Can I run the python interpreter without generating the compiled .pyc files?
问题:
回答1:
From \"What’s New in Python 2.6 - Interpreter Changes\":
Python can now be prevented from writing .pyc or .pyo files by supplying the -B switch to the Python interpreter, or by setting the PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE environment variable before running the interpreter. This setting is available to Python programs as the
sys.dont_write_bytecode
variable, and Python code can change the value to modify the interpreter’s behaviour.
Update 2010-11-27: Python 3.2 addresses the issue of cluttering source folders with .pyc
files by introducing a special __pycache__
subfolder, see What\'s New in Python 3.2 - PYC Repository Directories.
回答2:
import sys
sys.dont_write_bytecode = True
回答3:
There actually IS a way to do it in Python 2.3+, but it\'s a bit esoteric. I don\'t know if you realize this, but you can do the following:
$ unzip -l /tmp/example.zip
Archive: /tmp/example.zip
Length Date Time Name
-------- ---- ---- ----
8467 11-26-02 22:30 jwzthreading.py
-------- -------
8467 1 file
$ ./python
Python 2.3 (#1, Aug 1 2003, 19:54:32)
>>> import sys
>>> sys.path.insert(0, \'/tmp/example.zip\') # Add .zip file to front of path
>>> import jwzthreading
>>> jwzthreading.__file__
\'/tmp/example.zip/jwzthreading.py\'
According to the zipimport library:
Any files may be present in the ZIP archive, but only files .py and .py[co] are available for import. ZIP import of dynamic modules (.pyd, .so) is disallowed. Note that if an archive only contains .py files, Python will not attempt to modify the archive by adding the corresponding .pyc or .pyo file, meaning that if a ZIP archive doesn\'t contain .pyc files, importing may be rather slow.
Thus, all you have to do is zip the files up, add the zipfile to your sys.path and then import them.
If you\'re building this for UNIX, you might also consider packaging your script using this recipe: unix zip executable, but note that you might have to tweak this if you plan on using stdin or reading anything from sys.args (it CAN be done without too much trouble).
In my experience performance doesn\'t suffer too much because of this, but you should think twice before importing any very large modules this way.
回答4:
In 2.5, theres no way to suppress it, other than measures like not giving users write access to the directory.
In python 2.6 and 3.0 however, there may be a setting in the sys module called \"dont_write_bytecode\" that can be set to suppress this. This can also be set by passing the \"-B\" option, or setting the environment variable \"PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE\"
回答5:
You can set sys.dont_write_bytecode = True
in your source, but that would have to be in the first python file loaded. If you execute python somefile.py
then you will not get somefile.pyc
.
When you install a utility using setup.py
and entry_points=
you will have set sys.dont_write_bytecode
in the startup script. So you cannot rely on the \"default\" startup script generated by setuptools.
If you start Python with python file as argument yourself you can specify -B
:
python -B somefile.py
somefile.pyc
would not be generated anyway, but no .pyc
files for other files imported too.
If you have some utility myutil
and you cannot change that, it will not pass -B to the python interpreter. Just start it by setting the environment variable PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE
:
PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE=x myutil
回答6:
I have several test cases in a test suite and before I was running the test suite in the Mac Terminal like this:
python LoginSuite.py
Running the command this way my directory was being populated with .pyc files. I tried the below stated method and it solved the issue:
python -B LoginSuite.py
This method works if you are importing test cases into the test suite and running the suite on the command line.
回答7:
As far as I know python will compile all modules you \"import\". However python will NOT compile a python script run using: \"python script.py\" (it will however compile any modules that the script imports).
The real questions is why you don\'t want python to compile the modules? You could probably automate a way of cleaning these up if they are getting in the way.
回答8:
You could make the directories that your modules exist in read-only for the user that the Python interpreter is running as.
I don\'t think there\'s a more elegant option. PEP 304 appears to have been an attempt to introduce a simple option for this, but it appears to have been abandoned.
I imagine there\'s probably some other problem you\'re trying to solve, for which disabling .py[co] would appear to be a workaround, but it\'ll probably be better to attack whatever this original problem is instead.
回答9:
Solution for ipython 6.2.1 using python 3.5.2
(Tested on Ubuntu 16.04 and Windows 10):
Ipython
doesn’t respect %env PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE =1
if set in the ipython
interpretor or during startup in ~/.ipython/profile-default/startup/00-startup.ipy
.
Instead using the following in your ~.ipython/profile-default/startup/00-startup.py
import sys
Sys.dont_write_bytecode=True