blob: d977c772b72743643e6e327663e80920b262914c [file] [log] [blame]
Georg Brandlcb7cb242009-10-27 20:20:38 +00001:tocdepth: 2
2
3=========================
4Library and Extension FAQ
5=========================
6
7.. contents::
8
9General Library Questions
10=========================
11
12How do I find a module or application to perform task X?
13--------------------------------------------------------
14
15Check :ref:`the Library Reference <library-index>` to see if there's a relevant
16standard library module. (Eventually you'll learn what's in the standard
17library and will able to skip this step.)
18
19Search the `Python Package Index <http://pypi.python.org/pypi>`_.
20
21Next, check the `Vaults of Parnassus <http://www.vex.net/parnassus/>`_, an older
22index of packages.
23
24Finally, try `Google <http://www.google.com>`_ or other Web search engine.
25Searching for "Python" plus a keyword or two for your topic of interest will
26usually find something helpful.
27
28
29Where is the math.py (socket.py, regex.py, etc.) source file?
30-------------------------------------------------------------
31
32If you can't find a source file for a module it may be a builtin or dynamically
33loaded module implemented in C, C++ or other compiled language. In this case
34you may not have the source file or it may be something like mathmodule.c,
35somewhere in a C source directory (not on the Python Path).
36
37There are (at least) three kinds of modules in Python:
38
391) modules written in Python (.py);
402) modules written in C and dynamically loaded (.dll, .pyd, .so, .sl, etc);
413) modules written in C and linked with the interpreter; to get a list of these,
42 type::
43
44 import sys
45 print sys.builtin_module_names
46
47
48How do I make a Python script executable on Unix?
49-------------------------------------------------
50
51You need to do two things: the script file's mode must be executable and the
52first line must begin with ``#!`` followed by the path of the Python
53interpreter.
54
55The first is done by executing ``chmod +x scriptfile`` or perhaps ``chmod 755
56scriptfile``.
57
58The second can be done in a number of ways. The most straightforward way is to
59write ::
60
61 #!/usr/local/bin/python
62
63as the very first line of your file, using the pathname for where the Python
64interpreter is installed on your platform.
65
66If you would like the script to be independent of where the Python interpreter
67lives, you can use the "env" program. Almost all Unix variants support the
68following, assuming the python interpreter is in a directory on the user's
69$PATH::
70
71 #!/usr/bin/env python
72
73*Don't* do this for CGI scripts. The $PATH variable for CGI scripts is often
74very minimal, so you need to use the actual absolute pathname of the
75interpreter.
76
77Occasionally, a user's environment is so full that the /usr/bin/env program
78fails; or there's no env program at all. In that case, you can try the
79following hack (due to Alex Rezinsky)::
80
81 #! /bin/sh
82 """:"
83 exec python $0 ${1+"$@"}
84 """
85
86The minor disadvantage is that this defines the script's __doc__ string.
87However, you can fix that by adding ::
88
89 __doc__ = """...Whatever..."""
90
91
92
93Is there a curses/termcap package for Python?
94---------------------------------------------
95
96.. XXX curses *is* built by default, isn't it?
97
98For Unix variants: The standard Python source distribution comes with a curses
99module in the ``Modules/`` subdirectory, though it's not compiled by default
100(note that this is not available in the Windows distribution -- there is no
101curses module for Windows).
102
103The curses module supports basic curses features as well as many additional
104functions from ncurses and SYSV curses such as colour, alternative character set
105support, pads, and mouse support. This means the module isn't compatible with
106operating systems that only have BSD curses, but there don't seem to be any
107currently maintained OSes that fall into this category.
108
109For Windows: use `the consolelib module
110<http://effbot.org/zone/console-index.htm>`_.
111
112
113Is there an equivalent to C's onexit() in Python?
114-------------------------------------------------
115
116The :mod:`atexit` module provides a register function that is similar to C's
117onexit.
118
119
120Why don't my signal handlers work?
