"""distutils.command.build_py Implements the Distutils 'build_py' command.""" # This module should be kept compatible with Python 2.1. __revision__ = "$Id: build_py.py 55747 2007-06-02 18:53:07Z neal.norwitz $" import sys, string, os from types import * from glob import glob from distutils.core import Command from distutils.errors import * from distutils.util import convert_path from distutils import log class build_py (Command): description = "\"build\" pure Python modules (copy to build directory)" user_options = [ ('build-lib=', 'd', "directory to \"build\" (copy) to"), ('compile', 'c', "compile .py to .pyc"), ('no-compile', None, "don't compile .py files [default]"), ('optimize=', 'O', "also compile with optimization: -O1 for \"python -O\", " "-O2 for \"python -OO\", and -O0 to disable [default: -O0]"), ('force', 'f', "forcibly build everything (ignore file timestamps)"), ] boolean_options = ['compile', 'force'] negative_opt = {'no-compile' : 'compile'} def initialize_options (self): self.build_lib = None self.py_modules = None self.package = None self.package_data = None self.package_dir = None self.compile = 0 self.optimize = 0 self.force = None def finalize_options (self): self.set_undefined_options('build', ('build_lib', 'build_lib'), ('force', 'force')) # Get the distribution options that are aliases for build_py # options -- list of packages and list of modules. self.packages = self.distribution.packages self.py_modules = self.distribution.py_modules self.package_data = self.distribution.package_data self.package_dir = {} if self.distribution.package_dir: for name, path in self.distribution.package_dir.items(): self.package_dir[name] = convert_path(path) self.data_files = self.get_data_files() # Ick, copied straight from install_lib.py (fancy_getopt needs a # type system! Hell, *everything* needs a type system!!!) if type(self.optimize) is not IntType: try: self.optimize = int(self.optimize) assert 0 <= self.optimize <= 2 except (ValueError, AssertionError): raise DistutilsOptionError, "optimize must be 0, 1, or 2" def run (self): # XXX copy_file by default preserves atime and mtime. IMHO this is # the right thing to do, but perhaps it should be an option -- in # particular, a site administrator might want installed files to # reflect the time of installation rather than the last # modification time before the installed release. # XXX copy_file by default preserves mode, which appears to be the # wrong thing to do: if a file is read-only in the working # directory, we want it to be installed read/write so that the next # installation of the same module distribution can overwrite it # without problems. (This might be a Unix-specific issue.) Thus # we turn off 'preserve_mode' when copying to the build directory, # since the build directory is supposed to be exactly what the # installation will look like (ie. we preserve mode when # installing). # Two options control which modules will be installed: 'packages' # and 'py_modules'. The former lets us work with whole packages, not # specifying individual modules at all; the latter is for # specifying modules one-at-a-time. if self.py_modules: self.build_modules() if self.packages: self.build_packages() self.build_package_data() self.byte_compile(self.get_outputs(include_bytecode=0)) # run () def get_data_files (self): """Generate list of '(package,src_dir,build_dir,filenames)' tuples""" data = [] if not self.packages: return data for package in self.packages: # Locate package source directory src_dir = self.get_package_dir(package) # Compute package build directory build_dir = os.path.join(*([self.build_lib] + package.split('.'))) # Length of path to strip from found files plen = 0 if src_dir: plen = len(src_dir)+1 # Strip directory from globbed filenames filenames = [ file[plen:] for file in self.find_data_files(package, src_dir) ] data.append((package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames)) return data def find_data_files (self, package, src_dir): """Return filenames for package's data files in 'src_dir'""" globs = (self.package_data.get('', []) + self.package_data.get(package, [])) files = [] for pattern in globs: # Each pattern has to be converted to a platform-specific path filelist = glob(os.path.join(src_dir, convert_path(pattern))) # Files that match more than one pattern are only added once files.extend([fn for fn in filelist if fn not in files]) return files def build_package_data (self): """Copy data files into build directory""" lastdir = None for package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in self.data_files: for filename in filenames: target = os.path.join(build_dir, filename) self.mkpath(os.path.dirname(target)) self.copy_file(os.path.join(src_dir, filename), target, preserve_mode=False) def get_package_dir (self, package): """Return the directory, relative to the top of the source distribution, where package 'package' should be found (at least according to the 'package_dir' option, if any).""" path = string.split(package, '.') if not self.package_dir: if path: return apply(os.path.join, path) else: return '' else: tail = [] while path: try: pdir = self.package_dir[string.join(path, '.')] except KeyError: tail.insert(0, path[-1]) del path[-1] else: tail.insert(0, pdir) return apply(os.path.join, tail) else: # Oops, got all the way through 'path' without finding a # match in package_dir. If package_dir defines a directory # for the root (nameless) package, then fallback on it; # otherwise, we might as well have not consulted # package_dir at all, as we just use the directory implied # by 'tail' (which should be the same as the original value # of 'path' at this point). pdir = self.package_dir.get('') if pdir is not None: tail.insert(0, pdir) if tail: return apply(os.path.join, tail) else: return '' # get_package_dir () def check_package (self, package, package_dir): # Empty dir name means current directory, which we can probably # assume exists. Also, os.path.exists and isdir don't know about # my "empty string means current dir" convention, so we have to # circumvent them. if package_dir != "": if not os.path.exists(package_dir): raise DistutilsFileError, \ "package directory '%s' does not exist" % package_dir if not os.path.isdir(package_dir): raise DistutilsFileError, \ ("supposed package directory '%s' exists, " + "but is not a directory") % package_dir # Require __init__.py for all but the "root package" if package: init_py = os.path.join(package_dir, "__init__.py") if os.path.isfile(init_py): return init_py