PEP: 3147 Title: PYC Repository Directories Author: Barry Warsaw Status: Final Type: Standards Track Content-Type: text/x-rst Created: 16-Dec-2009 Python-Version: 3.2 Post-History: 30-Jan-2010, 25-Feb-2010, 03-Mar-2010, 12-Apr-2010 Resolution: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2010-April/099414.html Abstract ======== This PEP describes an extension to Python's import mechanism which improves sharing of Python source code files among multiple installed different versions of the Python interpreter. It does this by allowing more than one byte compilation file (.pyc files) to be co-located with the Python source file (.py file). The extension described here can also be used to support different Python compilation caches, such as JIT output that may be produced by an Unladen Swallow (:pep:`3146`) enabled C Python. Background ========== CPython compiles its source code into "byte code", and for performance reasons, it caches this byte code on the file system whenever the source file has changes. This makes loading of Python modules much faster because the compilation phase can be bypassed. When your source file is `foo.py`, CPython caches the byte code in a `foo.pyc` file right next to the source. Byte code files contain two 32-bit big-endian numbers followed by the marshaled [2]_ code object. The 32-bit numbers represent a magic number and a timestamp. The magic number changes whenever Python changes the byte code format, e.g. by adding new byte codes to its virtual machine. This ensures that pyc files built for previous versions of the VM won't cause problems. The timestamp is used to make sure that the pyc file match the py file that was used to create it. When either the magic number or timestamp do not match, the py file is recompiled and a new pyc file is written. In practice, it is well known that pyc files are not compatible across Python major releases. A reading of import.c [3]_ in the Python source code proves that within recent memory, every new CPython major release has bumped the pyc magic number. Rationale ========= Linux distributions such as Ubuntu [4]_ and Debian [5]_ provide more than one Python version at the same time to their users. For example, Ubuntu 9.10 Karmic Koala users can install Python 2.5, 2.6, and 3.1, with Python 2.6 being the default. This causes a conflict for third party Python source files installed by the system, because you cannot compile a single Python source file for more than one Python version at a time. When Python finds a `pyc` file with a non-matching magic number, it falls back to the slower process of recompiling the source. Thus if your system installed a `/usr/share/python/foo.py`, two different versions of Python would fight over the `pyc` file and rewrite it each time the source is compiled. (The standard library is unaffected by this, since multiple versions of the stdlib *are* installed on such distributions..) Furthermore, in order to ease the burden on operating system packagers for these distributions, the distribution packages do not contain Python version numbers [6]_; they are shared across all Python versions installed on the system. Putting Python version numbers in the packages would be a maintenance nightmare, since all the packages - *and their dependencies* - would have to be updated every time a new Python release was added or removed from the distribution. Because of the sheer number of packages available, this amount of work is infeasible. (:pep:`384` has been proposed to address binary compatibility issues of third party extension modules across different versions of Python.) Because these distributions cannot share pyc files, elaborate mechanisms have been developed to put the resulting pyc files in non-shared locations while the source code is still shared. Examples include the symlink-based Debian regimes python-support [8]_ and python-central [9]_. These approaches make for much more complicated, fragile, inscrutable, and fragmented policies for delivering Python applications to a wide range of users. Arguably more users get Python from their operating system vendor than from upstream tarballs. Thus, solving this pyc sharing problem for CPython is a high priority for such vendors. This PEP proposes a solution to this problem. Proposal ======== Python's import machinery is extended to write and search for byte code cache files in a single directory inside every Python package directory. This directory will be called `__pycache__`. Further, pyc file names will contain a magic string (called a "tag") that differentiates the Python version they were compiled for. This allows multiple byte compiled cache files to co-exist for a single Python source file. The magic tag is implementation defined, but should contain the implementation name and a version number shorthand, e.g. `cpython-32`. It must be unique among all versions of Python, and whenever the magic number is bumped, a new magic tag must be defined. An example `pyc` file for Python 3.2 is thus `foo.cpython-32.pyc`. The magic tag is available in the `imp` module via the `get_tag()` function. This is parallel to the `imp.get_magic()` function. This scheme has the added benefit of reducing the clutter in a Python package directory. When a Python source file is imported for the first time, a `__pycache__` directory will be created in the package directory, if one does not already exist. The pyc file for the imported source