121----------------------------------
122
123The most common problem is that the signal handler is declared with the wrong
124argument list. It is called as ::
125
126 handler(signum, frame)
127
128so it should be declared with two arguments::
129
130 def handler(signum, frame):
131 ...
132
133
134Common tasks
135============
136
137How do I test a Python program or component?
138--------------------------------------------
139
140Python comes with two testing frameworks. The :mod:`doctest` module finds
141examples in the docstrings for a module and runs them, comparing the output with
142the expected output given in the docstring.
143
144The :mod:`unittest` module is a fancier testing framework modelled on Java and
145Smalltalk testing frameworks.
146
147For testing, it helps to write the program so that it may be easily tested by
148using good modular design. Your program should have almost all functionality
149encapsulated in either functions or class methods -- and this sometimes has the
150surprising and delightful effect of making the program run faster (because local
151variable accesses are faster than global accesses). Furthermore the program
152should avoid depending on mutating global variables, since this makes testing
153much more difficult to do.
154
155The "global main logic" of your program may be as simple as ::
156
157 if __name__ == "__main__":
158 main_logic()
159
160at the bottom of the main module of your program.
161
162Once your program is organized as a tractable collection of functions and class
163behaviours you should write test functions that exercise the behaviours. A test
164suite can be associated with each module which automates a sequence of tests.
165This sounds like a lot of work, but since Python is so terse and flexible it's
166surprisingly easy. You can make coding much more pleasant and fun by writing
167your test functions in parallel with the "production code", since this makes it
168easy to find bugs and even design flaws earlier.
169
170"Support modules" that are not intended to be the main module of a program may
171include a self-test of the module. ::
172
173 if __name__ == "__main__":
174 self_test()
175
176Even programs that interact with complex external interfaces may be tested when
177the external interfaces are unavailable by using "fake" interfaces implemented
178in Python.
179
180
181How do I create documentation from doc strings?
182-----------------------------------------------
183
184.. XXX mention Sphinx/epydoc
185
186The :mod:`pydoc` module can create HTML from the doc strings in your Python
187source code. An alternative is `pythondoc
188<http://starship.python.net/crew/danilo/pythondoc/>`_.
189
190
191How do I get a single keypress at a time?
192-----------------------------------------
193
194For Unix variants: There are several solutions. It's straightforward to do this
195using curses, but curses is a fairly large module to learn. Here's a solution
196without curses::
197
198 import termios, fcntl, sys, os
199 fd = sys.stdin.fileno()
200
201 oldterm = termios.tcgetattr(fd)
202 newattr = termios.tcgetattr(fd)
203 newattr[3] = newattr[3] & ~termios.ICANON & ~termios.ECHO
204 termios.tcsetattr(fd, termios.TCSANOW, newattr)
205
206 oldflags = fcntl.fcntl(fd, fcntl.F_GETFL)
207 fcntl.fcntl(fd, fcntl.F_SETFL, oldflags | os.O_NONBLOCK)
208
209 try:
210 while 1:
211 try:
212 c = sys.stdin.read(1)
213 print "Got character", `c`
214 except IOError: pass
215 finally:
216 termios.tcsetattr(fd, termios.TCSAFLUSH, oldterm)
217 fcntl.fcntl(fd, fcntl.F_SETFL, oldflags)
218
219You need the :mod:`termios` and the :mod:`fcntl` module for any of this to work,
220and I've only tried it on Linux, though it should work elsewhere. In this code,
221characters are read and printed one at a time.
222
223:func:`termios.tcsetattr` turns off stdin's echoing and disables canonical mode.
224:func:`fcntl.fnctl` is used to obtain stdin's file descriptor flags and modify
225them for non-blocking mode. Since reading stdin when it is empty results in an
226:exc:`IOError`, this error is caught and ignored.
227
228
229Threads
230=======
231
232How do I program using threads?
233-------------------------------
234
235.. XXX it's _thread in py3k
236
237Be sure to use the :mod:`threading` module and not the :mod:`thread` module.
