summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/pyoxidizer.template.bzl
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-19 03:01:24 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2024-04-19 03:01:24 +0000
commitbbbba88cf6eb914c53ace70a32ed8874d5e600c2 (patch)
tree97210524cb84512c477421e1950f2c6f7e1a3089 /pyoxidizer.template.bzl
parentInitial commit. (diff)
downloadiredis-bbbba88cf6eb914c53ace70a32ed8874d5e600c2.tar.xz
iredis-bbbba88cf6eb914c53ace70a32ed8874d5e600c2.zip
Adding upstream version 1.14.1.upstream/1.14.1
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'pyoxidizer.template.bzl')
-rw-r--r--pyoxidizer.template.bzl343
1 files changed, 343 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/pyoxidizer.template.bzl b/pyoxidizer.template.bzl
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ea67485
--- /dev/null
+++ b/pyoxidizer.template.bzl
@@ -0,0 +1,343 @@
+# This file defines how PyOxidizer application building and packaging is
+# performed. See PyOxidizer's documentation at
+# https://pyoxidizer.readthedocs.io/en/stable/ for details of this
+# configuration file format.
+
+# Obtain the default PythonDistribution for our build target. We link
+# this distribution into our produced executable and extract the Python
+# standard library from it.
+def make_dist():
+ return default_python_distribution()
+
+# Configuration files consist of functions which define build "targets."
+# This function creates a Python executable and installs it in a destination
+# directory.
+def make_exe(dist):
+ # This function creates a `PythonPackagingPolicy` instance, which
+ # influences how executables are built and how resources are added to
+ # the executable. You can customize the default behavior by assigning
+ # to attributes and calling functions.
+ policy = dist.make_python_packaging_policy()
+
+ # Enable support for non-classified "file" resources to be added to
+ # resource collections.
+ # policy.allow_files = True
+
+ # Control support for loading Python extensions and other shared libraries
+ # from memory. This is only supported on Windows and is ignored on other
+ # platforms.
+ # policy.allow_in_memory_shared_library_loading = True
+
+ # Control whether to generate Python bytecode at various optimization
+ # levels. The default optimization level used by Python is 0.
+ # policy.bytecode_optimize_level_zero = True
+ # policy.bytecode_optimize_level_one = True
+ policy.bytecode_optimize_level_two = True
+
+ # Package all available Python extensions in the distribution.
+ policy.extension_module_filter = "all"
+
+ # Package the minimum set of Python extensions in the distribution needed
+ # to run a Python interpreter. Various functionality from the Python
+ # standard library won't work with this setting! But it can be used to
+ # reduce the size of generated executables by omitting unused extensions.
+ # policy.extension_module_filter = "minimal"
+
+ # Package Python extensions in the distribution not having additional
+ # library dependencies. This will exclude working support for SSL,
+ # compression formats, and other functionality.
+ # policy.extension_module_filter = "no-libraries"
+
+ # Package Python extensions in the distribution not having a dependency on
+ # copyleft licensed software like GPL.
+ # policy.extension_module_filter = "no-copyleft"
+
+ # Controls whether the file scanner attempts to classify files and emit
+ # resource-specific values.
+ # policy.file_scanner_classify_files = True
+
+ # Controls whether `File` instances are emitted by the file scanner.
+ # policy.file_scanner_emit_files = False
+
+ # Controls the `add_include` attribute of "classified" resources
+ # (`PythonModuleSource`, `PythonPackageResource`, etc).
+ # policy.include_classified_resources = True
+
+ # Toggle whether Python module source code for modules in the Python
+ # distribution's standard library are included.
+ policy.include_distribution_sources = True
+
+ # Toggle whether Python package resource files for the Python standard
+ # library are included.
+ policy.include_distribution_resources = False
+
+ # Controls the `add_include` attribute of `File` resources.
+ policy.include_file_resources = False
+
+ # Controls the `add_include` attribute of `PythonModuleSource` not in
+ # the standard library.
+ # policy.include_non_distribution_sources = True
+
+ # Toggle whether files associated with tests are included.
+ policy.include_test = False
+
+ # Resources are loaded from "in-memory" or "filesystem-relative" paths.
+ # The locations to attempt to add resources to are defined by the
+ # `resources_location` and `resources_location_fallback` attributes.
+ # The former is the first/primary location to try and the latter is
+ # an optional fallback.
+
+ # Use in-memory location for adding resources by default.
+ # policy.resources_location = "in-memory"
+
+ # Use filesystem-relative location for adding resources by default.
+ policy.resources_location = "filesystem-relative:lib"
+
+ # Attempt to add resources relative to the built binary when
+ # `resources_location` fails.
