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authorNick Coghlan <ncoghlan@gmail.com>2009-11-15 07:30:34 (GMT)
committerNick Coghlan <ncoghlan@gmail.com>2009-11-15 07:30:34 (GMT)
commit49868cb686954e57a6ab6bfea2cefeefb86305b1 (patch)
tree4e26a0452fac75a8a25ad6825729eab8ec2d0cf3 /Doc/library/runpy.rst
parent51200277b23fd9faca5f03dae127221e9b67e7f1 (diff)
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Issue #6816: expose the zipfile and directory execution mechanism to Python code via the runpy module. Also consolidated some script execution functionality in the test harness into a helper module and removed some implementation details from the runpy module documentation.
Diffstat (limited to 'Doc/library/runpy.rst')
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/runpy.rst141
1 files changed, 97 insertions, 44 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/library/runpy.rst b/Doc/library/runpy.rst
index 202f4e1..33b00dc 100644
--- a/Doc/library/runpy.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/runpy.rst
@@ -9,70 +9,122 @@
.. versionadded:: 2.5
The :mod:`runpy` module is used to locate and run Python modules without
-importing them first. Its main use is to implement the :option:`-m` command line
-switch that allows scripts to be located using the Python module namespace
-rather than the filesystem.
+importing them first. Its main use is to implement the :option:`-m` command
+line switch that allows scripts to be located using the Python module
+namespace rather than the filesystem.
-When executed as a script, the module effectively operates as follows::
+The :mod:`runpy` module provides two functions:
- del sys.argv[0] # Remove the runpy module from the arguments
- run_module(sys.argv[0], run_name="__main__", alter_sys=True)
-The :mod:`runpy` module provides a single function:
+.. function:: run_module(mod_name, init_globals=None, run_name=None, alter_sys=False)
+ Execute the code of the specified module and return the resulting module
+ globals dictionary. The module's code is first located using the standard
+ import mechanism (refer to PEP 302 for details) and then executed in a
+ fresh module namespace.
-.. function:: run_module(mod_name[, init_globals] [, run_name][, alter_sys])
+ If the supplied module name refers to a package rather than a normal
+ module, then that package is imported and the ``__main__`` submodule within
+ that package is then executed and the resulting module globals dictionary
+ returned.
- Execute the code of the specified module and return the resulting module globals
- dictionary. The module's code is first located using the standard import
- mechanism (refer to PEP 302 for details) and then executed in a fresh module
- namespace.
+ The optional dictionary argument *init_globals* may be used to pre-populate
+ the module's globals dictionary before the code is executed. The supplied
+ dictionary will not be modified. If any of the special global variables
+ below are defined in the supplied dictionary, those definitions are
+ overridden by :func:`run_module`.
- If the supplied module name refers to a package rather than a normal module,
- then that package is imported and the ``__main__`` submodule within that
- package is then executed and the resulting module globals dictionary returned.
+ The special global variables ``__name__``, ``__file__``, ``__loader__``
+ and ``__package__`` are set in the globals dictionary before the module
+ code is executed (Note that this is a minimal set of variables - other
+ variables may be set implicitly as an interpreter implementation detail).
- The optional dictionary argument *init_globals* may be used to pre-populate the
- globals dictionary before the code is executed. The supplied dictionary will not
- be modified. If any of the special global variables below are defined in the
- supplied dictionary, those definitions are overridden by the ``run_module``
- function.
+ ``__name__`` is set to *run_name* if this optional argument is not
+ :const:`None`, to ``mod_name + '.__main__'`` if the named module is a
+ package and to the *mod_name* argument otherwise.
- The special global variables ``__name__``, ``__file__``, ``__loader__``,
- ``__builtins__`` and ``__package__`` are set in the globals dictionary before
- the module code is executed.
+ ``__file__`` is set to the name provided by the module loader. If the
+ loader does not make filename information available, this variable is set
+ to `:const:`None`.
- ``__name__`` is set to *run_name* if this optional argument is supplied, to
- ``mod_name + '.__main__'`` if the named module is a package and to the
- *mod_name* argument otherwise.
+ ``__loader__`` is set to the PEP 302 module loader used to retrieve the
+ code for the module (This loader may be a wrapper around the standard
+ import mechanism).
- ``__loader__`` is set to the PEP 302 module loader used to retrieve the code for
- the module (This loader may be a wrapper around the standard import mechanism).
+ ``__package__`` is set to *mod_name* if the named module is a package and
+ to ``mod_name.rpartition('.')[0]`` otherwise.