will be written to the `__pycache__` directory, using the magic-tag formatted name. If either the creation of the `__pycache__` directory or the pyc file inside that fails, the import will still succeed, just as it does in a pre-:pep:`3147` world. If the py source file is missing, the pyc file inside `__pycache__` will be ignored. This eliminates the problem of accidental stale pyc file imports. For backward compatibility, Python will still support pyc-only distributions, however it will only do so when the pyc file lives in the directory where the py file *would* have been, i.e. not in the `__pycache__` directory. pyc file outside of `__pycache__` will only be imported if the py source file is missing. Tools such as `py_compile` [15]_ and `compileall` [16]_ will be extended to create :pep:`3147` formatted layouts automatically, but will have an option to create pyc-only distribution layouts. Examples --------- What would this look like in practice? Let's say we have a Python package named `alpha` which contains a sub-package name `beta`. The source directory layout before byte compilation might look like this:: alpha/ __init__.py one.py two.py beta/ __init__.py three.py four.py After byte compiling this package with Python 3.2, you would see the following layout:: alpha/ __pycache__/ __init__.cpython-32.pyc one.cpython-32.pyc two.cpython-32.pyc __init__.py one.py two.py beta/ __pycache__/ __init__.cpython-32.pyc three.cpython-32.pyc four.cpython-32.pyc __init__.py three.py four.py *Note: listing order may differ depending on the platform.* Let's say that two new versions of Python are installed, one is Python 3.3 and another is Unladen Swallow. After byte compilation, the file system would look like this:: alpha/ __pycache__/ __init__.cpython-32.pyc __init__.cpython-33.pyc __init__.unladen-10.pyc one.cpython-32.pyc one.cpython-33.pyc one.unladen-10.pyc two.cpython-32.pyc two.cpython-33.pyc two.unladen-10.pyc __init__.py one.py two.py beta/ __pycache__/ __init__.cpython-32.pyc __init__.cpython-33.pyc __init__.unladen-10.pyc three.cpython-32.pyc three.cpython-33.pyc three.unladen-10.pyc four.cpython-32.pyc four.cpython-33.pyc four.unladen-10.pyc __init__.py three.py four.py As you can see, as long as the Python version identifier string is unique, any number of pyc files can co-exist. These identifier strings are described in more detail below. A nice property of this layout is that the `__pycache__` directories can generally be ignored, such that a normal directory listing would show something like this:: alpha/ __pycache__/ __init__.py one.py two.py beta/ __pycache__/ __init__.py three.py four.py This is much less cluttered than even today's Python. Python behavior =============== When Python searches for a module to import (say `foo`), it may find one of several situations. As per current Python rules, the term "matching pyc" means that the magic number matches the current interpreter's magic number, and the source file's timestamp matches the timestamp in the `pyc` file exactly. Case 0: The steady state ------------------------ When Python is asked to import module `foo`, it searches for a `foo.py` file (or `foo` package, but that's not important for this discussion) along its `sys.path`. If found, Python looks to see if there is a matching `__pycache__/foo..pyc` file, and if so, that `pyc` file is loaded. Case 1: The first import ------------------------ When Python locates the `foo.py`, if the `__pycache__/foo..pyc` file is missing, Python will create it, also creating the `__pycache__` directory if necessary. Python will parse and byte compile the `foo.py` file and save the byte code in `__pycache__/foo..pyc`. Case 2: The second import ------------------------- When Python is asked to import module `foo` a second time (in a different process of course), it will again search for the `foo.py` file along its `sys.path`. When Python locates the `foo.py` file, it looks for a matching `__pycache__/foo..pyc` and finding this, it reads the byte code and continues as usual. Case 3: __pycache__/foo..pyc with no source --------------------------------------------------- It's possible that the `foo.py` file somehow got removed, while leaving the cached pyc file still on the file system. If the `__pycache__/foo..pyc` file exists, but the `foo.py` file used to create it does not, Python will raise an `ImportError` when asked to import foo. In other words, Python will not import a pyc file from the cache directory unless the source file exists. Case 4: legacy pyc files and source-less imports ------------------------------------------------ Python will ignore all legacy pyc files when a source file exists next to it. In other words, if a `foo.pyc` file exists next to the `foo.py` file, the pyc file will be ignored in all cases In order to continue to support source-less distributions though, if the source file is missing, Python will import a lone pyc file if it lives where the source file would have been. Case 5: read-only file systems ------------------------------ When the source lives on a read-only file system, or the `__pycache__` directory or pyc file cannot otherwise be written, all the same rules apply. This is also the case when `__pycache__` happens to be written with permissions which do not allow for writing containing pyc files. Flow chart ========== Here is a flow chart describing how modules are loaded: .. image:: pep-3147-1.png :scale: 75 :class: invert-in-dark-mode Alternative Python implementations ================================== Alternative Python implementations such as Jython [11]_, IronPython [12]_, PyPy [13]_, Pynie [14]_, and Unladen Swallow can also use the `__pycache__` directory to store whatever compilation artifacts make sense for their platforms. For example, Jython could store the class file for the module in `__pycache__/foo.jython-32.class`. Implementation strategy ======================= This feature is targeted for Python 3.2, solving the problem for those and all future versions. It may be back-ported to Python 2.7. Vendors are free to backport the changes to earlier distributions as they see fit. For backports of this feature to Python 2, when the `-U` flag is used, a file such as `foo.cpython-27u.pyc` can be written. Effects on existing code ======================== Adoption of this PEP will affect existing code and idioms, both inside Python and outside. This section enumerates some of these effects. Detecting PEP 3147 availability ------------------------------- The easiest way to detect whether your version of Python provides PEP 3147 functionality is to do the following check:: >>> import imp >>> has3147 = hasattr(imp, 'get_tag') __file__ --------- In Python 3, when you import a module, its `__file__` attribute points to its source `py` file (in Python 2, it points to the `pyc` file). A package's `__file__` points to the `py` file for its `__init__.py`. E.g.:: >>> import foo >>> foo.__file__ 'foo.py' # baz is a package >>> import baz >>> baz.__file__ 'baz/__init__.py' Nothing in this PEP would change the semantics of `__file__`. This PEP proposes the addition of an `__cached__` attribute to modules, which will always point to the actual `pyc` file that was read or written. When the environment variable `$PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE` is set, or the `-B` option is given, or if the source lives on a read-only filesystem, then the `__cached__` attribute will point to the location that the `pyc` file *would* have been written to if it didn't exist. This location of course includes the `__pycache__` subdirectory in its path. For alternative Python implementations which do not support `pyc` files, the `__cached__` attribute may point to whatever information makes sense. E.g. on Jython, this might be the `.class` file for the module: `__pycache__/foo.jython-32.class`. Some implementations may use multiple compiled files to create the module, in which case `__cached__` may be a tuple. The exact contents of `__cached__` are Python implementation specific. It is recommended that when nothing sensible can be calculated, implementations should set the `__cached__` attribute to `None`. py_compile and compileall ------------------------- Python comes with two modules, `py_compile` [15]_ and `compileall` [16]_ which support compiling Python modules external to the built-in import machinery. `py_compile` in particular has intimate knowledge of byte compilation, so these will be updated to understand the new layout. The `-b` flag is added to `compileall` for writing legacy `.pyc` byte-compiled file path names. bdist_wininst and the Windows installer --------------------------------------- These tools also compile modules explicitly on installation. If they do not use `py_compile` and `compileall`, then they would also have to be modified to understand the new layout. File extension checks --------------------- There exists some code which checks for files ending in `.pyc` and simply chops off the last character to find the matching `.py` file. This code will obviously fail once this PEP is implemented. To support this use case, we'll add two new methods to the `imp` package [17]_: * `imp.cache_from_source(py_path)` -> `pyc_path` * `imp.source_from_cache(pyc_path)` -> `py_path` Alternative implementations are free to override these functions to return reasonable values based on their own support for this PEP. These methods are allowed to return `None` when the implementation (or :pep:`302` loader in effect) for whatever reason cannot calculate the appropriate file name. They should not raise exceptions. Backports --------- For versions of Python earlier than 3.2 (and possibly 2.7), it is possible to backport this PEP. However, in Python 3.2 (and possibly 2.7), this behavior will be turned on by default, and in fact, it will replace the old behavior. Backports will need to support the old layout by default. We suggest supporting :pep:`3147` through the use of an environment variable called `$PYTHONENABLECACHEDIR` or the command line switch `-Xenablecachedir` to enable the feature. Makefiles and other dependency tools ------------------------------------ Makefiles and other tools which calculate dependencies on `.pyc` files (e.g. to byte-compile the source if the `.pyc` is missing) will have to be updated to check the new paths. Alternatives ============ This section describes some alternative approaches or details that were considered and rejected during the PEP's development. Hexadecimal magic tags ---------------------- pyc files inside of the `__pycache__` directories contain a magic tag in their file names. These are mnemonic tags for the actual magic numbers used by the importer. We could have used the hexadecimal representation [10]_ of the binary magic number as a unique identifier. For example, in Python 3.2:: >>> from binascii import hexlify >>> from imp import get_magic >>> 'foo.