238The :mod:`threading` module builds convenient abstractions on top of the
239low-level primitives provided by the :mod:`thread` module.
240
241Aahz has a set of slides from his threading tutorial that are helpful; see
242http://starship.python.net/crew/aahz/OSCON2001/.
243
244
245None of my threads seem to run: why?
246------------------------------------
247
248As soon as the main thread exits, all threads are killed. Your main thread is
249running too quickly, giving the threads no time to do any work.
250
251A simple fix is to add a sleep to the end of the program that's long enough for
252all the threads to finish::
253
254 import threading, time
255
256 def thread_task(name, n):
257 for i in range(n): print name, i
258
259 for i in range(10):
260 T = threading.Thread(target=thread_task, args=(str(i), i))
261 T.start()
262
263 time.sleep(10) # <----------------------------!
264
265But now (on many platforms) the threads don't run in parallel, but appear to run
266sequentially, one at a time! The reason is that the OS thread scheduler doesn't
267start a new thread until the previous thread is blocked.
268
269A simple fix is to add a tiny sleep to the start of the run function::
270
271 def thread_task(name, n):
272 time.sleep(0.001) # <---------------------!
273 for i in range(n): print name, i
274
275 for i in range(10):
276 T = threading.Thread(target=thread_task, args=(str(i), i))
277 T.start()
278
279 time.sleep(10)
280
281Instead of trying to guess how long a :func:`time.sleep` delay will be enough,
282it's better to use some kind of semaphore mechanism. One idea is to use the
283:mod:`Queue` module to create a queue object, let each thread append a token to
284the queue when it finishes, and let the main thread read as many tokens from the
285queue as there are threads.
286
287
288How do I parcel out work among a bunch of worker threads?
289---------------------------------------------------------
290
291Use the :mod:`Queue` module to create a queue containing a list of jobs. The
292:class:`~Queue.Queue` class maintains a list of objects with ``.put(obj)`` to
293add an item to the queue and ``.get()`` to return an item. The class will take
294care of the locking necessary to ensure that each job is handed out exactly
295once.
296
297Here's a trivial example::
298
299 import threading, Queue, time
300
301 # The worker thread gets jobs off the queue. When the queue is empty, it
302 # assumes there will be no more work and exits.
303 # (Realistically workers will run until terminated.)
304 def worker ():
305 print 'Running worker'
306 time.sleep(0.1)
307 while True:
308 try:
309 arg = q.get(block=False)
310 except Queue.Empty:
311 print 'Worker', threading.currentThread(),
312 print 'queue empty'
313 break
314 else:
315 print 'Worker', threading.currentThread(),
316 print 'running with argument', arg
317 time.sleep(0.5)
318
319 # Create queue
320 q = Queue.Queue()
321
322 # Start a pool of 5 workers
323 for i in range(5):
324 t = threading.Thread(target=worker, name='worker %i' % (i+1))
325 t.start()
326
327 # Begin adding work to the queue
328 for i in range(50):
329 q.put(i)
330
331 # Give threads time to run
332 print 'Main thread sleeping'
333 time.sleep(5)
334
335When run, this will produce the following output:
336
337 Running worker
338 Running worker
339 Running worker
340 Running worker
341 Running worker
342 Main thread sleeping
343 Worker <Thread(worker 1, started)> running with argument 0
344 Worker <Thread(worker 2, started)> running with argument 1
345 Worker <Thread(worker 3, started)> running with argument 2
346 Worker <Thread(worker 4, started)> running with argument 3
347 Worker <Thread(worker 5, started)> running with argument 4
348 Worker <Thread(worker 1, started)> running with argument 5
349 ...
350
351Consult the module's documentation for more details; the ``Queue`` class
352provides a featureful interface.
353
354
355What kinds of global value mutation are thread-safe?