- ``__file__`` is set to the name provided by the module loader. If the loader
- does not make filename information available, this variable is set to ``None``.
-
- ``__builtins__`` is automatically initialised with a reference to the top level
- namespace of the :mod:`__builtin__` module.
-
- ``__package__`` is set to *mod_name* if the named module is a package and to
- ``mod_name.rpartition('.')[0]`` otherwise.
-
- If the argument *alter_sys* is supplied and evaluates to ``True``, then
- ``sys.argv[0]`` is updated with the value of ``__file__`` and
+ If the argument *alter_sys* is supplied and evaluates to :const:`True`,
+ then ``sys.argv[0]`` is updated with the value of ``__file__`` and
``sys.modules[__name__]`` is updated with a temporary module object for the
module being executed. Both ``sys.argv[0]`` and ``sys.modules[__name__]``
are restored to their original values before the function returns.
- Note that this manipulation of :mod:`sys` is not thread-safe. Other threads may
- see the partially initialised module, as well as the altered list of arguments.
- It is recommended that the :mod:`sys` module be left alone when invoking this
- function from threaded code.
+ Note that this manipulation of :mod:`sys` is not thread-safe. Other threads
+ may see the partially initialised module, as well as the altered list of
+ arguments. It is recommended that the :mod:`sys` module be left alone when
+ invoking this function from threaded code.
.. versionchanged:: 2.7
- Added ability to execute packages by looking for a ``__main__`` submodule
+ Added ability to execute packages by looking for a ``__main__``
+ submodule
+
+
+.. function:: run_path(file_path, init_globals=None, run_name=None)
+
+ Execute the code at the named filesystem location and return the resulting
+ module globals dictionary. As with a script name supplied to the CPython
+ command line, the supplied path may refer to a Python source file, a
+ compiled bytecode file or a valid sys.path entry containing a ``__main__``
+ module (e.g. a zipfile containing a top-level ``__main__.py`` file).
+
+ For a simple script, the specified code is simply executed in a fresh
+ module namespace. For a valid sys.path entry (typically a zipfile or
+ directory), the entry is first added to the beginning of ``sys.path``. The
+ function then looks for and executes a :mod:`__main__` module using the
+ updated path. Note that there is no special protection against invoking
+ an existing :mod:`__main__` entry located elsewhere on ``sys.path`` if
+ there is no such module at the specified location.
+
+ The optional dictionary argument *init_globals* may be used to pre-populate
+ the module's globals dictionary before the code is executed. The supplied
+ dictionary will not be modified. If any of the special global variables
+ below are defined in the supplied dictionary, those definitions are
+ overridden by :func:`run_path`.
+
+ The special global variables ``__name__``, ``__file__``, ``__loader__``
+ and ``__package__`` are set in the globals dictionary before the module
+ code is executed (Note that this is a minimal set of variables - other
+ variables may be set implicitly as an interpreter implementation detail).
+
+ ``__name__`` is set to *run_name* if this optional argument is not
+ :const:`None` and to ``'<run_path>'`` otherwise.
+
+ ``__file__`` is set to the name provided by the module loader. If the
+ loader does not make filename information available, this variable is set
+ to :const:`None`. For a simple script, this will be set to ``file_path``.
+
+ ``__loader__`` is set to the PEP 302 module loader used to retrieve the
+ code for the module (This loader may be a wrapper around the standard
+ import mechanism). For a simple script, this will be set to :const:`None`.
+
+ ``__package__`` is set to ``__name__.rpartition('.')[0]``.
+
+ A number of alterations are also made to the :mod:`sys` module. Firstly,
+ ``sys.path`` may be altered as described above. ``sys.argv[0]`` is updated
+ with the value of ``file_path`` and ``sys.modules[__name__]`` is updated
+ with a temporary module object for the module being executed. All
+ modifications to items in :mod:`sys` are reverted before the function
+ returns.
+
+ Note that, unlike :func:`run_module`, the alterations made to :mod:`sys`
+ are not optional in this function as these adjustments are essential to
+ allowing the execution of sys.path entries. As the thread safety
+ limitations still apply, use of this function in threaded code should be
+ either serialised with the import lock or delegated to a separate process.
+ .. versionadded:: 2.7
.. seealso::
@@ -82,3 +134,4 @@ The :mod:`runpy` module provides a single function:
:pep:`366` - Main module explicit relative imports
PEP written and implemented by Nick Coghlan.
+ :ref:`using-on-general` - CPython command line details