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popbuild 3.7
Intro
Pop-Build is the single binary builder for pop projects. While it is written with
the intention of supporting pop projects it can be used with any python project.
Getting Started
The main idea behind Pop-Build is to make building python projects as a single
frozen binary easy. Therefore using pop-build just takes a few steps.
So we can start with an existing python application, this quickstart will assume
that your python project has a standard setup.py and requirements.txt.
The only other thing that most projects will need is a run.py.
The run.py
Since Pop-Build creates a single binary, it needs a single entry point. This entry
point is defined in the file run.py. This is just a simple python script that is
used to start your application. The contents of the run.py is typically the same
code that is used in your setuptools entry point, or the startup script used in
distutils. There is nothing special about the run.py, pop-build just needs an
entry point that is clean python.
Note
Setuptools creates a startup script that dynamically discovers part of how
the application starts up. This makes sense when the application is started
in an environment with many python libs and apps. But pop-build creates an
isolated python environment which does not satisfy the needs of setuptools.
A typical run.py will look like this:
import myapp
def main():
myapp.start()
main()
Just some good old python! If you are building a pop project then pop-seed will
create the run.py for you.
Run Pop-Build
Thats right! All you need outside of a run.py your python project likely already has!
Pop-Build uses the setup.py and requirements.txt files to build the environment used.
So assuming you have a standard python project defined, all you need to do is cd to that
directory and run pop-build, in this example we will assume the application is called
foo:
pop-build -n foo
This will kick off the process and the resulting binary will be placed in dist/foo
Now that the binary is available it can be directly called.
What Happened?
Pop-Build starts with the version of python that you exceuted pop-build with. This python
is the python that will be embeded in your binary. Next it creates a venv for your application.
With the venv in hand, Pop-Build populates it. The venv is populated with all of the deps that
are defined as requrements for the main application, including the application itself.
Now that the venv has been set up, we tell PyInstaller to create a binary from the run.py.
But PyInstaller is all about building a binary from all of the imports that come from
the run.py. This is done to build a small binary and include only the most required code.
But this is not the case for many applications, it is typical that things are late imported
and the application assumes that a larger python environment is available. It is also typical
that extra files are needed by the application and are typically added via the setup.py.
Instead of following the imports, Pop-Build bundles the venv into the binary created by
PyInstaller. This means that you have a strong assurance that the full, needed environment is
available. This does make a larger binary, but it allows for a much easier and reliable build.
Also, the binary is typically not much bigger.
Using the Build Addon
Many python projects require C libraries. How is it then, that
the dynamic libs can be added to the final binary? Pop-Build has an answer to this.
When running pop-build we can use a configuration file. This file allows for any option
that would be passed on the cli to be defined, but also to define the routines for
external builds.
A Pop-Build config, that as an example, adds the library libsodium looks like this:
build:
libsodium:
make:
- wget https://download.libsodium.org/libsodium/releases/LATEST.tar.gz
- tar xvf LATEST.tar.gz
- cd libsodium-stable && ./configure && make
src: libsodium-stable/src/libsodium/.libs/libsodium.so
dest: lib/
This example shows how we can define a library to download and build, then the src
which is relative to the root of the build and the dest which is relative to the root
of the venv.
The src can be a directory or a list of files, the dest is just a single directory to store
the files.
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