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Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001.. _api-reference:
2
3*************
4API Reference
5*************
6
7
8:mod:`distutils.core` --- Core Distutils functionality
9======================================================
10
11.. module:: distutils.core
12 :synopsis: The core Distutils functionality
13
14
15The :mod:`distutils.core` module is the only module that needs to be installed
16to use the Distutils. It provides the :func:`setup` (which is called from the
17setup script). Indirectly provides the :class:`distutils.dist.Distribution` and
18:class:`distutils.cmd.Command` class.
19
20
21.. function:: setup(arguments)
22
23 The basic do-everything function that does most everything you could ever ask
Éric Araujo000893f2011-05-29 00:14:45 +020024 for from a Distutils method.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000025
26 The setup function takes a large number of arguments. These are laid out in the
27 following table.
28
Georg Brandl44ea77b2013-03-28 13:28:44 +010029 .. tabularcolumns:: |l|L|L|
30
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000031 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
32 | argument name | value | type |
33 +====================+================================+=============================================================+
34 | *name* | The name of the package | a string |
35 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +020036 | *version* | The version number of the | a string |
37 | | package; see | |
38 | | :mod:`distutils.version` | |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000039 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
40 | *description* | A single line describing the | a string |
41 | | package | |
42 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
43 | *long_description* | Longer description of the | a string |
44 | | package | |
45 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
46 | *author* | The name of the package author | a string |
47 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
48 | *author_email* | The email address of the | a string |
49 | | package author | |
50 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
51 | *maintainer* | The name of the current | a string |
52 | | maintainer, if different from | |
Petri Lehtinen905b6482013-02-23 21:05:27 +010053 | | the author. Note that if | |
54 | | the maintainer is provided, | |
55 | | distutils will use it as the | |
56 | | author in :file:`PKG-INFO` | |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000057 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +020058 | *maintainer_email* | The email address of the | a string |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000059 | | current maintainer, if | |
60 | | different from the author | |
61 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +020062 | *url* | A URL for the package | a string |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000063 | | (homepage) | |
64 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +020065 | *download_url* | A URL to download the package | a string |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000066 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
67 | *packages* | A list of Python packages that | a list of strings |
68 | | distutils will manipulate | |
69 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
70 | *py_modules* | A list of Python modules that | a list of strings |
71 | | distutils will manipulate | |
72 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
73 | *scripts* | A list of standalone script | a list of strings |
74 | | files to be built and | |
75 | | installed | |
76 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +020077 | *ext_modules* | A list of Python extensions to | a list of instances of |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000078 | | be built | :class:`distutils.core.Extension` |
79 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +020080 | *classifiers* | A list of categories for the | a list of strings; valid classifiers are listed on `PyPI |
Georg Brandle73778c2014-10-29 08:36:35 +010081 | | package | <https://pypi.python.org/pypi?:action=list_classifiers>`_. |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000082 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +020083 | *distclass* | the :class:`Distribution` | a subclass of |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000084 | | class to use | :class:`distutils.core.Distribution` |
85 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
86 | *script_name* | The name of the setup.py | a string |
87 | | script - defaults to | |
88 | | ``sys.argv[0]`` | |
89 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
90 | *script_args* | Arguments to supply to the | a list of strings |
91 | | setup script | |
92 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +020093 | *options* | default options for the setup | a dictionary |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000094 | | script | |
95 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Benjamin Peterson75edad02009-01-01 15:05:06 +000096 | *license* | The license for the package | a string |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000097 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +020098 | *keywords* | Descriptive meta-data, see | a list of strings or a comma-separated string |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000099 | | :pep:`314` | |
100 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200101 | *platforms* | | a list of strings or a comma-separated string |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000102 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
103 | *cmdclass* | A mapping of command names to | a dictionary |
104 | | :class:`Command` subclasses | |
105 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Benjamin Peterson75edad02009-01-01 15:05:06 +0000106 | *data_files* | A list of data files to | a list |
107 | | install | |
108 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
109 | *package_dir* | A mapping of package to | a dictionary |
110 | | directory names | |
111 +--------------------+--------------------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +0000112
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000113
114
115.. function:: run_setup(script_name[, script_args=None, stop_after='run'])
116
117 Run a setup script in a somewhat controlled environment, and return the
118 :class:`distutils.dist.Distribution` instance that drives things. This is
119 useful if you need to find out the distribution meta-data (passed as keyword
120 args from *script* to :func:`setup`), or the contents of the config files or
121 command-line.
122
123 *script_name* is a file that will be read and run with :func:`exec`. ``sys.argv[0]``
124 will be replaced with *script* for the duration of the call. *script_args* is a
125 list of strings; if supplied, ``sys.argv[1:]`` will be replaced by *script_args*
126 for the duration of the call.
127
128 *stop_after* tells :func:`setup` when to stop processing; possible values:
129
Georg Brandl44ea77b2013-03-28 13:28:44 +0100130 .. tabularcolumns:: |l|L|
131
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000132 +---------------+---------------------------------------------+
133 | value | description |
134 +===============+=============================================+
135 | *init* | Stop after the :class:`Distribution` |
136 | | instance has been created and populated |
137 | | with the keyword arguments to :func:`setup` |
138 +---------------+---------------------------------------------+
139 | *config* | Stop after config files have been parsed |
140 | | (and their data stored in the |
141 | | :class:`Distribution` instance) |
142 +---------------+---------------------------------------------+
143 | *commandline* | Stop after the command-line |
144 | | (``sys.argv[1:]`` or *script_args*) have |
145 | | been parsed (and the data stored in the |
146 | | :class:`Distribution` instance.) |
147 +---------------+---------------------------------------------+
148 | *run* | Stop after all commands have been run (the |
149 | | same as if :func:`setup` had been called |
150 | | in the usual way). This is the default |
151 | | value. |
152 +---------------+---------------------------------------------+
153
154In addition, the :mod:`distutils.core` module exposed a number of classes that
155live elsewhere.
156
Georg Brandl4009c9e2010-10-06 08:26:09 +0000157* :class:`~distutils.extension.Extension` from :mod:`distutils.extension`
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000158
Georg Brandl4009c9e2010-10-06 08:26:09 +0000159* :class:`~distutils.cmd.Command` from :mod:`distutils.cmd`
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000160
Georg Brandl4009c9e2010-10-06 08:26:09 +0000161* :class:`~distutils.dist.Distribution` from :mod:`distutils.dist`
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000162
163A short description of each of these follows, but see the relevant module for
164the full reference.
165
166
167.. class:: Extension
168
169 The Extension class describes a single C or C++extension module in a setup
Éric Araujob008d3d2011-08-26 01:23:20 +0200170 script. It accepts the following keyword arguments in its constructor:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000171
Georg Brandl44ea77b2013-03-28 13:28:44 +0100172 .. tabularcolumns:: |l|L|l|
173
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000174 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
175 | argument name | value | type |
176 +========================+================================+===========================+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200177 | *name* | the full name of the | a string |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000178 | | extension, including any | |
179 | | packages --- ie. *not* a | |
180 | | filename or pathname, but | |
181 | | Python dotted name | |
182 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200183 | *sources* | list of source filenames, | a list of strings |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000184 | | relative to the distribution | |
185 | | root (where the setup script | |
186 | | lives), in Unix form (slash- | |
187 | | separated) for portability. | |
188 | | Source files may be C, C++, | |
189 | | SWIG (.i), platform-specific | |
190 | | resource files, or whatever | |
191 | | else is recognized by the | |
192 | | :command:`build_ext` command | |
193 | | as source for a Python | |
194 | | extension. | |
195 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200196 | *include_dirs* | list of directories to search | a list of strings |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000197 | | for C/C++ header files (in | |
198 | | Unix form for portability) | |
199 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200200 | *define_macros* | list of macros to define; each | a list of tuples |
201 | | macro is defined using a | |
Georg Brandl1f01deb2009-01-03 22:47:39 +0000202 | | 2-tuple ``(name, value)``, | |
203 | | where *value* is | |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000204 | | either the string to define it | |
205 | | to or ``None`` to define it | |
206 | | without a particular value | |
207 | | (equivalent of ``#define FOO`` | |
208 | | in source or :option:`-DFOO` | |
209 | | on Unix C compiler command | |
210 | | line) | |
211 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200212 | *undef_macros* | list of macros to undefine | a list of strings |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000213 | | explicitly | |
214 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200215 | *library_dirs* | list of directories to search | a list of strings |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000216 | | for C/C++ libraries at link | |
217 | | time | |
218 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200219 | *libraries* | list of library names (not | a list of strings |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000220 | | filenames or paths) to link | |
221 | | against | |
222 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200223 | *runtime_library_dirs* | list of directories to search | a list of strings |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000224 | | for C/C++ libraries at run | |
225 | | time (for shared extensions, | |
226 | | this is when the extension is | |
227 | | loaded) | |
228 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200229 | *extra_objects* | list of extra files to link | a list of strings |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000230 | | with (eg. object files not | |
231 | | implied by 'sources', static | |
232 | | library that must be | |
233 | | explicitly specified, binary | |
234 | | resource files, etc.) | |
235 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200236 | *extra_compile_args* | any extra platform- and | a list of strings |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000237 | | compiler-specific information | |
238 | | to use when compiling the | |
239 | | source files in 'sources'. For | |
240 | | platforms and compilers where | |
241 | | a command line makes sense, | |
242 | | this is typically a list of | |
243 | | command-line arguments, but | |
244 | | for other platforms it could | |
245 | | be anything. | |
246 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200247 | *extra_link_args* | any extra platform- and | a list of strings |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000248 | | compiler-specific information | |
249 | | to use when linking object | |
250 | | files together to create the | |
251 | | extension (or to create a new | |
252 | | static Python interpreter). | |
253 | | Similar interpretation as for | |
254 | | 'extra_compile_args'. | |
255 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200256 | *export_symbols* | list of symbols to be exported | a list of strings |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000257 | | from a shared extension. Not | |
258 | | used on all platforms, and not | |
259 | | generally necessary for Python | |
260 | | extensions, which typically | |
261 | | export exactly one symbol: | |
262 | | ``init`` + extension_name. | |
263 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200264 | *depends* | list of files that the | a list of strings |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000265 | | extension depends on | |
266 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo3f5e9582011-08-26 00:44:37 +0200267 | *language* | extension language (i.e. | a string |
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000268 | | ``'c'``, ``'c++'``, | |
269 | | ``'objc'``). Will be detected | |
270 | | from the source extensions if | |
271 | | not provided. | |
272 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Éric Araujo77443822011-08-26 00:45:18 +0200273 | *optional* | specifies that a build failure | a boolean |
274 | | in the extension should not | |
275 | | abort the build process, but | |
276 | | simply skip the extension. | |
277 +------------------------+--------------------------------+---------------------------+
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000278
279
280.. class:: Distribution
281
282 A :class:`Distribution` describes how to build, install and package up a Python
283 software package.
