diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'Lib/py_compile.py')
-rw-r--r-- | Lib/py_compile.py | 95 |
1 files changed, 63 insertions, 32 deletions
diff --git a/Lib/py_compile.py b/Lib/py_compile.py index 1adc3a2..7d5837c 100644 --- a/Lib/py_compile.py +++ b/Lib/py_compile.py @@ -1,37 +1,68 @@ -# Routine to "compile" a .py file to a .pyc file. -# This has intimate knowledge of how Python/import.c does it. -# By Sjoerd Mullender (I forced him to write it :-). +"""Routine to "compile" a .py file to a .pyc (or .pyo) file. + +This module has intimate knowledge of the format of .pyc files. +""" import imp MAGIC = imp.get_magic() def wr_long(f, x): - f.write(chr( x & 0xff)) - f.write(chr((x >> 8) & 0xff)) - f.write(chr((x >> 16) & 0xff)) - f.write(chr((x >> 24) & 0xff)) - -def compile(file, cfile = None): - import os, marshal, __builtin__ - f = open(file) - try: - timestamp = os.fstat(file.fileno()) - except AttributeError: - timestamp = long(os.stat(file)[8]) - codestring = f.read() - f.close() - codeobject = __builtin__.compile(codestring, file, 'exec') - if not cfile: - cfile = file + (__debug__ and 'c' or 'o') - fc = open(cfile, 'wb') - fc.write('\0\0\0\0') - wr_long(fc, timestamp) - marshal.dump(codeobject, fc) - fc.flush() - fc.seek(0, 0) - fc.write(MAGIC) - fc.close() - if os.name == 'mac': - import macfs - macfs.FSSpec(cfile).SetCreatorType('Pyth', 'PYC ') - macfs.FSSpec(file).SetCreatorType('Pyth', 'TEXT') + "Internal; write a 32-bit int to a file in little-endian order." + f.write(chr( x & 0xff)) + f.write(chr((x >> 8) & 0xff)) + f.write(chr((x >> 16) & 0xff)) + f.write(chr((x >> 24) & 0xff)) + +def compile(file, cfile=None, dfile=None): + """Byte-compile one Python source file to Python bytecode. + + Arguments: + + file: source filename + cfile: target filename; defaults to source with 'c' or 'o' appended + ('c' normally, 'o' in optimizing mode, giving .pyc or .pyo) + dfile: purported filename; defaults to source (this is the filename + that will show up in error messages) + + Note that it isn't necessary to byte-compile Python modules for + execution efficiency -- Python itself byte-compiles a module when + it is loaded, and if it can, writes out the bytecode to the + corresponding .pyc (or .pyo) file. + + However, if a Python installation is shared between users, it is a + good idea to byte-compile all modules upon installation, since + other users may not be able to write in the source directories, + and thus they won't be able to write the .pyc/.pyo file, and then + they would be byte-compiling every module each time it is loaded. + This can slow down program start-up considerably. + + See compileall.py for a script/module that uses this module to + byte-compile all installed files (or all files in selected + directories). + + """ + import os, marshal, __builtin__ + f = open(file) + try: + timestamp = os.fstat(file.fileno()) + except AttributeError: + timestamp = long(os.stat(file)[8]) + codestring = f.read() + f.close() + if codestring and codestring[-1] != '\n': + coestring = codestring + '\n' + codeobject = __builtin__.compile(codestring, dfile or file, 'exec') + if not cfile: + cfile = file + (__debug__ and 'c' or 'o') + fc = open(cfile, 'wb') + fc.write('\0\0\0\0') + wr_long(fc, timestamp) + marshal.dump(codeobject, fc) + fc.flush() + fc.seek(0, 0) + fc.write(MAGIC) + fc.close() + if os.name == 'mac': + import macfs + macfs.FSSpec(cfile).SetCreatorType('Pyth', 'PYC ') + macfs.FSSpec(file).SetCreatorType('Pyth', 'TEXT') |