| THE FREEZE SCRIPT |
| ================= |
| |
| |
| What is Freeze? |
| --------------- |
| |
| Freeze make it possible to ship arbitrary Python programs to people |
| who don't have Python. The shipped file (called a "frozen" version of |
| your Python program) is an executable, so this only works if your |
| platform is compatible with that on the receiving end (this is usually |
| a matter of having the same major operating system revision and CPU |
| type). |
| |
| The shipped file contains a Python interpreter and large portions of |
| the Python run-time. Some measures have been taken to avoid linking |
| unneeded modules, but the resulting binary is usually not small. |
| |
| The Python source code of your program (and of the library modules |
| written in Python that it uses) is not included in the binary -- |
| instead, the compiled byte-code (the instruction stream used |
| internally by the interpreter) is incorporated. This gives some |
| protection of your Python source code, though not much -- a |
| disassembler for Python byte-code is available in the standard Python |
| library. At least someone running "strings" on your binary won't see |
| the source. |
| |
| |
| How does Freeze know which modules to include? |
| ---------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Freeze uses a pretty simple-minded algorithm to find the modules that |
| your program uses: given a file containing Python source code, it |
| scans for lines beginning with the word "import" or "from" (possibly |
| preceded by whitespace) and then it knows where to find the module |
| name(s) in those lines. It then recursively scans the source for |
| those modules (if found, and not already processed) in the same way. |
| |
| Freeze will not see import statements hidden behind another statement, |
| like this: |
| |
| if some_test: import M # M not seen |
| |
| or like this: |
| |
| import A; import B; import C # B and C not seen |
| |
| nor will it see import statements constructed using string |
| operations and passed to 'exec', like this: |
| |
| exec "import %s" % "M" # M not seen |
| |
| On the other hand, Freeze will think you are importing a module even |
| if the import statement it sees will never be executed, like this: |
| |
| if 0: |
| import M # M is seen |
| |
| One tricky issue: Freeze assumes that the Python interpreter and |
| environment you're using to run Freeze is the same one that would be |
| used to run your program, which should also be the same whose sources |
| and installed files you will learn about in the next section. In |
| particular, your PYTHONPATH setting should be the same as for running |
| your program locally. (Tip: if the program doesn't run when you type |
| "python hello.py" there's little chance of getting the frozen version |
| to run.) |
| |
| |
| How do I use Freeze? |
| -------------------- |
| |
| Ideally, you should be able to use it as follows: |
| |
| python freeze.py hello.py |
| |
| where hello.py is your program and freeze.py is the main file of |
| Freeze (in actuality, you'll probably specify an absolute pathname |
| such as /ufs/guido/src/python/Demo/freeze/freeze.py). |
| |
| Unfortunately, this doesn't work. Well, it might, but somehow it's |
| extremely unlikely that it'll work on the first try. (If it does, |
| skip to the next section.) Most likely you'll get this error message: |
| |
| needed directory /usr/local/lib/python/lib not found |
| |
| The reason is that Freeze require that some files that are normally |
| kept inside the Python build tree are installed, and it searches for |
| it in the default install location. (The default install prefix is |
| /usr/local; these particular files are installed at lib/python/lib |
| under the install prefix.) |
| |
| The particular set of files needed is installed only if you run "make |
| libainstall" (note: "liba", not "lib") in the Python build tree (which |
| is the tree where you build Python -- often, but not necessarily, this |
| is also the Python source tree). If you have in fact done a "make |
| libainstall" but used a different prefix, all you need to do is pass |
| that same prefix to Freeze with the -p option: |
| |
| python freeze.py -p your-prefix hello.py |
| |
| (If you haven't run "make libainstall" yet, go and do it now and don't |
| come back until you've done it.) |
| |
| |
| How do I configure Freeze? |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| It's a good idea to change the line marked with XXX in freeze.py (an |
| assignment to variable PACK) to point to the absolute pathname of the |
| directory where Freeze lives (Demo/freeze in the Python source tree.) |
| This makes it possible to call Freeze from other directories. |
| |
| You can also edit the assignment to variable PREFIX -- this saves a |
| lot of -p options. |
| |
| |
| How do I use Freeze with extensions modules? |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| XXX to be written. (In short: pass -e extensionbuilddir.) |
| |
| |
| How do I use Freeze with dynamically loaded extension modules? |
| -------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| XXX to be written. (In short: pass -e modulebuilddir -- this even |
| works if you built the modules in Python's own Modules directory.) |
| |
| |
| |
| What do I do next? |
| ------------------ |
| |
| Freeze creates three files: frozen.c, config.c and Makefile. To |
| produce the frozen version of your program, you can simply type |
| "make". This should produce a binary file. If the filename argument |
| to Freeze was "hello.py", the binary will be called "hello". On the |
| other hand, if the argument was "hello", the binary will be called |
| "hello.bin". If you passed any other filename, all bets are off. :-) |
| In any case, the name of the file will be printed as the last message |
| from Freeze. |
| |
| |
| Help! I've tried everything but it doesn't work! |
| ------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Freeze is currently beta software. You could email me a bug report. |
| Please give as much context as possible -- "Freeze doesn't work" is |
| not going to get much sympathy. You could fix the bug and send me a |
| patch. You could learn Tcl. |
| |
| If you are thinking about debugging Freeze, start playing with a |
| really simple program first (like "print 'hello world'"). If you |
| can't get that to work there's something fundamentally wrong with your |
| environment (or with your understanding of it). Gradually build it up |
| to use more modules and extensions until you find where it stops |
| working. After that, you're on your own -- happy hacking! |
| |
| |
| --Guido van Rossum, CWI, Amsterdam <mailto:Guido.van.Rossum@cwi.nl> |
| <http://www.cwi.nl/cwi/people/Guido.van.Rossum.html> |