284
285 See the :func:`setup` function for a list of keyword arguments accepted by the
286 Distribution constructor. :func:`setup` creates a Distribution instance.
287
288
289.. class:: Command
290
291 A :class:`Command` class (or rather, an instance of one of its subclasses)
292 implement a single distutils command.
293
294
295:mod:`distutils.ccompiler` --- CCompiler base class
296===================================================
297
298.. module:: distutils.ccompiler
299 :synopsis: Abstract CCompiler class
300
301
302This module provides the abstract base class for the :class:`CCompiler`
303classes. A :class:`CCompiler` instance can be used for all the compile and
304link steps needed to build a single project. Methods are provided to set
305options for the compiler --- macro definitions, include directories, link path,
306libraries and the like.
307
308This module provides the following functions.
309
310
311.. function:: gen_lib_options(compiler, library_dirs, runtime_library_dirs, libraries)
312
313 Generate linker options for searching library directories and linking with
314 specific libraries. *libraries* and *library_dirs* are, respectively, lists of
315 library names (not filenames!) and search directories. Returns a list of
316 command-line options suitable for use with some compiler (depending on the two
317 format strings passed in).
318
319
320.. function:: gen_preprocess_options(macros, include_dirs)
321
322 Generate C pre-processor options (:option:`-D`, :option:`-U`, :option:`-I`) as
323 used by at least two types of compilers: the typical Unix compiler and Visual
324 C++. *macros* is the usual thing, a list of 1- or 2-tuples, where ``(name,)``
325 means undefine (:option:`-U`) macro *name*, and ``(name, value)`` means define
326 (:option:`-D`) macro *name* to *value*. *include_dirs* is just a list of
327 directory names to be added to the header file search path (:option:`-I`).
328 Returns a list of command-line options suitable for either Unix compilers or
329 Visual C++.
330
331
332.. function:: get_default_compiler(osname, platform)
333
334 Determine the default compiler to use for the given platform.
335
336 *osname* should be one of the standard Python OS names (i.e. the ones returned
337 by ``os.name``) and *platform* the common value returned by ``sys.platform`` for
338 the platform in question.
339
340 The default values are ``os.name`` and ``sys.platform`` in case the parameters
341 are not given.
342
343
344.. function:: new_compiler(plat=None, compiler=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0)
345
346 Factory function to generate an instance of some CCompiler subclass for the
347 supplied platform/compiler combination. *plat* defaults to ``os.name`` (eg.
348 ``'posix'``, ``'nt'``), and *compiler* defaults to the default compiler for
349 that platform. Currently only ``'posix'`` and ``'nt'`` are supported, and the
350 default compilers are "traditional Unix interface" (:class:`UnixCCompiler`
Georg Brandlc575c902008-09-13 17:46:05 +0000351 class) and Visual C++ (:class:`MSVCCompiler` class). Note that it's perfectly
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000352 possible to ask for a Unix compiler object under Windows, and a Microsoft
353 compiler object under Unix---if you supply a value for *compiler*, *plat* is
354 ignored.
355
356 .. % Is the posix/nt only thing still true? Mac OS X seems to work, and
357 .. % returns a UnixCCompiler instance. How to document this... hmm.
358
359
360.. function:: show_compilers()
361
362 Print list of available compilers (used by the :option:`--help-compiler` options
363 to :command:`build`, :command:`build_ext`, :command:`build_clib`).
364
365
366.. class:: CCompiler([verbose=0, dry_run=0, force=0])
367
368 The abstract base class :class:`CCompiler` defines the interface that must be
369 implemented by real compiler classes. The class also has some utility methods
370 used by several compiler classes.
371
372 The basic idea behind a compiler abstraction class is that each instance can be
373 used for all the compile/link steps in building a single project. Thus,
374 attributes common to all of those compile and link steps --- include
375 directories, macros to define, libraries to link against, etc. --- are
376 attributes of the compiler instance. To allow for variability in how individual
377 files are treated, most of those attributes may be varied on a per-compilation
378 or per-link basis.
379
380 The constructor for each subclass creates an instance of the Compiler object.
381 Flags are *verbose* (show verbose output), *dry_run* (don't actually execute the
382 steps) and *force* (rebuild everything, regardless of dependencies). All of
383 these flags default to ``0`` (off). Note that you probably don't want to
384 instantiate :class:`CCompiler` or one of its subclasses directly - use the
385 :func:`distutils.CCompiler.new_compiler` factory function instead.
386
387 The following methods allow you to manually alter compiler options for the
388 instance of the Compiler class.
389
390
391 .. method:: CCompiler.add_include_dir(dir)
392
393 Add *dir* to the list of directories that will be searched for header files.
394 The compiler is instructed to search directories in the order in which they are
395 supplied by successive calls to :meth:`add_include_dir`.
396
397
398 .. method:: CCompiler.set_include_dirs(dirs)
399
400 Set the list of directories that will be searched to *dirs* (a list of strings).
401 Overrides any preceding calls to :meth:`add_include_dir`; subsequent calls to
402 :meth:`add_include_dir` add to the list passed to :meth:`set_include_dirs`.
403 This does not affect any list of standard include directories that the compiler
404 may search by default.
405
406
407 .. method:: CCompiler.add_library(libname)
408
409 Add *libname* to the list of libraries that will be included in all links driven
410 by this compiler object. Note that *libname* should \*not\* be the name of a
411 file containing a library, but the name of the library itself: the actual
412 filename will be inferred by the linker, the compiler, or the compiler class
413 (depending on the platform).
414
415 The linker will be instructed to link against libraries in the order they were
416 supplied to :meth:`add_library` and/or :meth:`set_libraries`. It is perfectly
417 valid to duplicate library names; the linker will be instructed to link against
418 libraries as many times as they are mentioned.
419
420
421 .. method:: CCompiler.set_libraries(libnames)
422
423 Set the list of libraries to be included in all links driven by this compiler
424 object to *libnames* (a list of strings). This does not affect any standard
425 system libraries that the linker may include by default.
426
427
428 .. method:: CCompiler.add_library_dir(dir)
429
430 Add *dir* to the list of directories that will be searched for libraries
431 specified to :meth:`add_library` and :meth:`set_libraries`. The linker will be
432 instructed to search for libraries in the order they are supplied to
433 :meth:`add_library_dir` and/or :meth:`set_library_dirs`.
434
435
436 .. method:: CCompiler.set_library_dirs(dirs)
437
438 Set the list of library search directories to *dirs* (a list of strings). This
439 does not affect any standard library search path that the linker may search by
440 default.
441
442
443 .. method:: CCompiler.add_runtime_library_dir(dir)
444
445 Add *dir* to the list of directories that will be searched for shared libraries
446 at runtime.
447
448
449 .. method:: CCompiler.set_runtime_library_dirs(dirs)
450
451 Set the list of directories to search for shared libraries at runtime to *dirs*
452 (a list of strings). This does not affect any standard search path that the
453 runtime linker may search by default.
454
455
456 .. method:: CCompiler.define_macro(name[, value=None])
457
458 Define a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by this compiler object.
459 The optional parameter *value* should be a string; if it is not supplied, then
460 the macro will be defined without an explicit value and the exact outcome
Éric Araujo9cff4272012-01-15 02:25:31 +0100461 depends on the compiler used.
462
463 .. XXX true? does ANSI say anything about this?
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000464
465
466 .. method:: CCompiler.undefine_macro(name)
467
468 Undefine a preprocessor macro for all compilations driven by this compiler
469 object. If the same macro is defined by :meth:`define_macro` and
470 undefined by :meth:`undefine_macro` the last call takes precedence
471 (including multiple redefinitions or undefinitions). If the macro is
472 redefined/undefined on a per-compilation basis (ie. in the call to
473 :meth:`compile`), then that takes precedence.
474
475
476 .. method:: CCompiler.add_link_object(object)
477
478 Add *object* to the list of object files (or analogues, such as explicitly named
479 library files or the output of "resource compilers") to be included in every
480 link driven by this compiler object.
481
482
483 .. method:: CCompiler.set_link_objects(objects)
484
485 Set the list of object files (or analogues) to be included in every link to
486 *objects*. This does not affect any standard object files that the linker may
487 include by default (such as system libraries).
488
489 The following methods implement methods for autodetection of compiler options,
490 providing some functionality similar to GNU :program:`autoconf`.
491
492
493 .. method:: CCompiler.detect_language(sources)
494
495 Detect the language of a given file, or list of files. Uses the instance
496 attributes :attr:`language_map` (a dictionary), and :attr:`language_order` (a
497 list) to do the job.
498
499
500 .. method:: CCompiler.find_library_file(dirs, lib[, debug=0])
501
502 Search the specified list of directories for a static or shared library file
503 *lib* and return the full path to that file. If *debug* is true, look for a
504 debugging version (if that makes sense on the current platform). Return
505 ``None`` if *lib* wasn't found in any of the specified directories.
506
507
508 .. method:: CCompiler.has_function(funcname [, includes=None, include_dirs=None, libraries=None, library_dirs=None])
509
510 Return a boolean indicating whether *funcname* is supported on the current
511 platform. The optional arguments can be used to augment the compilation
512 environment by providing additional include files and paths and libraries and
513 paths.
514
515
516 .. method:: CCompiler.library_dir_option(dir)
517
518 Return the compiler option to add *dir* to the list of directories searched for
519 libraries.
520
521
522 .. method:: CCompiler.library_option(lib)
523
524 Return the compiler option to add *dir* to the list of libraries linked into the
525 shared library or executable.