356----------------------------------------------------
357
358A global interpreter lock (GIL) is used internally to ensure that only one
359thread runs in the Python VM at a time. In general, Python offers to switch
360among threads only between bytecode instructions; how frequently it switches can
361be set via :func:`sys.setcheckinterval`. Each bytecode instruction and
362therefore all the C implementation code reached from each instruction is
363therefore atomic from the point of view of a Python program.
364
365In theory, this means an exact accounting requires an exact understanding of the
366PVM bytecode implementation. In practice, it means that operations on shared
367variables of builtin data types (ints, lists, dicts, etc) that "look atomic"
368really are.
369
370For example, the following operations are all atomic (L, L1, L2 are lists, D,
371D1, D2 are dicts, x, y are objects, i, j are ints)::
372
373 L.append(x)
374 L1.extend(L2)
375 x = L[i]
376 x = L.pop()
377 L1[i:j] = L2
378 L.sort()
379 x = y
380 x.field = y
381 D[x] = y
382 D1.update(D2)
383 D.keys()
384
385These aren't::
386
387 i = i+1
388 L.append(L[-1])
389 L[i] = L[j]
390 D[x] = D[x] + 1
391
392Operations that replace other objects may invoke those other objects'
393:meth:`__del__` method when their reference count reaches zero, and that can
394affect things. This is especially true for the mass updates to dictionaries and
395lists. When in doubt, use a mutex!
396
397
398Can't we get rid of the Global Interpreter Lock?
399------------------------------------------------
400
401.. XXX mention multiprocessing
402
403The Global Interpreter Lock (GIL) is often seen as a hindrance to Python's
404deployment on high-end multiprocessor server machines, because a multi-threaded
405Python program effectively only uses one CPU, due to the insistence that
406(almost) all Python code can only run while the GIL is held.
407
408Back in the days of Python 1.5, Greg Stein actually implemented a comprehensive
409patch set (the "free threading" patches) that removed the GIL and replaced it
410with fine-grained locking. Unfortunately, even on Windows (where locks are very
411efficient) this ran ordinary Python code about twice as slow as the interpreter
412using the GIL. On Linux the performance loss was even worse because pthread
413locks aren't as efficient.
414
415Since then, the idea of getting rid of the GIL has occasionally come up but
416nobody has found a way to deal with the expected slowdown, and users who don't
417use threads would not be happy if their code ran at half at the speed. Greg's
418free threading patch set has not been kept up-to-date for later Python versions.
419
420This doesn't mean that you can't make good use of Python on multi-CPU machines!
421You just have to be creative with dividing the work up between multiple
422*processes* rather than multiple *threads*. Judicious use of C extensions will
423also help; if you use a C extension to perform a time-consuming task, the
424extension can release the GIL while the thread of execution is in the C code and
425allow other threads to get some work done.
426
427It has been suggested that the GIL should be a per-interpreter-state lock rather
428than truly global; interpreters then wouldn't be able to share objects.
429Unfortunately, this isn't likely to happen either. It would be a tremendous
430amount of work, because many object implementations currently have global state.
431For example, small integers and short strings are cached; these caches would
432have to be moved to the interpreter state. Other object types have their own
433free list; these free lists would have to be moved to the interpreter state.
434And so on.
435
436And I doubt that it can even be done in finite time, because the same problem
437exists for 3rd party extensions. It is likely that 3rd party extensions are
438being written at a faster rate than you can convert them to store all their
439global state in the interpreter state.
440
441And finally, once you have multiple interpreters not sharing any state, what
442have you gained over running each interpreter in a separate process?
443
444
445Input and Output
446================
447
448How do I delete a file? (And other file questions...)
449-----------------------------------------------------
450
451Use ``os.remove(filename)`` or ``os.unlink(filename)``; for documentation, see
452the :mod:`os` module. The two functions are identical; :func:`unlink` is simply
453the name of the Unix system call for this function.
454
455To remove a directory, use :func:`os.rmdir`; use :func:`os.mkdir` to create one.
456``os.makedirs(path)`` will create any intermediate directories in ``path`` that
457don't exist. ``os.removedirs(path)`` will remove intermediate directories as
458long as they're empty; if you want to delete an entire directory tree and its
459contents, use :func:`shutil.rmtree`.
