pycopy-lib is a project to develop a non-monolithic standard library for the Pycopy project (https://github.com/pfalcon/pycopy), while where possible, staying compatible with other variants and implementations of Python. The goals of the project are:
- As the main goal, develop Pycopy standard library as close as possible matching that of CPython. It thus necessarily targets "Unix" port of Pycopy.
- As a side goal, develop individual modules usable/useful on baremetal ports of Pycopy. This is oftentimes conflicts with the first goal (something as close as possible matching CPython functionality is just too big to run on low-memory systems), and necessitates creation of additional modules, or special "micro" (aka "u") versions of them.
Each module or package of pycopy-lib
is available as a separate
distribution package from PyPI. Each module comes from one of the following
sources (and thus each module has its own licensing terms):
- written from scratch specifically for Pycopy
- ported from CPython
- ported from some other Python implementation, e.g. PyPy
- some modules actually aren't implemented yet and are dummy
- some modules are extensions and are not part of CPython's standard library
As mentioned above, the main target of pycopy-lib is the "Unix" port of Pycopy.Actual system requirements vary per module. Modules not related to I/O may also work without problems on bare-metal ports, not just on "Unix" port (e.g. esp8266).
pycopy-lib packages are published on PyPI (Python Package Index), the standard Python community package repository: http://pypi.python.org/ . On PyPI, you can search for Pycopy related packages and read additional package information. All pycopy-lib package names are prefixed with "pycopy-".
Browse available packages via this URL. (Note: this may also include 3rd-party modules which are not part of pycopy-lib.)
To install packages from PyPI for usage on your local system, use the
upip
tool, which is Pycopy's native package manager, similar to
pip
, which is used to install packages for CPython. upip
is bundled
with Pycopy "Unix" port (i.e. if you build "Unix" port, you
automatically have upip
tool). Following examples assume that
pycopy
binary is available on your PATH
:
$ pycopy -m upip install pycopy-pystone
...
$ pycopy
>>> import pystone
>>> pystone.main()
Pystone(1.2) time for 50000 passes = 0.534
This machine benchmarks at 93633 pystones/second
Run pycopy -m upip --help
for more information about upip
.
While pycopy-lib focuses on Pycopy, sometimes it may be beneficial
to run Pycopy code using CPython, e.g. to use code coverage, debugging,
etc. tools available for it. To facilitate such usage, pycopy-lib also
provides reimplementations ("backports") of Pycopy modules, which
run on CPython. This first of all applies to the builtin Pycopy "u"
modules, but as time goes on, backports of pycopy-lib's own modules can
be provided. Backport modules are in the directories named cpython-*
of
this repository. On PyPI, these named
pycopy-cpython-*.
These modules should be installed with CPython's pip3 tool. Example session:
$ pip3 install --user pycopy-cpython-uhashlib
...
$ python3
...
>>> import uhashlib
>>> uhashlib.sha1(b"test").hexdigest()
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
AttributeError: 'sha1' object has no attribute 'hexdigest'
# Pycopy's uhashlib doesn't have hexdigest(), use ubinascii.hexlify(.digest())
>>> uhashlib.sha1(b"test").digest()
b'\xa9J\x8f\xe5\xcc\xb1\x9b\xa6\x1cL\x08s\xd3\x91\xe9\x87\x98/\xbb\xd3'
To install modules during development, use make install
. By default, all
available packages will be installed. To install a specific module, add the
MOD=<module>
parameter to the end of the make install
command.
pycopy-lib is a community project and can be implemented "fully" only by contributions from interested parties. The contributions are expected to adhere to Contribution Guidelines.
pycopy-lib is developed and maintained by Paul Sokolovsky (@pfalcon) with the help of Pycopy community.
While pycopy-lib's primary way is to provide implementation of Python standard library, pycopy-lib goes further and hosts some extension modules which are deemed to be worth being a part of "Pycopy standard library". This section lists them to easy discovery:
- byteslib - similar to
string
, function variants ofbytes
methods. - uaiohttpclient - HTTP client for uasyncio
- uargparse - small subset of argparse module
- uasyncio - asynchronous scheduling and I/O, roughly based on CPython's asyncio
- uasyncio.core - just a scheduler part of uasyncio
- uasyncio.queues - subset of CPython's asyncio.Queue
- uasyncio.synchro - synchronization primitives for uasyncio (subset of asyncio's)
- uasyncio.udp - UDP support for uasyncio
- ucontextlib - subset of contextlib functionality
- uctypelib - higher-level helpers to define structure for the builtin uctype module
- uctypeslib2 - pretty printing support for uctypes structure definitions
- ucurses - small subset of curses module
- udnspkt - DNS packet handling (Sans I/O approach)
- ulogging - small subset of logging module
- umqtt.robust
- umqtt.simple
- uos2 - minimalist subset of the "os" module
- upip - Pycopy package manager, modelled after "pip" tool
- upysh - minimalistic filesystem shell using Python syntax
- urequests - subset of "requests" module
- urlib.urequest - small subset of urlib.request module
- usubprocess - small subset of "subprocess" module
- utarfile - small subset of tarfile module
- utokenize - simple tokenizer for Python source
- uurequests - very small subset of "requests" module
- uwwwauth - HTTP Basic/Digest authentication algorithms
- xmltok2 - small/simple XML tokenizer