526
527
528 .. method:: CCompiler.runtime_library_dir_option(dir)
529
530 Return the compiler option to add *dir* to the list of directories searched for
531 runtime libraries.
532
533
534 .. method:: CCompiler.set_executables(**args)
535
536 Define the executables (and options for them) that will be run to perform the
537 various stages of compilation. The exact set of executables that may be
538 specified here depends on the compiler class (via the 'executables' class
539 attribute), but most will have:
540
541 +--------------+------------------------------------------+
542 | attribute | description |
543 +==============+==========================================+
544 | *compiler* | the C/C++ compiler |
545 +--------------+------------------------------------------+
546 | *linker_so* | linker used to create shared objects and |
547 | | libraries |
548 +--------------+------------------------------------------+
549 | *linker_exe* | linker used to create binary executables |
550 +--------------+------------------------------------------+
551 | *archiver* | static library creator |
552 +--------------+------------------------------------------+
553
554 On platforms with a command-line (Unix, DOS/Windows), each of these is a string
555 that will be split into executable name and (optional) list of arguments.
556 (Splitting the string is done similarly to how Unix shells operate: words are
557 delimited by spaces, but quotes and backslashes can override this. See
558 :func:`distutils.util.split_quoted`.)
559
560 The following methods invoke stages in the build process.
561
562
563 .. method:: CCompiler.compile(sources[, output_dir=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, debug=0, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None, depends=None])
564
565 Compile one or more source files. Generates object files (e.g. transforms a
566 :file:`.c` file to a :file:`.o` file.)
567
568 *sources* must be a list of filenames, most likely C/C++ files, but in reality
569 anything that can be handled by a particular compiler and compiler class (eg.
570 :class:`MSVCCompiler` can handle resource files in *sources*). Return a list of
571 object filenames, one per source filename in *sources*. Depending on the
572 implementation, not all source files will necessarily be compiled, but all
573 corresponding object filenames will be returned.
574
575 If *output_dir* is given, object files will be put under it, while retaining
576 their original path component. That is, :file:`foo/bar.c` normally compiles to
577 :file:`foo/bar.o` (for a Unix implementation); if *output_dir* is *build*, then
578 it would compile to :file:`build/foo/bar.o`.
579
580 *macros*, if given, must be a list of macro definitions. A macro definition is
581 either a ``(name, value)`` 2-tuple or a ``(name,)`` 1-tuple. The former defines
582 a macro; if the value is ``None``, the macro is defined without an explicit
583 value. The 1-tuple case undefines a macro. Later
584 definitions/redefinitions/undefinitions take precedence.
585
586 *include_dirs*, if given, must be a list of strings, the directories to add to
587 the default include file search path for this compilation only.
588
589 *debug* is a boolean; if true, the compiler will be instructed to output debug
590 symbols in (or alongside) the object file(s).
591
592 *extra_preargs* and *extra_postargs* are implementation-dependent. On platforms
593 that have the notion of a command-line (e.g. Unix, DOS/Windows), they are most
594 likely lists of strings: extra command-line arguments to prepend/append to the
595 compiler command line. On other platforms, consult the implementation class
596 documentation. In any event, they are intended as an escape hatch for those
597 occasions when the abstract compiler framework doesn't cut the mustard.
598
599 *depends*, if given, is a list of filenames that all targets depend on. If a
600 source file is older than any file in depends, then the source file will be
601 recompiled. This supports dependency tracking, but only at a coarse
602 granularity.
603
604 Raises :exc:`CompileError` on failure.
605
606
607 .. method:: CCompiler.create_static_lib(objects, output_libname[, output_dir=None, debug=0, target_lang=None])
608
609 Link a bunch of stuff together to create a static library file. The "bunch of
610 stuff" consists of the list of object files supplied as *objects*, the extra
611 object files supplied to :meth:`add_link_object` and/or
612 :meth:`set_link_objects`, the libraries supplied to :meth:`add_library` and/or
613 :meth:`set_libraries`, and the libraries supplied as *libraries* (if any).
614
615 *output_libname* should be a library name, not a filename; the filename will be
616 inferred from the library name. *output_dir* is the directory where the library
Éric Araujo9cff4272012-01-15 02:25:31 +0100617 file will be put.
618
619 .. XXX defaults to what?
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000620
621 *debug* is a boolean; if true, debugging information will be included in the
622 library (note that on most platforms, it is the compile step where this matters:
623 the *debug* flag is included here just for consistency).
624
625 *target_lang* is the target language for which the given objects are being
626 compiled. This allows specific linkage time treatment of certain languages.
627
628 Raises :exc:`LibError` on failure.
629
630
631 .. method:: CCompiler.link(target_desc, 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])
632
633 Link a bunch of stuff together to create an executable or shared library file.
634
635 The "bunch of stuff" consists of the list of object files supplied as *objects*.
636 *output_filename* should be a filename. If *output_dir* is supplied,
637 *output_filename* is relative to it (i.e. *output_filename* can provide
638 directory components if needed).
639
640 *libraries* is a list of libraries to link against. These are library names,
641 not filenames, since they're translated into filenames in a platform-specific
642 way (eg. *foo* becomes :file:`libfoo.a` on Unix and :file:`foo.lib` on
643 DOS/Windows). However, they can include a directory component, which means the
644 linker will look in that specific directory rather than searching all the normal
645 locations.
646
647 *library_dirs*, if supplied, should be a list of directories to search for
648 libraries that were specified as bare library names (ie. no directory
649 component). These are on top of the system default and those supplied to
650 :meth:`add_library_dir` and/or :meth:`set_library_dirs`. *runtime_library_dirs*
651 is a list of directories that will be embedded into the shared library and used
652 to search for other shared libraries that \*it\* depends on at run-time. (This
653 may only be relevant on Unix.)
654
655 *export_symbols* is a list of symbols that the shared library will export.
656 (This appears to be relevant only on Windows.)
657
658 *debug* is as for :meth:`compile` and :meth:`create_static_lib`, with the
659 slight distinction that it actually matters on most platforms (as opposed to
660 :meth:`create_static_lib`, which includes a *debug* flag mostly for form's
661 sake).
662
663 *extra_preargs* and *extra_postargs* are as for :meth:`compile` (except of
664 course that they supply command-line arguments for the particular linker being
665 used).
666
667 *target_lang* is the target language for which the given objects are being
668 compiled. This allows specific linkage time treatment of certain languages.
669
670 Raises :exc:`LinkError` on failure.
671
672
673 .. method:: CCompiler.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])
674
675 Link an executable. *output_progname* is the name of the file executable, while
676 *objects* are a list of object filenames to link in. Other arguments are as for
677 the :meth:`link` method.
678
679
680 .. method:: CCompiler.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])
681
682 Link a shared library. *output_libname* is the name of the output library,
683 while *objects* is a list of object filenames to link in. Other arguments are
684 as for the :meth:`link` method.
685
686
687 .. method:: CCompiler.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])
688
689 Link a shared object. *output_filename* is the name of the shared object that
690 will be created, while *objects* is a list of object filenames to link in.
691 Other arguments are as for the :meth:`link` method.
692
693
694 .. method:: CCompiler.preprocess(source[, output_file=None, macros=None, include_dirs=None, extra_preargs=None, extra_postargs=None])
695
696 Preprocess a single C/C++ source file, named in *source*. Output will be written
697 to file named *output_file*, or *stdout* if *output_file* not supplied.
698 *macros* is a list of macro definitions as for :meth:`compile`, which will
699 augment the macros set with :meth:`define_macro` and :meth:`undefine_macro`.
700 *include_dirs* is a list of directory names that will be added to the default
701 list, in the same way as :meth:`add_include_dir`.
702
703 Raises :exc:`PreprocessError` on failure.
704
705 The following utility methods are defined by the :class:`CCompiler` class, for
706 use by the various concrete subclasses.
707
708
709 .. method:: CCompiler.executable_filename(basename[, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''])
710
711 Returns the filename of the executable for the given *basename*. Typically for
712 non-Windows platforms this is the same as the basename, while Windows will get
713 a :file:`.exe` added.
714
715
716 .. method:: CCompiler.library_filename(libname[, lib_type='static', strip_dir=0, output_dir=''])
717
718 Returns the filename for the given library name on the current platform. On Unix
719 a library with *lib_type* of ``'static'`` will typically be of the form
720 :file:`liblibname.a`, while a *lib_type* of ``'dynamic'`` will be of the form
721 :file:`liblibname.so`.
722
723
724 .. method:: CCompiler.object_filenames(source_filenames[, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''])
725
726 Returns the name of the object files for the given source files.
727 *source_filenames* should be a list of filenames.
728
729
730 .. method:: CCompiler.shared_object_filename(basename[, strip_dir=0, output_dir=''])
731
732 Returns the name of a shared object file for the given file name *basename*.
733
734
735 .. method:: CCompiler.execute(func, args[, msg=None, level=1])
736
Georg Brandla710fda2013-10-06 11:12:29 +0200737 Invokes :func:`distutils.util.execute`. This method invokes a Python function
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000738 *func* with the given arguments *args*, after logging and taking into account
Éric Araujo9cff4272012-01-15 02:25:31 +0100739 the *dry_run* flag.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000740
741
742 .. method:: CCompiler.spawn(cmd)
743
744 Invokes :func:`distutils.util.spawn`. This invokes an external process to run
Éric Araujo9cff4272012-01-15 02:25:31 +0100745 the given command.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000746
747
748 .. method:: CCompiler.mkpath(name[, mode=511])
749
750 Invokes :func:`distutils.dir_util.mkpath`. This creates a directory and any
Éric Araujo9cff4272012-01-15 02:25:31 +0100751 missing ancestor directories.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000752
753
754 .. method:: CCompiler.move_file(src, dst)
755
Éric Araujo9cff4272012-01-15 02:25:31 +0100756 Invokes :meth:`distutils.file_util.move_file`. Renames *src* to *dst*.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000757
758
759 .. method:: CCompiler.announce(msg[, level=1])
760
Éric Araujo9cff4272012-01-15 02:25:31 +0100761 Write a message using :func:`distutils.log.debug`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000762
763
764 .. method:: CCompiler.warn(msg)
765
766 Write a warning message *msg* to standard error.
767
768
769 .. method:: CCompiler.debug_print(msg)
770
771 If the *debug* flag is set on this :class:`CCompiler` instance, print *msg* to
772 standard output, otherwise do nothing.