460
461To rename a file, use ``os.rename(old_path, new_path)``.
462
463To truncate a file, open it using ``f = open(filename, "r+")``, and use
464``f.truncate(offset)``; offset defaults to the current seek position. There's
465also ```os.ftruncate(fd, offset)`` for files opened with :func:`os.open`, where
466``fd`` is the file descriptor (a small integer).
467
468The :mod:`shutil` module also contains a number of functions to work on files
469including :func:`~shutil.copyfile`, :func:`~shutil.copytree`, and
470:func:`~shutil.rmtree`.
471
472
473How do I copy a file?
474---------------------
475
476The :mod:`shutil` module contains a :func:`~shutil.copyfile` function. Note
477that on MacOS 9 it doesn't copy the resource fork and Finder info.
478
479
480How do I read (or write) binary data?
481-------------------------------------
482
483To read or write complex binary data formats, it's best to use the :mod:`struct`
484module. It allows you to take a string containing binary data (usually numbers)
485and convert it to Python objects; and vice versa.
486
487For example, the following code reads two 2-byte integers and one 4-byte integer
488in big-endian format from a file::
489
490 import struct
491
492 f = open(filename, "rb") # Open in binary mode for portability
493 s = f.read(8)
494 x, y, z = struct.unpack(">hhl", s)
495
496The '>' in the format string forces big-endian data; the letter 'h' reads one
497"short integer" (2 bytes), and 'l' reads one "long integer" (4 bytes) from the
498string.
499
500For data that is more regular (e.g. a homogeneous list of ints or thefloats),
501you can also use the :mod:`array` module.
502
503
504I can't seem to use os.read() on a pipe created with os.popen(); why?
505---------------------------------------------------------------------
506
507:func:`os.read` is a low-level function which takes a file descriptor, a small
508integer representing the opened file. :func:`os.popen` creates a high-level
509file object, the same type returned by the builtin :func:`open` function. Thus,
510to read n bytes from a pipe p created with :func:`os.popen`, you need to use
511``p.read(n)``.
512
513
514How do I run a subprocess with pipes connected to both input and output?
515------------------------------------------------------------------------
516
517.. XXX update to use subprocess
518
519Use the :mod:`popen2` module. For example::
520
521 import popen2
522 fromchild, tochild = popen2.popen2("command")
523 tochild.write("input\n")
524 tochild.flush()
525 output = fromchild.readline()
526
527Warning: in general it is unwise to do this because you can easily cause a
528deadlock where your process is blocked waiting for output from the child while
529the child is blocked waiting for input from you. This can be caused because the
530parent expects the child to output more text than it does, or it can be caused
531by data being stuck in stdio buffers due to lack of flushing. The Python parent
532can of course explicitly flush the data it sends to the child before it reads
533any output, but if the child is a naive C program it may have been written to
534never explicitly flush its output, even if it is interactive, since flushing is
535normally automatic.
536
537Note that a deadlock is also possible if you use :func:`popen3` to read stdout
538and stderr. If one of the two is too large for the internal buffer (increasing
539the buffer size does not help) and you ``read()`` the other one first, there is
540a deadlock, too.
541
542Note on a bug in popen2: unless your program calls ``wait()`` or ``waitpid()``,
543finished child processes are never removed, and eventually calls to popen2 will
544fail because of a limit on the number of child processes. Calling
545:func:`os.waitpid` with the :data:`os.WNOHANG` option can prevent this; a good
546place to insert such a call would be before calling ``popen2`` again.
547
548In many cases, all you really need is to run some data through a command and get
549the result back. Unless the amount of data is very large, the easiest way to do
550this is to write it to a temporary file and run the command with that temporary
551file as input. The standard module :mod:`tempfile` exports a ``mktemp()``
552function to generate unique temporary file names. ::
553
554 import tempfile
555 import os
556
557 class Popen3:
558 """
559 This is a deadlock-safe version of popen that returns
560 an object with errorlevel, out (a string) and err (a string).
