Suppose, I have written a code in python 2.7 . let's say i am using vlc player in my script and now i have created a msi file for my code so how to install "vlc player" in user's system during installation of msi file of my python code.
Please give the example of setup file of cx_freeze package which installs all the dependent softweare (like VLC) in the user's system during installation of msi of python code.
I just want to know where to add these dependencies (for installation) in setup file of cx_freeze.
i dont know much about cx_freeze
well for my project i've used pynsist
and this is really easy to make msi in this.
this is my instaalet.cfg file to run pynist
you can check example here
Related
I need to package my Python application, its dependencies, and Python itself into a single MSI installer for distribution to users. The end result should desirably be:
Python is installed in the standard location
the package and its dependencies are installed in a separate directory (possibly site-packages)
the installation directory should contain the Python uncompressed and a standalone executable is not required
Kind of a dup of this question about how to make a python into an executable.
It boils down to:
py2exe on windows, Freeze on Linux, and
py2app on Mac.
I use PyInstaller (the svn version) to create a stand-alone version of my program that includes Python and all the dependencies. It takes a little fiddling to get it to work right and include everything (as does py2exe and other similar programs, see this question), but then it works very well.
You then need to create an installer. NSIS Works great for that and is free, but it creates .exe files not .msi. If .msi is not necessary, I highly recommend it. Otherwise check out the answers to this question for other options.
My company uses the free InnoSetup tool. It is a moderately complex program that has tons of flexibility for building installers for windows. I believe that it creates .exe and not .msi files, however. InnoSetup is not python specific but we have created an installer for one of our products that installs python along with dependencies to locations specified by the user at install time.
I've had much better results with dependencies and custom folder structures using pyinstaller, and it lets you find and specify hidden imports and hooks for larger dependencies like numpy and scipy. Also a PITA, though.
py2exe will make windows executables with python bundled in.
py2exe is the best way to do this. It's a bit of a PITA to use, but the end result works very well.
Ok, I have used py2exe before and it works perfectly except for one thing... It only works on executable windows machines. I then learned about Jython which turn a python script into a .Jar file. Which as you know is executable from any machine that has Java ("To your latest running version") installed. Which is great because both unix, windows, and ios (Most of the time) Run java. That means its executable from all of the following machines. As long as they run Java. No need for "py2mac + py2exe + freeze" just to run on all operating systems. Just Jython
For more information on how it works and how you can use it click here.
http://www.jython.org/
I want to distribute a python program on, say, Windows and/or Mac, but I don't want to give the user the headache of ensuring there is an appropriate python runtime installed on their machine. And i don't want to interfere with their machine's configuration by, let's say, requesting root privileges and installing a system-wide python runtime on their system that suits my program specifically because it's too invasive and might cause compatibility collisions with other installed versions of the runtime.
I would much rather have a self-contained executable that could be, for example, stored on a USB flash-drive, inserted into the system, and then maybe with a stepping-stone binary executable that just invokes the device-portable runtime on a python script that I provide, I could then run the program as if it were a self-contained binary executable (with only standard-library dependencies).
A link to this binary executable could be published into main-menu program lists, docks, or desktops. And it could be invoked by shell scripts or other executed-by-proxy mechanisms. Such a no-install/self-contained python program could potentially be a first-class user-invokable application. This is what I want to achieve.
I googled around for projects that provided a device-portable/mobile python installation and so far I've only found portablepython.com. Unfortunately it says the project is discontinued and no download link for the project is provided. it listed some similar projects but they all seemed defunkt or with a very different focus.
Does anyone know of an active project that is or includes such an independent/portable/mobile/no-install distribution for python?
or is there some way i could configure python's build system to build a noinstall-friendly product?
any ideas welcome. thanks for your input!
After more searching I found that Python.org publishes its own standalone-python distribution called the embeddable zip file.
This is exactly what I was searching for. It's a basic python standalone runtime that requires relatively few megabytes of storage.
I started with this embeddable distro and then cajoled a standalone copy of pip to work with it. Problem solved.