773
774.. % \subsection{Compiler-specific modules}
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +0000775.. %
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000776.. % The following modules implement concrete subclasses of the abstract
777.. % \class{CCompiler} class. They should not be instantiated directly, but should
778.. % be created using \function{distutils.ccompiler.new_compiler()} factory
779.. % function.
780
781
782:mod:`distutils.unixccompiler` --- Unix C Compiler
783==================================================
784
785.. module:: distutils.unixccompiler
786 :synopsis: UNIX C Compiler
787
788
789This module provides the :class:`UnixCCompiler` class, a subclass of
790:class:`CCompiler` that handles the typical Unix-style command-line C compiler:
791
792* macros defined with :option:`-Dname[=value]`
793
794* macros undefined with :option:`-Uname`
795
796* include search directories specified with :option:`-Idir`
797
798* libraries specified with :option:`-llib`
799
800* library search directories specified with :option:`-Ldir`
801
802* compile handled by :program:`cc` (or similar) executable with :option:`-c`
803 option: compiles :file:`.c` to :file:`.o`
804
805* link static library handled by :program:`ar` command (possibly with
806 :program:`ranlib`)
807
808* link shared library handled by :program:`cc` :option:`-shared`
809
810
811:mod:`distutils.msvccompiler` --- Microsoft Compiler
812====================================================
813
814.. module:: distutils.msvccompiler
815 :synopsis: Microsoft Compiler
816
817
818This module provides :class:`MSVCCompiler`, an implementation of the abstract
819:class:`CCompiler` class for Microsoft Visual Studio. Typically, extension
820modules need to be compiled with the same compiler that was used to compile
821Python. For Python 2.3 and earlier, the compiler was Visual Studio 6. For Python
8222.4 and 2.5, the compiler is Visual Studio .NET 2003. The AMD64 and Itanium
823binaries are created using the Platform SDK.
824
825:class:`MSVCCompiler` will normally choose the right compiler, linker etc. on
826its own. To override this choice, the environment variables *DISTUTILS_USE_SDK*
827and *MSSdk* must be both set. *MSSdk* indicates that the current environment has
828been setup by the SDK's ``SetEnv.Cmd`` script, or that the environment variables
829had been registered when the SDK was installed; *DISTUTILS_USE_SDK* indicates
830that the distutils user has made an explicit choice to override the compiler
831selection by :class:`MSVCCompiler`.
832
833
834:mod:`distutils.bcppcompiler` --- Borland Compiler
835==================================================
836
837.. module:: distutils.bcppcompiler
838
839
840This module provides :class:`BorlandCCompiler`, an subclass of the abstract
841:class:`CCompiler` class for the Borland C++ compiler.
842
843
844:mod:`distutils.cygwincompiler` --- Cygwin Compiler
845===================================================
846
847.. module:: distutils.cygwinccompiler
848
849
850This module provides the :class:`CygwinCCompiler` class, a subclass of
851:class:`UnixCCompiler` that handles the Cygwin port of the GNU C compiler to
852Windows. It also contains the Mingw32CCompiler class which handles the mingw32
853port of GCC (same as cygwin in no-cygwin mode).
854
855
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000856:mod:`distutils.archive_util` --- Archiving utilities
857======================================================
858
859.. module:: distutils.archive_util
860 :synopsis: Utility functions for creating archive files (tarballs, zip files, ...)
861
862
863This module provides a few functions for creating archive files, such as
864tarballs or zipfiles.
865
866
867.. function:: make_archive(base_name, format[, root_dir=None, base_dir=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0])
868
869 Create an archive file (eg. ``zip`` or ``tar``). *base_name* is the name of
870 the file to create, minus any format-specific extension; *format* is the
871 archive format: one of ``zip``, ``tar``, ``ztar``, or ``gztar``. *root_dir* is
872 a directory that will be the root directory of the archive; ie. we typically
873 ``chdir`` into *root_dir* before creating the archive. *base_dir* is the
874 directory where we start archiving from; ie. *base_dir* will be the common
875 prefix of all files and directories in the archive. *root_dir* and *base_dir*
876 both default to the current directory. Returns the name of the archive file.
877
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000878
879.. function:: make_tarball(base_name, base_dir[, compress='gzip', verbose=0, dry_run=0])
880
881 'Create an (optional compressed) archive as a tar file from all files in and
882 under *base_dir*. *compress* must be ``'gzip'`` (the default), ``'compress'``,
883 ``'bzip2'``, or ``None``. Both :program:`tar` and the compression utility named
884 by *compress* must be on the default program search path, so this is probably
885 Unix-specific. The output tar file will be named :file:`base_dir.tar`,
886 possibly plus the appropriate compression extension (:file:`.gz`, :file:`.bz2`
887 or :file:`.Z`). Return the output filename.
888
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000889
890.. function:: make_zipfile(base_name, base_dir[, verbose=0, dry_run=0])
891
892 Create a zip file from all files in and under *base_dir*. The output zip file
Éric Araujo4433a5f2010-12-15 20:26:30 +0000893 will be named *base_name* + :file:`.zip`. Uses either the :mod:`zipfile` Python
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000894 module (if available) or the InfoZIP :file:`zip` utility (if installed and
895 found on the default search path). If neither tool is available, raises
896 :exc:`DistutilsExecError`. Returns the name of the output zip file.
897
898
899:mod:`distutils.dep_util` --- Dependency checking
900=================================================
901
902.. module:: distutils.dep_util
903 :synopsis: Utility functions for simple dependency checking
904
905
906This module provides functions for performing simple, timestamp-based
907dependency of files and groups of files; also, functions based entirely on such
908timestamp dependency analysis.
909
910
911.. function:: newer(source, target)
912
913 Return true if *source* exists and is more recently modified than *target*, or
914 if *source* exists and *target* doesn't. Return false if both exist and *target*
915 is the same age or newer than *source*. Raise :exc:`DistutilsFileError` if
916 *source* does not exist.
917
918
919.. function:: newer_pairwise(sources, targets)
920
921 Walk two filename lists in parallel, testing if each source is newer than its
922 corresponding target. Return a pair of lists (*sources*, *targets*) where
923 source is newer than target, according to the semantics of :func:`newer`
924
925 .. % % equivalent to a listcomp...
926
927
928.. function:: newer_group(sources, target[, missing='error'])
929
930 Return true if *target* is out-of-date with respect to any file listed in
931 *sources* In other words, if *target* exists and is newer than every file in
932 *sources*, return false; otherwise return true. *missing* controls what we do
933 when a source file is missing; the default (``'error'``) is to blow up with an
934 :exc:`OSError` from inside :func:`os.stat`; if it is ``'ignore'``, we silently
935 drop any missing source files; if it is ``'newer'``, any missing source files
936 make us assume that *target* is out-of-date (this is handy in "dry-run" mode:
937 it'll make you pretend to carry out commands that wouldn't work because inputs
938 are missing, but that doesn't matter because you're not actually going to run
939 the commands).
940
941
942:mod:`distutils.dir_util` --- Directory tree operations
943=======================================================
944
945.. module:: distutils.dir_util
946 :synopsis: Utility functions for operating on directories and directory trees
947
948
949This module provides functions for operating on directories and trees of
950directories.
951
952
Georg Brandlf4a41232008-05-26 17:55:52 +0000953.. function:: mkpath(name[, mode=0o777, verbose=0, dry_run=0])
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000954
955 Create a directory and any missing ancestor directories. If the directory
956 already exists (or if *name* is the empty string, which means the current
957 directory, which of course exists), then do nothing. Raise
958 :exc:`DistutilsFileError` if unable to create some directory along the way (eg.
959 some sub-path exists, but is a file rather than a directory). If *verbose* is
960 true, print a one-line summary of each mkdir to stdout. Return the list of
961 directories actually created.
962
963
Georg Brandlf4a41232008-05-26 17:55:52 +0000964.. function:: create_tree(base_dir, files[, mode=0o777, verbose=0, dry_run=0])
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000965
966 Create all the empty directories under *base_dir* needed to put *files* there.
Benjamin Peterson82f34ad2015-01-13 09:17:24 -0500967 *base_dir* is just the name of a directory which doesn't necessarily exist
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000968 yet; *files* is a list of filenames to be interpreted relative to *base_dir*.
969 *base_dir* + the directory portion of every file in *files* will be created if
970 it doesn't already exist. *mode*, *verbose* and *dry_run* flags are as for
971 :func:`mkpath`.
972
973
974.. function:: copy_tree(src, dst[, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1, preserve_symlinks=0, update=0, verbose=0, dry_run=0])
975
976 Copy an entire directory tree *src* to a new location *dst*. Both *src* and
977 *dst* must be directory names. If *src* is not a directory, raise
978 :exc:`DistutilsFileError`. If *dst* does not exist, it is created with
979 :func:`mkpath`. The end result of the copy is that every file in *src* is
980 copied to *dst*, and directories under *src* are recursively copied to *dst*.
981 Return the list of files that were copied or might have been copied, using their
982 output name. The return value is unaffected by *update* or *dry_run*: it is
983 simply the list of all files under *src*, with the names changed to be under
984 *dst*.
985
Serhiy Storchaka7880db62013-10-09 14:09:16 +0300986 *preserve_mode* and *preserve_times* are the same as for
987 :func:`distutils.file_util.copy_file`; note that they only apply to
988 regular files, not to
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000989 directories. If *preserve_symlinks* is true, symlinks will be copied as
990 symlinks (on platforms that support them!); otherwise (the default), the
991 destination of the symlink will be copied. *update* and *verbose* are the same
992 as for :func:`copy_file`.
993
Éric Araujo3e4a3dc2012-12-08 14:21:51 -0500994 Files in *src* that begin with :file:`.nfs` are skipped (more information on
995 these files is available in answer D2 of the `NFS FAQ page
Zachary Ware253deed2014-03-20 09:46:09 -0500996 <http://nfs.sourceforge.net/#section_d>`_).