561 (capturestderr may not work under windows.)
562 Example: print Popen3('grep spam','\n\nhere spam\n\n').out
563 """
564 def __init__(self,command,input=None,capturestderr=None):
565 outfile=tempfile.mktemp()
566 command="( %s ) > %s" % (command,outfile)
567 if input:
568 infile=tempfile.mktemp()
569 open(infile,"w").write(input)
570 command=command+" <"+infile
571 if capturestderr:
572 errfile=tempfile.mktemp()
573 command=command+" 2>"+errfile
574 self.errorlevel=os.system(command) >> 8
575 self.out=open(outfile,"r").read()
576 os.remove(outfile)
577 if input:
578 os.remove(infile)
579 if capturestderr:
580 self.err=open(errfile,"r").read()
581 os.remove(errfile)
582
583Note that many interactive programs (e.g. vi) don't work well with pipes
584substituted for standard input and output. You will have to use pseudo ttys
585("ptys") instead of pipes. Or you can use a Python interface to Don Libes'
586"expect" library. A Python extension that interfaces to expect is called "expy"
587and available from http://expectpy.sourceforge.net. A pure Python solution that
588works like expect is ` pexpect <http://pexpect.sourceforge.net>`_.
589
590
591How do I access the serial (RS232) port?
592----------------------------------------
593
594For Win32, POSIX (Linux, BSD, etc.), Jython:
595
596 http://pyserial.sourceforge.net
597
598For Unix, see a Usenet post by Mitch Chapman:
599
600 http://groups.google.com/groups?selm=34A04430.CF9@ohioee.com
601
602
603Why doesn't closing sys.stdout (stdin, stderr) really close it?
604---------------------------------------------------------------
605
606Python file objects are a high-level layer of abstraction on top of C streams,
607which in turn are a medium-level layer of abstraction on top of (among other
608things) low-level C file descriptors.
609
610For most file objects you create in Python via the builtin ``file`` constructor,
611``f.close()`` marks the Python file object as being closed from Python's point
612of view, and also arranges to close the underlying C stream. This also happens
613automatically in f's destructor, when f becomes garbage.
614
615But stdin, stdout and stderr are treated specially by Python, because of the
616special status also given to them by C. Running ``sys.stdout.close()`` marks
617the Python-level file object as being closed, but does *not* close the
618associated C stream.
619
620To close the underlying C stream for one of these three, you should first be
621sure that's what you really want to do (e.g., you may confuse extension modules
622trying to do I/O). If it is, use os.close::
623
624 os.close(0) # close C's stdin stream
625 os.close(1) # close C's stdout stream
626 os.close(2) # close C's stderr stream
627
628
629Network/Internet Programming
630============================
631
632What WWW tools are there for Python?
633------------------------------------
634
635See the chapters titled :ref:`internet` and :ref:`netdata` in the Library
636Reference Manual. Python has many modules that will help you build server-side
637and client-side web systems.
638
639.. XXX check if wiki page is still up to date
640
641A summary of available frameworks is maintained by Paul Boddie at
642http://wiki.python.org/moin/WebProgramming .
643
644Cameron Laird maintains a useful set of pages about Python web technologies at
645http://phaseit.net/claird/comp.lang.python/web_python.
646
647
648How can I mimic CGI form submission (METHOD=POST)?
649--------------------------------------------------
650
651I would like to retrieve web pages that are the result of POSTing a form. Is
652there existing code that would let me do this easily?
653
654Yes. Here's a simple example that uses httplib::
655
656 #!/usr/local/bin/python
657
658 import httplib, sys, time
659
660 ### build the query string
661 qs = "First=Josephine&MI=Q&Last=Public"
662
663 ### connect and send the server a path
664 httpobj = httplib.HTTP('www.some-server.out-there', 80)
665 httpobj.putrequest('POST', '/cgi-bin/some-cgi-script')
666 ### now generate the rest of the HTTP headers...