+ # policy.resources_location_fallback = "filesystem-relative:prefix"
+
+ # Clear out a fallback resource location.
+ # policy.resources_location_fallback = None
+
+ # Define a preferred Python extension module variant in the Python distribution
+ # to use.
+ # policy.set_preferred_extension_module_variant("foo", "bar")
+
+ # Configure policy values to classify files as typed resources.
+ # (This is the default.)
+ # policy.set_resource_handling_mode("classify")
+
+ # Configure policy values to handle files as files and not attempt
+ # to classify files as specific types.
+ # policy.set_resource_handling_mode("files")
+
+ # This variable defines the configuration of the embedded Python
+ # interpreter. By default, the interpreter will run a Python REPL
+ # using settings that are appropriate for an "isolated" run-time
+ # environment.
+ #
+ # The configuration of the embedded Python interpreter can be modified
+ # by setting attributes on the instance. Some of these are
+ # documented below.
+ python_config = dist.make_python_interpreter_config()
+
+ # Make the embedded interpreter behave like a `python` process.
+ # python_config.config_profile = "python"
+
+ # Set initial value for `sys.path`. If the string `$ORIGIN` exists in
+ # a value, it will be expanded to the directory of the built executable.
+ python_config.module_search_paths = ["$ORIGIN/lib"]
+
+ # Use jemalloc as Python's memory allocator.
+ # python_config.allocator_backend = "jemalloc"
+
+ # Use mimalloc as Python's memory allocator.
+ # python_config.allocator_backend = "mimalloc"
+
+ # Use snmalloc as Python's memory allocator.
+ # python_config.allocator_backend = "snmalloc"
+
+ # Let Python choose which memory allocator to use. (This will likely
+ # use the malloc()/free() linked into the program.
+ python_config.allocator_backend = "default"
+
+ # Enable the use of a custom allocator backend with the "raw" memory domain.
+ # python_config.allocator_raw = True
+
+ # Enable the use of a custom allocator backend with the "mem" memory domain.
+ # python_config.allocator_mem = True
+
+ # Enable the use of a custom allocator backend with the "obj" memory domain.
+ # python_config.allocator_obj = True
+
+ # Enable the use of a custom allocator backend with pymalloc's arena
+ # allocator.
+ # python_config.allocator_pymalloc_arena = True
+
+ # Enable Python memory allocator debug hooks.
+ # python_config.allocator_debug = True
+
+ # Control whether `oxidized_importer` is the first importer on
+ # `sys.meta_path`.
+ # python_config.oxidized_importer = False
+
+ # Enable the standard path-based importer which attempts to load
+ # modules from the filesystem.
+ # python_config.filesystem_importer = True
+
+ # Set `sys.frozen = True`
+ # python_config.sys_frozen = True
+
+ # Set `sys.meipass`
+ # python_config.sys_meipass = True
+
+ # Write files containing loaded modules to the directory specified
+ # by the given environment variable.
+ # python_config.write_modules_directory_env = "/tmp/oxidized/loaded_modules"
+
+ # Evaluate a string as Python code when the interpreter starts.
+ python_config.run_command = "from iredis.entry import main; main()"
+
+ # Run a Python module as __main__ when the interpreter starts.
+ # python_config.run_module = "<module>"
+
+ # Run a Python file when the interpreter starts.
+ # python_config.run_filename = "/path/to/file"
+
+ # Produce a PythonExecutable from a Python distribution, embedded
+ # resources, and other options. The returned object represents the
+ # standalone executable that will be built.
+ exe = dist.to_python_executable(
+ name="iredis",
+
+ # If no argument passed, the default `PythonPackagingPolicy` for the
+ # distribution is used.
+ packaging_policy=policy,
+
+ # If no argument passed, the default `PythonInterpreterConfig` is used.
+ config=python_config,
+ )
+
+ # Install tcl/tk support files to a specified directory so the `tkinter` Python
+ # module works.
+ # exe.tcl_files_path = "lib"
+
+ # Never attempt to copy Windows runtime DLLs next to the built executable.
+ # exe.windows_runtime_dlls_mode = "never"
+
+ # Copy Windows runtime DLLs next to the built executable when they can be
+ # located.
+ # exe.windows_runtime_dlls_mode = "when-present"
+
+ # Copy Windows runtime DLLs next to the build executable and error if this
+ # cannot be done.
+ # exe.windows_runtime_dlls_mode = "always"
+
+ # Make the executable a console application on Windows.
+ # exe.windows_subsystem = "console"
+
+ # Make the executable a non-console application on Windows.