Éric Araujo3e4a3dc2012-12-08 14:21:51 -0500997
Éric Araujo3f7c0e42012-12-08 22:53:43 -0500998 .. versionchanged:: 3.3.1
Éric Araujo3e4a3dc2012-12-08 14:21:51 -0500999 NFS files are ignored.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001000
1001.. function:: remove_tree(directory[, verbose=0, dry_run=0])
1002
1003 Recursively remove *directory* and all files and directories underneath it. Any
1004 errors are ignored (apart from being reported to ``sys.stdout`` if *verbose* is
1005 true).
1006
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001007
1008:mod:`distutils.file_util` --- Single file operations
1009=====================================================
1010
1011.. module:: distutils.file_util
1012 :synopsis: Utility functions for operating on single files
1013
1014
1015This module contains some utility functions for operating on individual files.
1016
1017
1018.. function:: copy_file(src, dst[, preserve_mode=1, preserve_times=1, update=0, link=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0])
1019
1020 Copy file *src* to *dst*. If *dst* is a directory, then *src* is copied there
1021 with the same name; otherwise, it must be a filename. (If the file exists, it
1022 will be ruthlessly clobbered.) If *preserve_mode* is true (the default), the
1023 file's mode (type and permission bits, or whatever is analogous on the
1024 current platform) is copied. If *preserve_times* is true (the default), the
1025 last-modified and last-access times are copied as well. If *update* is true,
1026 *src* will only be copied if *dst* does not exist, or if *dst* does exist but
1027 is older than *src*.
1028
1029 *link* allows you to make hard links (using :func:`os.link`) or symbolic links
1030 (using :func:`os.symlink`) instead of copying: set it to ``'hard'`` or
1031 ``'sym'``; if it is ``None`` (the default), files are copied. Don't set *link*
1032 on systems that don't support it: :func:`copy_file` doesn't check if hard or
1033 symbolic linking is available. It uses :func:`_copy_file_contents` to copy file
1034 contents.
1035
1036 Return a tuple ``(dest_name, copied)``: *dest_name* is the actual name of the
1037 output file, and *copied* is true if the file was copied (or would have been
1038 copied, if *dry_run* true).
1039
1040 .. % XXX if the destination file already exists, we clobber it if
1041 .. % copying, but blow up if linking. Hmmm. And I don't know what
1042 .. % macostools.copyfile() does. Should definitely be consistent, and
1043 .. % should probably blow up if destination exists and we would be
1044 .. % changing it (ie. it's not already a hard/soft link to src OR
1045 .. % (not update) and (src newer than dst)).
1046
1047
1048.. function:: move_file(src, dst[, verbose, dry_run])
1049
1050 Move file *src* to *dst*. If *dst* is a directory, the file will be moved into
1051 it with the same name; otherwise, *src* is just renamed to *dst*. Returns the
1052 new full name of the file.
1053
1054 .. warning::
1055
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001056 Handles cross-device moves on Unix using :func:`copy_file`. What about
1057 other systems?
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001058
1059
1060.. function:: write_file(filename, contents)
1061
1062 Create a file called *filename* and write *contents* (a sequence of strings
1063 without line terminators) to it.
1064
1065
1066:mod:`distutils.util` --- Miscellaneous other utility functions
1067===============================================================
1068
1069.. module:: distutils.util
1070 :synopsis: Miscellaneous other utility functions
1071
1072
1073This module contains other assorted bits and pieces that don't fit into any
1074other utility module.
1075
1076
1077.. function:: get_platform()
1078
1079 Return a string that identifies the current platform. This is used mainly to
1080 distinguish platform-specific build directories and platform-specific built
1081 distributions. Typically includes the OS name and version and the architecture
1082 (as supplied by 'os.uname()'), although the exact information included depends
1083 on the OS; eg. for IRIX the architecture isn't particularly important (IRIX only
1084 runs on SGI hardware), but for Linux the kernel version isn't particularly
1085 important.
1086
1087 Examples of returned values:
1088
1089 * ``linux-i586``
1090 * ``linux-alpha``
1091 * ``solaris-2.6-sun4u``
1092 * ``irix-5.3``
1093 * ``irix64-6.2``
1094
1095 For non-POSIX platforms, currently just returns ``sys.platform``.
1096
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001097 For Mac OS X systems the OS version reflects the minimal version on which
Benjamin Petersonc39d7622008-12-30 17:56:45 +00001098 binaries will run (that is, the value of ``MACOSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET``
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001099 during the build of Python), not the OS version of the current system.
Benjamin Petersonc39d7622008-12-30 17:56:45 +00001100
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001101 For universal binary builds on Mac OS X the architecture value reflects
Senthil Kumaranb4760ef2015-06-14 17:35:37 -07001102 the universal binary status instead of the architecture of the current
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001103 processor. For 32-bit universal binaries the architecture is ``fat``,
1104 for 64-bit universal binaries the architecture is ``fat64``, and
Ronald Oussorenbea37ae2009-09-15 19:16:02 +00001105 for 4-way universal binaries the architecture is ``universal``. Starting
1106 from Python 2.7 and Python 3.2 the architecture ``fat3`` is used for
1107 a 3-way universal build (ppc, i386, x86_64) and ``intel`` is used for
Senthil Kumaranb4760ef2015-06-14 17:35:37 -07001108 a universal build with the i386 and x86_64 architectures
Benjamin Petersonc39d7622008-12-30 17:56:45 +00001109
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001110 Examples of returned values on Mac OS X:
Benjamin Petersonc39d7622008-12-30 17:56:45 +00001111
1112 * ``macosx-10.3-ppc``
1113
1114 * ``macosx-10.3-fat``
1115
1116 * ``macosx-10.5-universal``
1117
Ronald Oussorenbea37ae2009-09-15 19:16:02 +00001118 * ``macosx-10.6-intel``
1119
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001120
1121.. function:: convert_path(pathname)
1122
1123 Return 'pathname' as a name that will work on the native filesystem, i.e. split
1124 it on '/' and put it back together again using the current directory separator.
1125 Needed because filenames in the setup script are always supplied in Unix style,
1126 and have to be converted to the local convention before we can actually use them
1127 in the filesystem. Raises :exc:`ValueError` on non-Unix-ish systems if
1128 *pathname* either starts or ends with a slash.
1129
1130
1131.. function:: change_root(new_root, pathname)
1132
1133 Return *pathname* with *new_root* prepended. If *pathname* is relative, this is
1134 equivalent to ``os.path.join(new_root,pathname)`` Otherwise, it requires making
1135 *pathname* relative and then joining the two, which is tricky on DOS/Windows.
1136
1137
1138.. function:: check_environ()
1139
1140 Ensure that 'os.environ' has all the environment variables we guarantee that
1141 users can use in config files, command-line options, etc. Currently this
1142 includes:
1143
1144 * :envvar:`HOME` - user's home directory (Unix only)
1145 * :envvar:`PLAT` - description of the current platform, including hardware and
1146 OS (see :func:`get_platform`)
1147
1148
1149.. function:: subst_vars(s, local_vars)
1150
1151 Perform shell/Perl-style variable substitution on *s*. Every occurrence of
1152 ``$`` followed by a name is considered a variable, and variable is substituted
1153 by the value found in the *local_vars* dictionary, or in ``os.environ`` if it's
1154 not in *local_vars*. *os.environ* is first checked/augmented to guarantee that
1155 it contains certain values: see :func:`check_environ`. Raise :exc:`ValueError`
1156 for any variables not found in either *local_vars* or ``os.environ``.
1157
1158 Note that this is not a fully-fledged string interpolation function. A valid
1159 ``$variable`` can consist only of upper and lower case letters, numbers and an
1160 underscore. No { } or ( ) style quoting is available.
1161
1162
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001163.. function:: split_quoted(s)
1164
1165 Split a string up according to Unix shell-like rules for quotes and backslashes.
1166 In short: words are delimited by spaces, as long as those spaces are not escaped
1167 by a backslash, or inside a quoted string. Single and double quotes are
1168 equivalent, and the quote characters can be backslash-escaped. The backslash is
1169 stripped from any two-character escape sequence, leaving only the escaped
1170 character. The quote characters are stripped from any quoted string. Returns a
1171 list of words.
1172
1173 .. % Should probably be moved into the standard library.
1174
1175
1176.. function:: execute(func, args[, msg=None, verbose=0, dry_run=0])
1177
1178 Perform some action that affects the outside world (for instance, writing to the
1179 filesystem). Such actions are special because they are disabled by the
1180 *dry_run* flag. This method takes care of all that bureaucracy for you; all
1181 you have to do is supply the function to call and an argument tuple for it (to
1182 embody the "external action" being performed), and an optional message to print.
1183
1184
1185.. function:: strtobool(val)
1186
1187 Convert a string representation of truth to true (1) or false (0).
1188
1189 True values are ``y``, ``yes``, ``t``, ``true``, ``on`` and ``1``; false values
1190 are ``n``, ``no``, ``f``, ``false``, ``off`` and ``0``. Raises
1191 :exc:`ValueError` if *val* is anything else.
1192
1193
1194.. function:: byte_compile(py_files[, optimize=0, force=0, prefix=None, base_dir=None, verbose=1, dry_run=0, direct=None])
1195
1196 Byte-compile a collection of Python source files to either :file:`.pyc` or
Éric Araujo47a45212011-10-08 00:34:13 +02001197 :file:`.pyo` files in a :file:`__pycache__` subdirectory (see :pep:`3147`).
1198 *py_files* is a list of files to compile; any files that don't end in
1199 :file:`.py` are silently skipped. *optimize* must be one of the following:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001200
1201 * ``0`` - don't optimize (generate :file:`.pyc`)
1202 * ``1`` - normal optimization (like ``python -O``)
1203 * ``2`` - extra optimization (like ``python -OO``)
1204
1205 If *force* is true, all files are recompiled regardless of timestamps.
1206
Georg Brandl9afde1c2007-11-01 20:32:30 +00001207 The source filename encoded in each :term:`bytecode` file defaults to the filenames
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001208 listed in *py_files*; you can modify these with *prefix* and *basedir*.
1209 *prefix* is a string that will be stripped off of each source filename, and
1210 *base_dir* is a directory name that will be prepended (after *prefix* is
1211 stripped). You can supply either or both (or neither) of *prefix* and
1212 *base_dir*, as you wish.