667 httpobj.putheader('Accept', '*/*')
668 httpobj.putheader('Connection', 'Keep-Alive')
669 httpobj.putheader('Content-type', 'application/x-www-form-urlencoded')
670 httpobj.putheader('Content-length', '%d' % len(qs))
671 httpobj.endheaders()
672 httpobj.send(qs)
673 ### find out what the server said in response...
674 reply, msg, hdrs = httpobj.getreply()
675 if reply != 200:
676 sys.stdout.write(httpobj.getfile().read())
677
678Note that in general for URL-encoded POST operations, query strings must be
679quoted by using :func:`urllib.quote`. For example to send name="Guy Steele,
680Jr."::
681
682 >>> from urllib import quote
683 >>> x = quote("Guy Steele, Jr.")
684 >>> x
685 'Guy%20Steele,%20Jr.'
686 >>> query_string = "name="+x
687 >>> query_string
688 'name=Guy%20Steele,%20Jr.'
689
690
691What module should I use to help with generating HTML?
692------------------------------------------------------
693
694.. XXX add modern template languages
695
696There are many different modules available:
697
698* HTMLgen is a class library of objects corresponding to all the HTML 3.2 markup
699 tags. It's used when you are writing in Python and wish to synthesize HTML
700 pages for generating a web or for CGI forms, etc.
701
702* DocumentTemplate and Zope Page Templates are two different systems that are
703 part of Zope.
704
705* Quixote's PTL uses Python syntax to assemble strings of text.
706
707Consult the `Web Programming wiki pages
708<http://wiki.python.org/moin/WebProgramming>`_ for more links.
709
710
711How do I send mail from a Python script?
712----------------------------------------
713
714Use the standard library module :mod:`smtplib`.
715
716Here's a very simple interactive mail sender that uses it. This method will
717work on any host that supports an SMTP listener. ::
718
719 import sys, smtplib
720
721 fromaddr = raw_input("From: ")
722 toaddrs = raw_input("To: ").split(',')
723 print "Enter message, end with ^D:"
724 msg = ''
725 while True:
726 line = sys.stdin.readline()
727 if not line:
728 break
729 msg += line
730
731 # The actual mail send
732 server = smtplib.SMTP('localhost')
733 server.sendmail(fromaddr, toaddrs, msg)
734 server.quit()
735
736A Unix-only alternative uses sendmail. The location of the sendmail program
737varies between systems; sometimes it is ``/usr/lib/sendmail``, sometime
738``/usr/sbin/sendmail``. The sendmail manual page will help you out. Here's
739some sample code::
740
741 SENDMAIL = "/usr/sbin/sendmail" # sendmail location
742 import os
743 p = os.popen("%s -t -i" % SENDMAIL, "w")
744 p.write("To: receiver@example.com\n")
745 p.write("Subject: test\n")
746 p.write("\n") # blank line separating headers from body
747 p.write("Some text\n")
748 p.write("some more text\n")
749 sts = p.close()
750 if sts != 0:
751 print "Sendmail exit status", sts
752
753
754How do I avoid blocking in the connect() method of a socket?
755------------------------------------------------------------
756
757The select module is commonly used to help with asynchronous I/O on sockets.
758
759To prevent the TCP connect from blocking, you can set the socket to non-blocking
760mode. Then when you do the ``connect()``, you will either connect immediately
761(unlikely) or get an exception that contains the error number as ``.errno``.
762``errno.EINPROGRESS`` indicates that the connection is in progress, but hasn't
763finished yet. Different OSes will return different values, so you're going to
764have to check what's returned on your system.
765
766You can use the ``connect_ex()`` method to avoid creating an exception. It will
767just return the errno value. To poll, you can call ``connect_ex()`` again later
768-- 0 or ``errno.EISCONN`` indicate that you're connected -- or you can pass this
769socket to select to check if it's writable.
770
771
772Databases
773=========
774
775Are there any interfaces to database packages in Python?