{}.pyc'.format(hexlify(get_magic()).decode('ascii')) 'foo.580c0d0a.pyc' This isn't particularly human friendly though, thus the magic tag proposed in this PEP. PEP 304 ------- There is some overlap between the goals of this PEP and :pep:`304`, which has been withdrawn. However :pep:`304` would allow a user to create a shadow file system hierarchy in which to store `pyc` files. This concept of a shadow hierarchy for `pyc` files could be used to satisfy the aims of this PEP. Although the :pep:`304` does not indicate why it was withdrawn, shadow directories have a number of problems. The location of the shadow `pyc` files would not be easily discovered and would depend on the proper and consistent use of the `$PYTHONBYTECODE` environment variable both by the system and by end users. There are also global implications, meaning that while the system might want to shadow `pyc` files, users might not want to, but the PEP defines only an all-or-nothing approach. As an example of the problem, a common (though fragile) Python idiom for locating data files is to do something like this:: from os import dirname, join import foo.bar data_file = join(dirname(foo.bar.__file__), 'my.dat') This would be problematic since `foo.bar.__file__` will give the location of the `pyc` file in the shadow directory, and it may not be possible to find the `my.dat` file relative to the source directory from there. Fat byte compilation files -------------------------- An earlier version of this PEP described "fat" Python byte code files. These files would contain the equivalent of multiple `pyc` files in a single `pyf` file, with a lookup table keyed off the appropriate magic number. This was an extensible file format so that the first 5 parallel Python implementations could be supported fairly efficiently, but with extension lookup tables available to scale `pyf` byte code objects as large as necessary. The fat byte compilation files were fairly complex, and inherently introduced difficult race conditions, so the current simplification of using directories was suggested. The same problem applies to using zip files as the fat pyc file format. Multiple file extensions ------------------------ The PEP author also considered an approach where multiple thin byte compiled files lived in the same place, but used different file extensions to designate the Python version. E.g. foo.pyc25, foo.pyc26, foo.pyc31 etc. This was rejected because of the clutter involved in writing so many different files. The multiple extension approach makes it more difficult (and an ongoing task) to update any tools that are dependent on the file extension. .pyc ---- A proposal was floated to call the `__pycache__` directory `.pyc` or some other dot-file name. This would have the effect on \*nix systems of hiding the directory. There are many reasons why this was rejected by the BDFL [20]_ including the fact that dot-files are only special on some platforms, and we actually do *not* want to hide these completely from users. Reference implementation ======================== Work on this code is tracked in a Bazaar branch on Launchpad [22]_ until it's ready for merge into Python 3.2. The work-in-progress diff can also be viewed [23]_ and is updated automatically as new changes are uploaded. A Rietveld code review issue [24]_ has been opened as of 2010-04-01 (no, this is not an April Fools joke :). References ========== .. [2] The marshal module: https://docs.python.org/3.1/library/marshal.html .. [3] import.c: https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/v3.2a1/Python/import.c .. [4] Ubuntu: https://www.ubuntu.com .. [5] Debian: https://www.debian.org .. [6] Debian Python Policy: https://www.debian.org/doc/packaging-manuals/python-policy/ .. [8] python-support: https://web.archive.org/web/20100110123824/http://wiki.debian.org/DebianPythonFAQ#Whatispython-support.3F .. [9] python-central: https://web.archive.org/web/20100110123824/http://wiki.debian.org/DebianPythonFAQ#Whatispython-central.3F .. [10] binascii.hexlify(): https://docs.python.org/3.1/library/binascii.html#binascii.hexlify .. [11] Jython: http://www.jython.org/ .. [12] IronPython: http://ironpython.net/ .. [13] PyPy: https://web.archive.org/web/20100310130136/http://codespeak.net/pypy/dist/pypy/doc/ .. [14] Pynie: https://code.google.com/archive/p/pynie/ .. [15] py_compile: https://docs.python.org/3.1/library/py_compile.html .. [16] compileall: https://docs.python.org/3.1/library/compileall.html .. [17] imp: https://docs.python.org/3.1/library/imp.html .. [20] https://www.mail-archive.com/python-dev@python.org/msg45203.html [21] importlib: https://docs.python.org/3.1/library/importlib.html .. [22] https://code.launchpad.net/~barry/python/pep3147 .. [23] https://code.launchpad.net/~barry/python/pep3147/+merge/22648 .. [24] http://codereview.appspot.com/842043/show ACKNOWLEDGMENTS =============== Barry Warsaw's original idea was for fat Python byte code files. Martin von Loewis reviewed an early draft of the PEP and suggested the simplification to store traditional `pyc` and `pyo` files in a directory. Many other people reviewed early versions of this PEP and provided useful feedback including but not limited to: * David Malcolm * Josselin Mouette * Matthias Klose * Michael Hudson * Michael Vogt * Piotr Ożarowski * Scott Kitterman * Toshio Kuratomi Copyright ========= This document has been placed in the public domain.