1213
1214 If *dry_run* is true, doesn't actually do anything that would affect the
1215 filesystem.
1216
1217 Byte-compilation is either done directly in this interpreter process with the
1218 standard :mod:`py_compile` module, or indirectly by writing a temporary script
1219 and executing it. Normally, you should let :func:`byte_compile` figure out to
1220 use direct compilation or not (see the source for details). The *direct* flag
1221 is used by the script generated in indirect mode; unless you know what you're
1222 doing, leave it set to ``None``.
1223
Éric Araujo47a45212011-10-08 00:34:13 +02001224 .. versionchanged:: 3.2.3
1225 Create ``.pyc`` or ``.pyo`` files with an :func:`import magic tag
1226 <imp.get_tag>` in their name, in a :file:`__pycache__` subdirectory
1227 instead of files without tag in the current directory.
1228
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001229
1230.. function:: rfc822_escape(header)
1231
1232 Return a version of *header* escaped for inclusion in an :rfc:`822` header, by
1233 ensuring there are 8 spaces space after each newline. Note that it does no other
1234 modification of the string.
1235
1236 .. % this _can_ be replaced
1237
1238.. % \subsection{Distutils objects}
1239
1240
1241:mod:`distutils.dist` --- The Distribution class
1242================================================
1243
1244.. module:: distutils.dist
1245 :synopsis: Provides the Distribution class, which represents the module distribution being
1246 built/installed/distributed
1247
1248
Serhiy Storchaka7880db62013-10-09 14:09:16 +03001249This module provides the :class:`~distutils.core.Distribution` class, which
1250represents the module distribution being built/installed/distributed.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001251
1252
1253:mod:`distutils.extension` --- The Extension class
1254==================================================
1255
1256.. module:: distutils.extension
1257 :synopsis: Provides the Extension class, used to describe C/C++ extension modules in setup
1258 scripts
1259
1260
1261This module provides the :class:`Extension` class, used to describe C/C++
1262extension modules in setup scripts.
1263
1264.. % \subsection{Ungrouped modules}
1265.. % The following haven't been moved into a more appropriate section yet.
1266
1267
1268:mod:`distutils.debug` --- Distutils debug mode
1269===============================================
1270
1271.. module:: distutils.debug
1272 :synopsis: Provides the debug flag for distutils
1273
1274
1275This module provides the DEBUG flag.
1276
1277
1278:mod:`distutils.errors` --- Distutils exceptions
1279================================================
1280
1281.. module:: distutils.errors
1282 :synopsis: Provides standard distutils exceptions
1283
1284
1285Provides exceptions used by the Distutils modules. Note that Distutils modules
1286may raise standard exceptions; in particular, SystemExit is usually raised for
1287errors that are obviously the end-user's fault (eg. bad command-line arguments).
1288
1289This module is safe to use in ``from ... import *`` mode; it only exports
1290symbols whose names start with ``Distutils`` and end with ``Error``.
1291
1292
1293:mod:`distutils.fancy_getopt` --- Wrapper around the standard getopt module
1294===========================================================================
1295
1296.. module:: distutils.fancy_getopt
1297 :synopsis: Additional getopt functionality
1298
1299
1300This module provides a wrapper around the standard :mod:`getopt` module that
1301provides the following additional features:
1302
1303* short and long options are tied together
1304
1305* options have help strings, so :func:`fancy_getopt` could potentially create a
1306 complete usage summary
1307
1308* options set attributes of a passed-in object
1309
1310* boolean options can have "negative aliases" --- eg. if :option:`--quiet` is
1311 the "negative alias" of :option:`--verbose`, then :option:`--quiet` on the
1312 command line sets *verbose* to false.
1313
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001314.. function:: fancy_getopt(options, negative_opt, object, args)
1315
1316 Wrapper function. *options* is a list of ``(long_option, short_option,
1317 help_string)`` 3-tuples as described in the constructor for
1318 :class:`FancyGetopt`. *negative_opt* should be a dictionary mapping option names
1319 to option names, both the key and value should be in the *options* list.
1320 *object* is an object which will be used to store values (see the :meth:`getopt`
1321 method of the :class:`FancyGetopt` class). *args* is the argument list. Will use
1322 ``sys.argv[1:]`` if you pass ``None`` as *args*.
1323
1324
1325.. function:: wrap_text(text, width)
1326
1327 Wraps *text* to less than *width* wide.
1328
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001329
1330.. class:: FancyGetopt([option_table=None])
1331
1332 The option_table is a list of 3-tuples: ``(long_option, short_option,
1333 help_string)``
1334
1335 If an option takes an argument, its *long_option* should have ``'='`` appended;
1336 *short_option* should just be a single character, no ``':'`` in any case.
1337 *short_option* should be ``None`` if a *long_option* doesn't have a
1338 corresponding *short_option*. All option tuples must have long options.
1339
1340The :class:`FancyGetopt` class provides the following methods:
1341
1342
1343.. method:: FancyGetopt.getopt([args=None, object=None])
1344
1345 Parse command-line options in args. Store as attributes on *object*.
1346
1347 If *args* is ``None`` or not supplied, uses ``sys.argv[1:]``. If *object* is
1348 ``None`` or not supplied, creates a new :class:`OptionDummy` instance, stores
1349 option values there, and returns a tuple ``(args, object)``. If *object* is
1350 supplied, it is modified in place and :func:`getopt` just returns *args*; in
1351 both cases, the returned *args* is a modified copy of the passed-in *args* list,
1352 which is left untouched.
1353
1354 .. % and args returned are?
1355
1356
1357.. method:: FancyGetopt.get_option_order()
1358
1359 Returns the list of ``(option, value)`` tuples processed by the previous run of
1360 :meth:`getopt` Raises :exc:`RuntimeError` if :meth:`getopt` hasn't been called
1361 yet.
1362
1363
1364.. method:: FancyGetopt.generate_help([header=None])
1365
1366 Generate help text (a list of strings, one per suggested line of output) from
1367 the option table for this :class:`FancyGetopt` object.
1368
1369 If supplied, prints the supplied *header* at the top of the help.
1370
1371
1372:mod:`distutils.filelist` --- The FileList class
1373================================================
1374
1375.. module:: distutils.filelist
Georg Brandl3221dc92009-04-27 16:23:47 +00001376 :synopsis: The FileList class, used for poking about the file system and
1377 building lists of files.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001378
1379
1380This module provides the :class:`FileList` class, used for poking about the
1381filesystem and building lists of files.
1382
1383
1384:mod:`distutils.log` --- Simple PEP 282-style logging
1385=====================================================
1386
1387.. module:: distutils.log
1388 :synopsis: A simple logging mechanism, 282-style
1389
1390
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001391:mod:`distutils.spawn` --- Spawn a sub-process
1392==============================================
1393
1394.. module:: distutils.spawn
1395 :synopsis: Provides the spawn() function
1396
1397
1398This module provides the :func:`spawn` function, a front-end to various
1399platform-specific functions for launching another program in a sub-process.
1400Also provides :func:`find_executable` to search the path for a given executable
1401name.
1402
1403
1404:mod:`distutils.sysconfig` --- System configuration information
1405===============================================================
1406
1407.. module:: distutils.sysconfig
1408 :synopsis: Low-level access to configuration information of the Python interpreter.
1409.. moduleauthor:: Fred L. Drake, Jr. <fdrake@acm.org>
1410.. moduleauthor:: Greg Ward <gward@python.net>
1411.. sectionauthor:: Fred L. Drake, Jr. <fdrake@acm.org>
1412
1413
1414The :mod:`distutils.sysconfig` module provides access to Python's low-level
1415configuration information. The specific configuration variables available
1416depend heavily on the platform and configuration. The specific variables depend
1417on the build process for the specific version of Python being run; the variables
1418are those found in the :file:`Makefile` and configuration header that are
1419installed with Python on Unix systems. The configuration header is called
1420:file:`pyconfig.h` for Python versions starting with 2.2, and :file:`config.h`
1421for earlier versions of Python.
1422
1423Some additional functions are provided which perform some useful manipulations
1424for other parts of the :mod:`distutils` package.
1425
1426
1427.. data:: PREFIX
1428
1429 The result of ``os.path.normpath(sys.prefix)``.
1430
1431
1432.. data:: EXEC_PREFIX
1433
1434 The result of ``os.path.normpath(sys.exec_prefix)``.
1435
1436
1437.. function:: get_config_var(name)
1438
1439 Return the value of a single variable. This is equivalent to
1440 ``get_config_vars().get(name)``.
1441
1442
1443.. function:: get_config_vars(...)
1444
1445 Return a set of variable definitions. If there are no arguments, this returns a
1446 dictionary mapping names of configuration variables to values. If arguments are
1447 provided, they should be strings, and the return value will be a sequence giving
1448 the associated values. If a given name does not have a corresponding value,
1449 ``None`` will be included for that variable.
1450
1451
1452.. function:: get_config_h_filename()
1453
1454 Return the full path name of the configuration header. For Unix, this will be
1455 the header generated by the :program:`configure` script; for other platforms the
1456 header will have been supplied directly by the Python source distribution. The
1457 file is a platform-specific text file.
1458
1459
1460.. function:: get_makefile_filename()
1461
1462 Return the full path name of the :file:`Makefile` used to build Python. For
1463 Unix, this will be a file generated by the :program:`configure` script; the
1464 meaning for other platforms will vary. The file is a platform-specific text
1465 file, if it exists. This function is only useful on POSIX platforms.
1466
1467
1468.. function:: get_python_inc([plat_specific[, prefix]])
1469
1470 Return the directory for either the general or platform-dependent C include
1471 files. If *plat_specific* is true, the platform-dependent include directory is
1472 returned; if false or omitted, the platform-independent directory is returned.
1473 If *prefix* is given, it is used as either the prefix instead of
1474 :const:`PREFIX`, or as the exec-prefix instead of :const:`EXEC_PREFIX` if
1475 *plat_specific* is true.