else: log.warn(("package init file '%s' not found " + "(or not a regular file)"), init_py) # Either not in a package at all (__init__.py not expected), or # __init__.py doesn't exist -- so don't return the filename. return None # check_package () def check_module (self, module, module_file): if not os.path.isfile(module_file): log.warn("file %s (for module %s) not found", module_file, module) return 0 else: return 1 # check_module () def find_package_modules (self, package, package_dir): self.check_package(package, package_dir) module_files = glob(os.path.join(package_dir, "*.py")) modules = [] setup_script = os.path.abspath(self.distribution.script_name) for f in module_files: abs_f = os.path.abspath(f) if abs_f != setup_script: module = os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(f))[0] modules.append((package, module, f)) else: self.debug_print("excluding %s" % setup_script) return modules def find_modules (self): """Finds individually-specified Python modules, ie. those listed by module name in 'self.py_modules'. Returns a list of tuples (package, module_base, filename): 'package' is a tuple of the path through package-space to the module; 'module_base' is the bare (no packages, no dots) module name, and 'filename' is the path to the ".py" file (relative to the distribution root) that implements the module. """ # Map package names to tuples of useful info about the package: # (package_dir, checked) # package_dir - the directory where we'll find source files for # this package # checked - true if we have checked that the package directory # is valid (exists, contains __init__.py, ... ?) packages = {} # List of (package, module, filename) tuples to return modules = [] # We treat modules-in-packages almost the same as toplevel modules, # just the "package" for a toplevel is empty (either an empty # string or empty list, depending on context). Differences: # - don't check for __init__.py in directory for empty package for module in self.py_modules: path = string.split(module, '.') package = string.join(path[0:-1], '.') module_base = path[-1] try: (package_dir, checked) = packages[package] except KeyError: package_dir = self.get_package_dir(package) checked = 0 if not checked: init_py = self.check_package(package, package_dir) packages[package] = (package_dir, 1) if init_py: modules.append((package, "__init__", init_py)) # XXX perhaps we should also check for just .pyc files # (so greedy closed-source bastards can distribute Python # modules too) module_file = os.path.join(package_dir, module_base + ".py") if not self.check_module(module, module_file): continue modules.append((package, module_base, module_file)) return modules # find_modules () def find_all_modules (self): """Compute the list of all modules that will be built, whether they are specified one-module-at-a-time ('self.py_modules') or by whole packages ('self.packages'). Return a list of tuples (package, module, module_file), just like 'find_modules()' and 'find_package_modules()' do.""" modules = [] if self.py_modules: modules.extend(self.find_modules()) if self.packages: for package in self.packages: package_dir = self.get_package_dir(package) m = self.find_package_modules(package, package_dir) modules.extend(m) return modules # find_all_modules () def get_source_files (self): modules = self.find_all_modules() filenames = [] for module in modules: filenames.append(module[-1]) return filenames def get_module_outfile (self, build_dir, package, module): outfile_path = [build_dir] + list(package) + [module + ".py"] return apply(os.path.join, outfile_path) def get_outputs (self, include_bytecode=1): modules = self.find_all_modules() outputs = [] for (package, module, module_file) in modules: package = string.split(package, '.') filename = self.get_module_outfile(self.build_lib, package, module) outputs.append(filename) if include_bytecode: if self.compile: outputs.append(filename + "c") if self.optimize > 0: outputs.append(filename + "o") outputs += [ os.path.join(build_dir, filename) for package, src_dir, build_dir, filenames in self.data_files for filename in filenames ] return outputs def build_module (self, module, module_file, package): if type(package) is StringType: package = string.split(package, '.') elif type(package) not in (ListType, TupleType): raise TypeError, \ "'package' must be a string (dot-separated), list, or tuple" # Now put the module source file into the "build" area -- this is # easy, we just copy it somewhere under self.build_lib (the build # directory for Python source). outfile = self.get_module_outfile(self.build_lib, package, module) dir = os.path.dirname(outfile) self.mkpath(dir) return self.copy_file(module_file, outfile, preserve_mode=0) def build_modules (self): modules = self.find_modules() for (package, module, module_file) in modules: # Now "build" the module -- ie. copy the source file to # self.build_lib (the build directory for Python source). # (Actually, it gets copied to the directory for this package # under self.build_lib.) self.build_module(module, module_file, package) # build_modules () def build_packages (self): for package in self.packages: # Get list of (package, module, module_file) tuples based on # scanning the package directory. 'package' is only included # in the tuple so that 'find_modules()' and # 'find_package_tuples()' have a consistent interface; it's # ignored here (apart from a sanity check). Also, 'module' is # the *unqualified* module name (ie. no dots, no package -- we # already know its package!), and 'module_file' is the path to # the .py file, relative to the current directory # (ie. including 'package_dir'). package_dir = self.get_package_dir(package) modules = self.find_package_modules(package, package_dir) # Now loop over the modules we found, "building" each one (just # copy it to self.build_lib). for (package_, module, module_file) in modules: assert package == package_ self.build_module(module, module_file, package) # build_packages () def byte_compile (self, files): from distutils.util import byte_compile prefix = self.build_lib if prefix[-1] != os.sep: prefix = prefix + os.sep # XXX this code is essentially the same as the 'byte_compile() # method of the "install_lib" command, except for the determination # of the 'prefix' string. Hmmm. if self.compile: byte_compile(files, optimize=0, force=self.force, prefix=prefix, dry_run=self.dry_run) if self.optimize > 0: byte_compile(files, optimize=self.optimize, force=self.force, prefix=prefix, dry_run=self.dry_run) # class build_py