be used instead of parsing the given source file.
105\end{funcdesc}
106
107\begin{funcdesc}{new_module}{name}
108Return a new empty module object called \var{name}. This object is
109{\em not} inserted in \code{sys.modules}.
110\end{funcdesc}
111
112The following constants with integer values, defined in the module,
113are used to indicate the search result of \code{imp.find_module}.
114
115\begin{datadesc}{SEARCH_ERROR}
116The module was not found.
117\end{datadesc}
118
119\begin{datadesc}{PY_SOURCE}
120The module was found as a source file.
121\end{datadesc}
122
123\begin{datadesc}{PY_COMPILED}
124The module was found as a compiled code object file.
125\end{datadesc}
126
127\begin{datadesc}{C_EXTENSION}
128The module was found as dynamically loadable shared library.
129\end{datadesc}
130
131\subsection{Examples}
132The following function emulates the default import statement:
133
134\begin{verbatim}
135import imp
136from sys import modules
137
138def __import__(name):
139 # Fast path: let's see if it's already in sys.modules.
140 # Two speed optimizations are worth mentioning:
141 # - We use 'modules' instead of 'sys.modules'; this saves a
142 # dictionary look-up per call.
143 # - It's also faster to use a try-except statement than
144 # to use modules.has_key(name) to check if it's there.
145 try:
146 return modules[name]
147 except KeyError:
148 pass
149
150 # See if it's a built-in module
151 m = imp.init_builtin(name)
152 if m:
153 return m
154
155 # See if it's a frozen module
156 m = imp.init_frozen(name)
157 if m:
158 return m
159
160 # Search the default path (i.e. sys.path).
161 # If this raises an exception, the module is not found --
162 # let the caller handle the exception.
163 fp, pathname, (suffix, mode, type) = imp.find_module(name)
164
165 # See what we got.
166 # Note that fp will be closed automatically when we return.
167 if type == imp.C_EXTENSION:
168 return imp.load_dynamic(name, pathname)
169 if type == imp.PY_SOURCE:
170 return imp.load_source(name, pathname, fp)
171 if type == imp.PY_COMPILED:
172 return imp.load_source(name, pathname, fp)
173
174 # Shouldn't get here at all.
175 raise ImportError, '%s: unknown module type (%d)' % (name, type)
176\end{verbatim}