1476
1477
1478.. function:: get_python_lib([plat_specific[, standard_lib[, prefix]]])
1479
1480 Return the directory for either the general or platform-dependent library
1481 installation. If *plat_specific* is true, the platform-dependent include
1482 directory is returned; if false or omitted, the platform-independent directory
1483 is returned. If *prefix* is given, it is used as either the prefix instead of
1484 :const:`PREFIX`, or as the exec-prefix instead of :const:`EXEC_PREFIX` if
1485 *plat_specific* is true. If *standard_lib* is true, the directory for the
1486 standard library is returned rather than the directory for the installation of
1487 third-party extensions.
1488
1489The following function is only intended for use within the :mod:`distutils`
1490package.
1491
1492
1493.. function:: customize_compiler(compiler)
1494
1495 Do any platform-specific customization of a
1496 :class:`distutils.ccompiler.CCompiler` instance.
1497
1498 This function is only needed on Unix at this time, but should be called
1499 consistently to support forward-compatibility. It inserts the information that
1500 varies across Unix flavors and is stored in Python's :file:`Makefile`. This
1501 information includes the selected compiler, compiler and linker options, and the
1502 extension used by the linker for shared objects.
1503
1504This function is even more special-purpose, and should only be used from
1505Python's own build procedures.
1506
1507
1508.. function:: set_python_build()
1509
1510 Inform the :mod:`distutils.sysconfig` module that it is being used as part of
1511 the build process for Python. This changes a lot of relative locations for
1512 files, allowing them to be located in the build area rather than in an installed
1513 Python.
1514
1515
1516:mod:`distutils.text_file` --- The TextFile class
1517=================================================
1518
1519.. module:: distutils.text_file
1520 :synopsis: provides the TextFile class, a simple interface to text files
1521
1522
1523This module provides the :class:`TextFile` class, which gives an interface to
1524text files that (optionally) takes care of stripping comments, ignoring blank
1525lines, and joining lines with backslashes.
1526
1527
1528.. class:: TextFile([filename=None, file=None, **options])
1529
1530 This class provides a file-like object that takes care of all the things you
1531 commonly want to do when processing a text file that has some line-by-line
1532 syntax: strip comments (as long as ``#`` is your comment character), skip blank
1533 lines, join adjacent lines by escaping the newline (ie. backslash at end of
1534 line), strip leading and/or trailing whitespace. All of these are optional and
1535 independently controllable.
1536
1537 The class provides a :meth:`warn` method so you can generate warning messages
1538 that report physical line number, even if the logical line in question spans
1539 multiple physical lines. Also provides :meth:`unreadline` for implementing
1540 line-at-a-time lookahead.
1541
1542 :class:`TextFile` instances are create with either *filename*, *file*, or both.
1543 :exc:`RuntimeError` is raised if both are ``None``. *filename* should be a
1544 string, and *file* a file object (or something that provides :meth:`readline`
1545 and :meth:`close` methods). It is recommended that you supply at least
1546 *filename*, so that :class:`TextFile` can include it in warning messages. If
1547 *file* is not supplied, :class:`TextFile` creates its own using the
1548 :func:`open` built-in function.
1549
1550 The options are all boolean, and affect the values returned by :meth:`readline`
1551
Georg Brandl44ea77b2013-03-28 13:28:44 +01001552 .. tabularcolumns:: |l|L|l|
1553
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001554 +------------------+--------------------------------+---------+
1555 | option name | description | default |
1556 +==================+================================+=========+
1557 | *strip_comments* | strip from ``'#'`` to end-of- | true |
1558 | | line, as well as any | |
1559 | | whitespace leading up to the | |
1560 | | ``'#'``\ ---unless it is | |
1561 | | escaped by a backslash | |
1562 +------------------+--------------------------------+---------+
1563 | *lstrip_ws* | strip leading whitespace from | false |
1564 | | each line before returning it | |
1565 +------------------+--------------------------------+---------+
1566 | *rstrip_ws* | strip trailing whitespace | true |
1567 | | (including line terminator!) | |
1568 | | from each line before | |
1569 | | returning it. | |
1570 +------------------+--------------------------------+---------+
1571 | *skip_blanks* | skip lines that are empty | true |
1572 | | \*after\* stripping comments | |
1573 | | and whitespace. (If both | |
1574 | | lstrip_ws and rstrip_ws are | |
1575 | | false, then some lines may | |
1576 | | consist of solely whitespace: | |
1577 | | these will \*not\* be skipped, | |
1578 | | even if *skip_blanks* is | |
1579 | | true.) | |
1580 +------------------+--------------------------------+---------+
1581 | *join_lines* | if a backslash is the last | false |
1582 | | non-newline character on a | |
1583 | | line after stripping comments | |
1584 | | and whitespace, join the | |
1585 | | following line to it to form | |
1586 | | one logical line; if N | |
1587 | | consecutive lines end with a | |
1588 | | backslash, then N+1 physical | |
1589 | | lines will be joined to form | |
1590 | | one logical line. | |
1591 +------------------+--------------------------------+---------+
1592 | *collapse_join* | strip leading whitespace from | false |
1593 | | lines that are joined to their | |
1594 | | predecessor; only matters if | |
1595 | | ``(join_lines and not | |
1596 | | lstrip_ws)`` | |
1597 +------------------+--------------------------------+---------+
1598
1599 Note that since *rstrip_ws* can strip the trailing newline, the semantics of
Georg Brandl22b34312009-07-26 14:54:51 +00001600 :meth:`readline` must differ from those of the built-in file object's
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001601 :meth:`readline` method! In particular, :meth:`readline` returns ``None`` for
1602 end-of-file: an empty string might just be a blank line (or an all-whitespace
1603 line), if *rstrip_ws* is true but *skip_blanks* is not.
1604
1605
1606 .. method:: TextFile.open(filename)
1607
Georg Brandl22b34312009-07-26 14:54:51 +00001608 Open a new file *filename*. This overrides any *file* or *filename*
1609 constructor arguments.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001610
1611
1612 .. method:: TextFile.close()
1613
1614 Close the current file and forget everything we know about it (including the
1615 filename and the current line number).
1616
1617
1618 .. method:: TextFile.warn(msg[,line=None])
1619
1620 Print (to stderr) a warning message tied to the current logical line in the
1621 current file. If the current logical line in the file spans multiple physical
1622 lines, the warning refers to the whole range, such as ``"lines 3-5"``. If
1623 *line* is supplied, it overrides the current line number; it may be a list or
1624 tuple to indicate a range of physical lines, or an integer for a single
1625 physical line.
1626
1627
1628 .. method:: TextFile.readline()
1629
1630 Read and return a single logical line from the current file (or from an internal
1631 buffer if lines have previously been "unread" with :meth:`unreadline`). If the
1632 *join_lines* option is true, this may involve reading multiple physical lines
1633 concatenated into a single string. Updates the current line number, so calling
1634 :meth:`warn` after :meth:`readline` emits a warning about the physical line(s)
1635 just read. Returns ``None`` on end-of-file, since the empty string can occur
1636 if *rstrip_ws* is true but *strip_blanks* is not.
1637
1638
1639 .. method:: TextFile.readlines()
1640
1641 Read and return the list of all logical lines remaining in the current file.
1642 This updates the current line number to the last line of the file.
1643
1644
1645 .. method:: TextFile.unreadline(line)
1646
1647 Push *line* (a string) onto an internal buffer that will be checked by future
1648 :meth:`readline` calls. Handy for implementing a parser with line-at-a-time
1649 lookahead. Note that lines that are "unread" with :meth:`unreadline` are not
1650 subsequently re-cleansed (whitespace stripped, or whatever) when read with
1651 :meth:`readline`. If multiple calls are made to :meth:`unreadline` before a call
1652 to :meth:`readline`, the lines will be returned most in most recent first order.
1653
1654
1655:mod:`distutils.version` --- Version number classes
1656===================================================
1657
1658.. module:: distutils.version
1659 :synopsis: implements classes that represent module version numbers.
1660
1661
1662.. % todo
1663.. % \section{Distutils Commands}
Georg Brandl48310cd2009-01-03 21:18:54 +00001664.. %
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001665.. % This part of Distutils implements the various Distutils commands, such
1666.. % as \code{build}, \code{install} \&c. Each command is implemented as a
1667.. % separate module, with the command name as the name of the module.
1668
1669
1670:mod:`distutils.cmd` --- Abstract base class for Distutils commands
1671===================================================================
1672
1673.. module:: distutils.cmd
Georg Brandl4009c9e2010-10-06 08:26:09 +00001674 :synopsis: This module provides the abstract base class Command. This class
1675 is subclassed by the modules in the distutils.command subpackage.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001676
1677
1678This module supplies the abstract base class :class:`Command`.
1679
1680
1681.. class:: Command(dist)
1682
1683 Abstract base class for defining command classes, the "worker bees" of the
1684 Distutils. A useful analogy for command classes is to think of them as
Georg Brandl4009c9e2010-10-06 08:26:09 +00001685 subroutines with local variables called *options*. The options are declared
1686 in :meth:`initialize_options` and defined (given their final values) in
1687 :meth:`finalize_options`, both of which must be defined by every command
1688 class. The distinction between the two is necessary because option values
1689 might come from the outside world (command line, config file, ...), and any
1690 options dependent on other options must be computed after these outside
1691 influences have been processed --- hence :meth:`finalize_options`. The body
1692 of the subroutine, where it does all its work based on the values of its
1693 options, is the :meth:`run` method, which must also be implemented by every
1694 command class.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001695
Serhiy Storchaka7880db62013-10-09 14:09:16 +03001696 The class constructor takes a single argument *dist*, a
1697 :class:`~distutils.core.Distribution` instance.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001698
1699
Georg Brandl4009c9e2010-10-06 08:26:09 +00001700Creating a new Distutils command
1701================================
1702
1703This section outlines the steps to create a new Distutils command.
1704
1705A new command lives in a module in the :mod:`distutils.command` package. There
1706is a sample template in that directory called :file:`command_template`. Copy
1707this file to a new module with the same name as the new command you're
1708implementing. This module should implement a class with the same name as the
1709module (and the command). So, for instance, to create the command
1710``peel_banana`` (so that users can run ``setup.py peel_banana``), you'd copy
1711:file:`command_template` to :file:`distutils/command/peel_banana.py`, then edit
1712it so that it's implementing the class :class:`peel_banana`, a subclass of
1713:class:`distutils.cmd.Command`.