Improving upon #oreus2020's answer, you can download the embeddable zip file from here. Then, unzip the compressed file to a folder of your choice. Go to the root of your install and find python._pth file and open it in a text editor. Remove the "#" before import site(This file is the one which manages the environment of the portable install. If you want anything to be recognized by the portable python interpreter, just throw the path in here and that's it!). If you want pip, go to this page and save it in the root of your portable install and run it using the portable python interpreter like ./python get-pip.py from a commandline opened at the root of your install. Pip installed! To use the pip, do ./python -m pip <commands> from the commandline opened at the root of your install and then open the python._pth file and insert the following below the "." ./Lib/site-packages ./Scripts. Voila, you got yourself a python portable install!
My python._pth file looks like:
python39.zip
.
# Uncomment to run site.main() automatically
./Repo
./Repo/Code
./Repo/Code/cogs
./Lib/site-packages
./Scripts
import site
If you are still wondering, here is the link to the one I made for myself.
P.S. Pardon my bad English
I admit at the beginning that I am a novice python developer, so I apologize in advance for questions that may seem stupid.
I prepared python script with GUI (Tkinter), which use plenty external libraries. I'm working on Windows. Currently, I share my program in the form of an .exe file for Windows users, who do not have Python installed on their PCs. Everything works.
Recently I received a query if I can compile my code on an executable file that is usable for Mac users.
I have a number of questions related to this:
1) can I do it from a PC with Windows or i need Mac? I guess I have to have access to a Mac.
2) will my code work on mac without any editing? What about external libraries? Do you know any easy way to copy/paste my "python with used libraries" from Windows to Mac?
3) will I create a executable file in the same way as Windows, I mean I will use a "Pyinstaller" type library?
Thank you in advance for your help.
1) can I do it from a PC with Windows or i need Mac? I guess I have to have access to a Mac.
You can use a virtual machine and build for mac.
2) will my code work on mac without any editing? What about external libraries? Do you know any easy way to copy/paste my "python with used libraries" from Windows to Mac?
Some libraries have different behavior between macOS and Windows, yes. You should consult the documentation for the libraries you are using.
3) will I create a executable file in the same way as Windows, I mean I will use a "Pyinstaller" type library?
If you're actually using pyinstaller then it is compatible with both mac and windows. You have to check that the library you're using is compatible with both by looking at their docs.
An example of this is to use virtualbox mac image.
Install virtualbox (see this)
Install MacOS (see this)
Install the correct python (obviously python.org)
git clone your repository
Setup your virtual environment (or just pip install -r requirements.txt with your requirements file but I'm a stickler about venvs)
Note: I know you said pyinstaller-like but pyinstaller has a note about macos.
Build!
You shouldn't have any trouble. Just make sure the version of python is the same, as I believe the default on mac is 2.7.
Also, python scripts aren't compiled, rather interpreted, so making the file executable doesn't really mean it's a binary file in this case. I'm not sure what method you used to run python on a computer that doesn't have python on it, as there are a few, but if you can manage to do that on windows, it should work on mac.
I am new in Python, and I wonder if I can release my program in some kind of compiled build project with all modules and librarys included, so I can run it on diffrent systems? I don't want to install opencv on every pc.
You can specify a requirements.txt file which lists the dependencies used by your program. Python pip can read this file to bundle and package your application. See the docs here: https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/user_guide/#requirements-files.
Also, I believe that OpenCV requires some native extensions installed which are not packaged with Python. Unfortunately, you'll need to install native extensions on each new machine you use.
This is the question: How to create a setup file(.msi) from a .py file? I have a little script but I need an installer to use it with "InstallSimple" program wich will install another applications.
I tried with pyinstaller but it supports 2.3-2.7 versions and I have an script for 3.3 version.
To create an .msi file you need to use distutils. The essential procedure there is to create a setup.py file with information about your script, and you can then run python setup.py bdist_msi and it will create an .msi file for you.
However, using only this will create an .msi-file for your Python script, but it will require you to install Python on the computer first. This is probably not what you want. To solve that you can create an .exe-file from your script with cx_Freeze. cx_Freeze can in turn use distutils to make the .msi file. There is an example here.
Have you tried cx_Freeze ? According to the latest docs cx_Freeze 4.3.1 documentation, it supports python3.