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138 lines
4.9 KiB
Plaintext
138 lines
4.9 KiB
Plaintext
Python Script Wrapper for Windows
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=================================
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setuptools includes wrappers for Python scripts that allows them to be
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executed like regular windows programs. There are 2 wrappers, once
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for command-line programs, cli.exe, and one for graphica programs,
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gui.exe. These programs are almost identical, function pretty much
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the same way, and are generated from the same source file. The
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wrapper programs are used by copying them to the directory containing
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the script they are to wrap and with the same name as the script they
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are to wrap. In the rest of this document, we'll give an example that
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will illustrate this.
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Let's create a simple script, foo-script.py:
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>>> import os, sys, tempfile
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>>> from setuptools.command.easy_install import nt_quote_arg
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>>> sample_directory = tempfile.mkdtemp()
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>>> open(os.path.join(sample_directory, 'foo-script.py'), 'w').write(
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... """#!%(python_exe)s
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... import sys
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... input = repr(sys.stdin.read())
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... print sys.argv[0][-14:]
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... print sys.argv[1:]
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... print input
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... if __debug__:
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... print 'non-optimized'
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... """ % dict(python_exe=nt_quote_arg(sys.executable)))
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Note that the script starts with a Unix-style '#!' line saying which
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Python executable to run. The wrapper will use this to find the
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correct Python executable.
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We'll also copy cli.exe to the sample-directory with the name foo.exe:
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>>> import pkg_resources
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>>> open(os.path.join(sample_directory, 'foo.exe'), 'wb').write(
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... pkg_resources.resource_string('setuptools', 'cli.exe')
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... )
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When the copy of cli.exe, foo.exe in this example, runs, it examines
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the path name it was run with and computes a Python script path name
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by removing the '.exe' suffic and adding the '-script.py' suffix. (For
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GUI programs, the suffix '-script-pyw' is added.) This is why we
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named out script the way we did. Now we can run out script by running
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the wrapper:
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>>> import os
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>>> input, output = os.popen4('"'+nt_quote_arg(os.path.join(sample_directory, 'foo.exe'))
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... + r' arg1 "arg 2" "arg \"2\\\"" "arg 4\\" "arg5 a\\b"')
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>>> input.write('hello\nworld\n')
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>>> input.close()
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>>> print output.read(),
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\foo-script.py
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['arg1', 'arg 2', 'arg "2\\"', 'arg 4\\', 'arg5 a\\\\b']
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'hello\nworld\n'
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non-optimized
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This example was a little pathological in that it exercised windows
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(MS C runtime) quoting rules:
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- Strings containing spaces are surrounded by double quotes.
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- Double quotes in strings need to be escaped by preceding them with
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back slashes.
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- One or more backslashes preceding double quotes quotes need to be
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escaped by preceding each of them them with back slashes.
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Specifying Python Command-line Options
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--------------------------------------
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You can specify a single argument on the '#!' line. This can be used
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to specify Python options like -O, to run in optimized mode or -i
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to start the interactive interpreter. You can combine multiple
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options as usual. For example, to run in optimized mode and
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enter the interpreter after running the script, you could use -Oi:
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>>> open(os.path.join(sample_directory, 'foo-script.py'), 'w').write(
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... """#!%(python_exe)s -Oi
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... import sys
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... input = repr(sys.stdin.read())
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... print sys.argv[0][-14:]
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... print sys.argv[1:]
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... print input
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... if __debug__:
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... print 'non-optimized'
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... sys.ps1 = '---'
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... """ % dict(python_exe=nt_quote_arg(sys.executable)))
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>>> input, output = os.popen4(nt_quote_arg(os.path.join(sample_directory, 'foo.exe')))
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>>> input.close()
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>>> print output.read(),
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\foo-script.py
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[]
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''
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---
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Testing the GUI Version
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-----------------------
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Now let's test the GUI version with the simple scipt, bar-script.py:
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>>> import os, sys, tempfile
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>>> from setuptools.command.easy_install import nt_quote_arg
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>>> sample_directory = tempfile.mkdtemp()
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>>> open(os.path.join(sample_directory, 'bar-script.pyw'), 'w').write(
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... """#!%(python_exe)s
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... import sys
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... open(sys.argv[1], 'wb').write(repr(sys.argv[2]))
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... """ % dict(python_exe=nt_quote_arg(sys.executable)))
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We'll also copy gui.exe to the sample-directory with the name bar.exe:
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>>> import pkg_resources
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>>> open(os.path.join(sample_directory, 'bar.exe'), 'wb').write(
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... pkg_resources.resource_string('setuptools', 'gui.exe')
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... )
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Finally, we'll run the script and check the result:
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>>> import os
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>>> input, output = os.popen4('"'+nt_quote_arg(os.path.join(sample_directory, 'bar.exe'))
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... + r' "%s" "Test Argument"' % os.path.join(sample_directory, 'test_output.txt'))
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>>> input.close()
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>>> print output.read()
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<BLANKLINE>
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>>> print open(os.path.join(sample_directory, 'test_output.txt'), 'rb').read()
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'Test Argument'
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We're done with the sample_directory:
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>>> import shutil
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>>> shutil.rmtree(sample_directory)
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