776--------------------------------------------------------
777
778Yes.
779
780.. XXX remove bsddb in py3k, fix other module names
781
782Python 2.3 includes the :mod:`bsddb` package which provides an interface to the
783BerkeleyDB library. Interfaces to disk-based hashes such as :mod:`DBM <dbm>`
784and :mod:`GDBM <gdbm>` are also included with standard Python.
785
786Support for most relational databases is available. See the
787`DatabaseProgramming wiki page
788<http://wiki.python.org/moin/DatabaseProgramming>`_ for details.
789
790
791How do you implement persistent objects in Python?
792--------------------------------------------------
793
794The :mod:`pickle` library module solves this in a very general way (though you
795still can't store things like open files, sockets or windows), and the
796:mod:`shelve` library module uses pickle and (g)dbm to create persistent
797mappings containing arbitrary Python objects. For better performance, you can
798use the :mod:`cPickle` module.
799
800A more awkward way of doing things is to use pickle's little sister, marshal.
801The :mod:`marshal` module provides very fast ways to store noncircular basic
802Python types to files and strings, and back again. Although marshal does not do
803fancy things like store instances or handle shared references properly, it does
804run extremely fast. For example loading a half megabyte of data may take less
805than a third of a second. This often beats doing something more complex and
806general such as using gdbm with pickle/shelve.
807
808
809Why is cPickle so slow?
810-----------------------
811
812.. XXX update this, default protocol is 2/3
813
814The default format used by the pickle module is a slow one that results in
815readable pickles. Making it the default, but it would break backward
816compatibility::
817
818 largeString = 'z' * (100 * 1024)
819 myPickle = cPickle.dumps(largeString, protocol=1)
820
821
822If my program crashes with a bsddb (or anydbm) database open, it gets corrupted. How come?
823------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
824
825Databases opened for write access with the bsddb module (and often by the anydbm
826module, since it will preferentially use bsddb) must explicitly be closed using
827the ``.close()`` method of the database. The underlying library caches database
828contents which need to be converted to on-disk form and written.
829
830If you have initialized a new bsddb database but not written anything to it
831before the program crashes, you will often wind up with a zero-length file and
832encounter an exception the next time the file is opened.
833
834
835I tried to open Berkeley DB file, but bsddb produces bsddb.error: (22, 'Invalid argument'). Help! How can I restore my data?
836----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
837
838Don't panic! Your data is probably intact. The most frequent cause for the error
839is that you tried to open an earlier Berkeley DB file with a later version of
840the Berkeley DB library.
841
842Many Linux systems now have all three versions of Berkeley DB available. If you
843are migrating from version 1 to a newer version use db_dump185 to dump a plain
844text version of the database. If you are migrating from version 2 to version 3
845use db2_dump to create a plain text version of the database. In either case,
846use db_load to create a new native database for the latest version installed on
847your computer. If you have version 3 of Berkeley DB installed, you should be
848able to use db2_load to create a native version 2 database.
849
850You should move away from Berkeley DB version 1 files because the hash file code
851contains known bugs that can corrupt your data.
852
853
854Mathematics and Numerics
855========================
856
857How do I generate random numbers in Python?
858-------------------------------------------
859
860The standard module :mod:`random` implements a random number generator. Usage
861is simple::
862
863 import random
864 random.random()
865
866This returns a random floating point number in the range [0, 1).
867
868There are also many other specialized generators in this module, such as:
869
870* ``randrange(a, b)`` chooses an integer in the range [a, b).
871* ``uniform(a, b)`` chooses a floating point number in the range [a, b).
872* ``normalvariate(mean, sdev)`` samples the normal (Gaussian) distribution.
873
874Some higher-level functions operate on sequences directly, such as:
875
876* ``choice(S)`` chooses random element from a given sequence
877* ``shuffle(L)`` shuffles a list in-place, i.e. permutes it randomly
878
879There's also a ``Random`` class you can instantiate to create independent
880multiple random number generators.