+ # exe.windows_subsystem = "windows"
+
+ # Invoke `pip download` to install a single package using wheel archives
+ # obtained via `pip download`. `pip_download()` returns objects representing
+ # collected files inside Python wheels. `add_python_resources()` adds these
+ # objects to the binary, with a load location as defined by the packaging
+ # policy's resource location attributes.
+ #exe.add_python_resources(exe.pip_download(["pyflakes==2.2.0"]))
+
+ # Invoke `pip install` with our Python distribution to install a single package.
+ # `pip_install()` returns objects representing installed files.
+ # `add_python_resources()` adds these objects to the binary, with a load
+ # location as defined by the packaging policy's resource location
+ # attributes.
+ exe.add_python_resources(exe.pip_install(["$WHEEL_PATH"]))
+
+ # Invoke `pip install` using a requirements file and add the collected resources
+ # to our binary.
+ #exe.add_python_resources(exe.pip_install(["-r", "requirements.txt"]))
+
+
+
+ # Read Python files from a local directory and add them to our embedded
+ # context, taking just the resources belonging to the `foo` and `bar`
+ # Python packages.
+ #exe.add_python_resources(exe.read_package_root(
+ # path="/src/mypackage",
+ # packages=["foo", "bar"],
+ #))
+
+ # Discover Python files from a virtualenv and add them to our embedded
+ # context.
+ #exe.add_python_resources(exe.read_virtualenv(path="/path/to/venv"))
+
+ # Filter all resources collected so far through a filter of names
+ # in a file.
+ #exe.filter_from_files(files=["/path/to/filter-file"]))
+
+ # Return our `PythonExecutable` instance so it can be built and
+ # referenced by other consumers of this target.
+ return exe
+
+def make_embedded_resources(exe):
+ return exe.to_embedded_resources()
+
+def make_install(exe):
+ # Create an object that represents our installed application file layout.
+ files = FileManifest()
+
+ # Add the generated executable to our install layout in the root directory.
+ files.add_python_resource(".", exe)
+
+ return files
+
+def make_msi(exe):
+ # See the full docs for more. But this will convert your Python executable
+ # into a `WiXMSIBuilder` Starlark type, which will be converted to a Windows
+ # .msi installer when it is built.
+ return exe.to_wix_msi_builder(
+ # Simple identifier of your app.
+ "iredis",
+ # The name of your application.
+ "iredis",
+ # The version of your application.
+ "1.9.1",
+ # The author/manufacturer of your application.
+ "laixintao"
+ )
+
+
+# Dynamically enable automatic code signing.
+def register_code_signers():
+ # You will need to run with `pyoxidizer build --var ENABLE_CODE_SIGNING 1` for
+ # this if block to be evaluated.
+ if not VARS.get("ENABLE_CODE_SIGNING"):
+ return
+
+ # Use a code signing certificate in a .pfx/.p12 file, prompting the
+ # user for its path and password to open.
+ # pfx_path = prompt_input("path to code signing certificate file")
+ # pfx_password = prompt_password(
+ # "password for code signing certificate file",
+ # confirm = True
+ # )
+ # signer = code_signer_from_pfx_file(pfx_path, pfx_password)
+
+ # Use a code signing certificate in the Windows certificate store, specified
+ # by its SHA-1 thumbprint. (This allows you to use YubiKeys and other
+ # hardware tokens if they speak to the Windows certificate APIs.)
+ # sha1_thumbprint = prompt_input(
+ # "SHA-1 thumbprint of code signing certificate in Windows store"
+ # )
+ # signer = code_signer_from_windows_store_sha1_thumbprint(sha1_thumbprint)
+
+ # Choose a code signing certificate automatically from the Windows
+ # certificate store.
+ # signer = code_signer_from_windows_store_auto()
+
+ # Activate your signer so it gets called automatically.
+ # signer.activate()
+
+
+# Call our function to set up automatic code signers.
+register_code_signers()
+
+# Tell PyOxidizer about the build targets defined above.
+register_target("dist", make_dist)
+register_target("exe", make_exe, depends=["dist"])
+register_target("resources", make_embedded_resources, depends=["exe"], default_build_script=True)
+register_target("install", make_install, depends=["exe"], default=True)
+register_target("msi_installer", make_msi, depends=["exe"])
+
+# Resolve whatever targets the invoker of this configuration file is requesting
+# be resolved.
+resolve_targets()
+
+# END OF COMMON USER-ADJUSTED SETTINGS.
+#
+# Everything below this is typically managed by PyOxidizer and doesn't need
+# to be updated by people.
+
+PYOXIDIZER_VERSION = "0.14.1"
+PYOXIDIZER_COMMIT = "UNKNOWN"