1714
1715Subclasses of :class:`Command` must define the following methods.
1716
1717.. method:: Command.initialize_options()
1718
1719 Set default values for all the options that this command supports. Note that
1720 these defaults may be overridden by other commands, by the setup script, by
1721 config files, or by the command-line. Thus, this is not the place to code
1722 dependencies between options; generally, :meth:`initialize_options`
1723 implementations are just a bunch of ``self.foo = None`` assignments.
1724
1725
1726.. method:: Command.finalize_options()
1727
1728 Set final values for all the options that this command supports. This is
1729 always called as late as possible, ie. after any option assignments from the
1730 command-line or from other commands have been done. Thus, this is the place
Ezio Melottie130a522011-10-19 10:58:56 +03001731 to code option dependencies: if *foo* depends on *bar*, then it is safe to
Georg Brandl4009c9e2010-10-06 08:26:09 +00001732 set *foo* from *bar* as long as *foo* still has the same value it was
1733 assigned in :meth:`initialize_options`.
1734
1735
1736.. method:: Command.run()
1737
1738 A command's raison d'etre: carry out the action it exists to perform, controlled
1739 by the options initialized in :meth:`initialize_options`, customized by other
1740 commands, the setup script, the command-line, and config files, and finalized in
1741 :meth:`finalize_options`. All terminal output and filesystem interaction should
1742 be done by :meth:`run`.
1743
1744
1745.. attribute:: Command.sub_commands
1746
1747 *sub_commands* formalizes the notion of a "family" of commands,
1748 e.g. ``install`` as the parent with sub-commands ``install_lib``,
1749 ``install_headers``, etc. The parent of a family of commands defines
1750 *sub_commands* as a class attribute; it's a list of 2-tuples ``(command_name,
1751 predicate)``, with *command_name* a string and *predicate* a function, a
1752 string or ``None``. *predicate* is a method of the parent command that
1753 determines whether the corresponding command is applicable in the current
Éric Araujo000893f2011-05-29 00:14:45 +02001754 situation. (E.g. ``install_headers`` is only applicable if we have any C
Georg Brandl4009c9e2010-10-06 08:26:09 +00001755 header files to install.) If *predicate* is ``None``, that command is always
1756 applicable.
1757
1758 *sub_commands* is usually defined at the *end* of a class, because
1759 predicates can be methods of the class, so they must already have been
1760 defined. The canonical example is the :command:`install` command.
1761
1762
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001763:mod:`distutils.command` --- Individual Distutils commands
1764==========================================================
1765
1766.. module:: distutils.command
1767 :synopsis: This subpackage contains one module for each standard Distutils command.
1768
1769
1770.. % \subsubsection{Individual Distutils commands}
1771.. % todo
1772
1773
1774:mod:`distutils.command.bdist` --- Build a binary installer
1775===========================================================
1776
1777.. module:: distutils.command.bdist
1778 :synopsis: Build a binary installer for a package
1779
1780
1781.. % todo
1782
1783
1784:mod:`distutils.command.bdist_packager` --- Abstract base class for packagers
1785=============================================================================
1786
1787.. module:: distutils.command.bdist_packager
1788 :synopsis: Abstract base class for packagers
1789
1790
1791.. % todo
1792
1793
1794:mod:`distutils.command.bdist_dumb` --- Build a "dumb" installer
1795================================================================
1796
1797.. module:: distutils.command.bdist_dumb
1798 :synopsis: Build a "dumb" installer - a simple archive of files
1799
1800
1801.. % todo
1802
1803
1804:mod:`distutils.command.bdist_msi` --- Build a Microsoft Installer binary package
1805=================================================================================
1806
1807.. module:: distutils.command.bdist_msi
1808 :synopsis: Build a binary distribution as a Windows MSI file
1809
Éric Araujo5864b9f2011-05-31 21:50:38 +02001810.. class:: bdist_msi
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001811
Benjamin Petersond23f8222009-04-05 19:13:16 +00001812 Builds a `Windows Installer`_ (.msi) binary package.
1813
1814 .. _Windows Installer: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc185688(VS.85).aspx
1815
1816 In most cases, the ``bdist_msi`` installer is a better choice than the
1817 ``bdist_wininst`` installer, because it provides better support for
1818 Win64 platforms, allows administrators to perform non-interactive
1819 installations, and allows installation through group policies.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001820
1821
1822:mod:`distutils.command.bdist_rpm` --- Build a binary distribution as a Redhat RPM and SRPM
1823===========================================================================================
1824
1825.. module:: distutils.command.bdist_rpm
1826 :synopsis: Build a binary distribution as a Redhat RPM and SRPM
1827
1828
1829.. % todo
1830
1831
1832:mod:`distutils.command.bdist_wininst` --- Build a Windows installer
1833====================================================================
1834
1835.. module:: distutils.command.bdist_wininst
1836 :synopsis: Build a Windows installer
1837
1838
1839.. % todo
1840
1841
1842:mod:`distutils.command.sdist` --- Build a source distribution
1843==============================================================
1844
1845.. module:: distutils.command.sdist
1846 :synopsis: Build a source distribution
1847
1848
1849.. % todo
1850
1851
1852:mod:`distutils.command.build` --- Build all files of a package
1853===============================================================
1854
1855.. module:: distutils.command.build
1856 :synopsis: Build all files of a package
1857
1858
1859.. % todo
1860
1861
1862:mod:`distutils.command.build_clib` --- Build any C libraries in a package
1863==========================================================================
1864
1865.. module:: distutils.command.build_clib
1866 :synopsis: Build any C libraries in a package
1867
1868
1869.. % todo
1870
1871
1872:mod:`distutils.command.build_ext` --- Build any extensions in a package
1873========================================================================
1874
1875.. module:: distutils.command.build_ext
1876 :synopsis: Build any extensions in a package
1877
1878
1879.. % todo
1880
1881
1882:mod:`distutils.command.build_py` --- Build the .py/.pyc files of a package
1883===========================================================================
1884
1885.. module:: distutils.command.build_py
1886 :synopsis: Build the .py/.pyc files of a package
1887
1888
Éric Araujo5864b9f2011-05-31 21:50:38 +02001889.. class:: build_py
Martin v. Löwis73a22f02008-03-22 00:35:10 +00001890
Éric Araujo5864b9f2011-05-31 21:50:38 +02001891.. class:: build_py_2to3
Martin v. Löwis73a22f02008-03-22 00:35:10 +00001892
1893 Alternative implementation of build_py which also runs the
1894 2to3 conversion library on each .py file that is going to be
1895 installed. To use this in a setup.py file for a distribution
1896 that is designed to run with both Python 2.x and 3.x, add::
1897
1898 try:
1899 from distutils.command.build_py import build_py_2to3 as build_py
1900 except ImportError:
1901 from distutils.command.build_py import build_py
1902
1903 to your setup.py, and later::
1904
Georg Brandl682d7e02010-10-06 10:26:05 +00001905 cmdclass = {'build_py': build_py}
Martin v. Löwis73a22f02008-03-22 00:35:10 +00001906
1907 to the invocation of setup().
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001908
1909
1910:mod:`distutils.command.build_scripts` --- Build the scripts of a package
1911=========================================================================
1912
1913.. module:: distutils.command.build_scripts
1914 :synopsis: Build the scripts of a package
1915
1916
1917.. % todo
1918
1919
1920:mod:`distutils.command.clean` --- Clean a package build area
1921=============================================================
1922
1923.. module:: distutils.command.clean
1924 :synopsis: Clean a package build area
1925
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -07001926This command removes the temporary files created by :command:`build`
1927and its subcommands, like intermediary compiled object files. With
1928the ``--all`` option, the complete build directory will be removed.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001929
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -07001930Extension modules built :ref:`in place <distutils-build-ext-inplace>`
1931will not be cleaned, as they are not in the build directory.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001932
1933
1934:mod:`distutils.command.config` --- Perform package configuration
1935=================================================================
1936
1937.. module:: distutils.command.config
1938 :synopsis: Perform package configuration
1939
1940
1941.. % todo
1942
1943
1944:mod:`distutils.command.install` --- Install a package
1945======================================================
1946
1947.. module:: distutils.command.install
1948 :synopsis: Install a package
1949
1950
1951.. % todo
1952
1953
1954:mod:`distutils.command.install_data` --- Install data files from a package
1955===========================================================================
1956
1957.. module:: distutils.command.install_data
1958 :synopsis: Install data files from a package
1959
1960
1961.. % todo
1962
1963
1964:mod:`distutils.command.install_headers` --- Install C/C++ header files from a package
1965======================================================================================
1966
1967.. module:: distutils.command.install_headers
1968 :synopsis: Install C/C++ header files from a package
1969
1970
1971.. % todo
1972
1973
1974:mod:`distutils.command.install_lib` --- Install library files from a package
1975=============================================================================
1976
1977.. module:: distutils.command.install_lib
1978 :synopsis: Install library files from a package
1979
1980
1981.. % todo
1982
1983
1984:mod:`distutils.command.install_scripts` --- Install script files from a package
1985================================================================================
1986
1987.. module:: distutils.command.install_scripts
1988 :synopsis: Install script files from a package
1989
1990
1991.. % todo
1992
1993
1994:mod:`distutils.command.register` --- Register a module with the Python Package Index
1995=====================================================================================
1996
1997.. module:: distutils.command.register
1998 :synopsis: Register a module with the Python Package Index
1999
2000
2001The ``register`` command registers the package with the Python Package Index.
2002This is described in more detail in :pep:`301`.
2003
2004.. % todo
Tarek Ziadé96c45a92010-07-31 09:10:51 +00002005
Éric Araujo4b8f6652011-05-29 18:05:53 +02002006
Tarek Ziadé96c45a92010-07-31 09:10:51 +00002007:mod:`distutils.command.check` --- Check the meta-data of a package
2008===================================================================
2009
2010.. module:: distutils.command.check
2011 :synopsis: Check the metadata of a package
2012
2013
2014The ``check`` command performs some tests on the meta-data of a package.
2015For example, it verifies that all required meta-data are provided as
2016the arguments passed to the :func:`setup` function.
2017
2018.. % todo