Notes about specific Features¶
Ctypes Dependencies¶
Ctypes is a foreign function library for Python, that allows calling functions present in shared libraries. Those libraries are not imported as Python packages, because they are not picked up via Python imports: their path is passed to ctypes instead, which deals with the shared library directly; this caused <1.4 PyInstaller import detect machinery to miss those libraries, failing the goal to build self-contained PyInstaller executables:
from ctypes import *
# This will pass undetected under PyInstaller detect machinery,
# because it's not a direct import.
handle = CDLL("/usr/lib/library.so")
handle.function_call()
Solution in PyInstaller¶
PyInstaller contains a pragmatic implementation of Ctypes dependencies: it will search for simple standard usages of ctypes and automatically track and bundle the referenced libraries. The following usages will be correctly detected:
CDLL("library.so")
WinDLL("library.so")
ctypes.DLL("library.so")
cdll.library # Only valid under Windows - a limitation of ctypes, not PyInstaller's
windll.library # Only valid under Windows - a limitation of ctypes, not PyInstaller's
cdll.LoadLibrary("library.so")
windll.LoadLibrary("library.so")
More in detail, the following restrictions apply:
only libraries referenced by bare filenames (e.g. no leading paths) will be handled; handling absolute paths would be impossible without modifying the bytecode as well (remember that while running frozen, ctypes would keep searching the library at that very absolute location, whose presence on the host system nobody can guarantee), and relative paths handling would require recreating in the frozen executable the same hierarchy of directories leading to the library, in addition of keeping track of which the current working directory is;
only library paths represented by a literal string will be detected and included in the final executable: PyInstaller import detection works by inspecting raw Python bytecode, and since you can pass the library path to ctypes using a string (that can be represented by a literal in the code, but also by a variable, by the return value of an arbitrarily complex function, etc…), it’s not reasonably possible to detect all ctypes dependencies;
only libraries referenced in the same context of ctypes’ invocation will be handled.
We feel that it should be enough to cover most ctypes’ usages, with little or no modification required in your code.
If PyInstaller does not detect a library, you can add it to your
bundle by passing the respective information to --add-binary
option or
listing it in the .spec-file. If your frozen
application will be able to pick up the library at run-time can not be
guaranteed as it depends on the detailed implementation.
Gotchas¶
The ctypes detection system at Analysis time
is based on ctypes.util.find_library()
.
This means that you have to make sure
that while performing Analysis
and running frozen,
all the environment values find_library()
uses to search libraries
are aligned to those when running un-frozen.
Examples include using LD_LIBRARY_PATH
or DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH
to
widen find_library()
scope.
SWIG support¶
PyInstaller tries to detect binary modules created by SWIG. This detection requires:
The Python wrapper module must be imported somewhere in your application (or by any of the modules it uses).
The wrapper module must be available as source-code and it’s first line must contain the text
automatically generated by SWIG
.The C-module must have the same name as the wrapper module prefixed with an underscore (
_
). (This is a SWIG restriction already.)The C-module must sit just beside the wrapper module (thus a relative import would work).
Also some restrictions apply, due to the way the SWIG wrapper is implemented:
The C-module will become a global module. As a consequence, you can not use two SWIG modules with the same basename (e.g.
pkg1._cmod
andpkg2._cmod
), as one would overwrite the other.
Cython support¶
PyInstaller can follow import statements that refer to Cython C object modules and bundle them – like for any other module implemented in C.
But – again, as for any other module implemented in C – PyInstaller can not
determine if the Cython C object module is importing some Python module.
These will typically show up as in a traceback like this
(mind the .pyx
extension):
Traceback (most recent call last):
[…]
File "myapp\cython_module.pyx", line 3, in init myapp.cython_module
ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'csv'
So if you are using a Cython C object module, which imports Python modules,
you will have to list these as --hidden-import
.
macOS multi-arch support¶
With the introduction of Apple Silicon M1, there are now several architecture options available for python:
single-arch
x86_64
with thin binaries: older python.org builds, Homebrew python running natively on Intel Macs or under rosetta2 on M1 Macssingle-arch
arm64
with thin binaries: Homebrew python running natively on M1 macsmulti-arch
universal2
with fat binaries (i.e., containing bothx86_64
andarm64
slices): recentuniversal2
python.org builds
PyInstaller aims to support all possible combinations stemming from the above options:
single-arch application created using corresponding single-arch python
universal2
application created usinguniversal2
pythonsingle-arch application created using
universal2
python (i.e., reducinguniversal2
fat binaries into eitherx86_64
orarm64
thin binaries)
By default, PyInstaller targets the current running architecture
and produces a single-arch binary (x86_64
when running on Intel Mac
or under rosetta2 on M1 Mac, or arm64
when running on M1 Mac). The
reason for that is that even with a universal2
python environment,
some packages may end up providing only single-arch binaries, making it
impossible to create a functional universal2
frozen application.
The alternative options, such as creating a universal2
version
of frozen application, or creating a non-native single-arch version using
universal2
environment, must therefore be explicitly enabled. This
can be done either by specifying the target architecture in the .spec
file via the target_arch=
argument to EXE()
, or on command-line
via the --target-arch
switch. Valid values are x86_64
, arm64
,
and universal2
.
Architecture validation during binary collection¶
To prevent run-time issues caused by missing or mismatched architecture slices in binaries, the binary collection process performs strict architecture validation. It checks whether collected binary files contain required arch slice(s), and if not, the build process is aborted with an error message about the problematic binary.
In such cases, creating frozen application for the selected target
architecture will not be possible unless the problem of missing arch slices
is manually addressed (for example, by downloading the wheel corresponding to
the missing architecture, and stiching the offending binary files together
using the lipo
utility).
Changed in version 4.10: In earlier PyInstaller versions, the architecture validation was performed on all collected binaries, such as python extension modules and the shared libraries referenced by those extensions. As of PyInstaller 4.10, the architecture validation is limited to only python extension modules.
The individual architecture slices in a multi-arch universal2
extension
may be linked against (slices in) universal2
shared libraries, or
against distinct single-arch thin shared libraries. This latter case makes
it impossible to reliably validate architecture of the collected shared
libraries w.r.t. the target application architecture.
However, the extension modules do need to be fully compatible with the target application architecture. Therefore, their continued validation should hopefully suffice to detect attempts at using incompatible single-arch python packages *.
- *
Although nothing really prevents a package from having distinct, architecture-specific extension modules…
Trimming fat binaries for single-arch targets¶
When targeting a single architecture, the build process extracts the
corresponding arch slice from any collected fat binaries, including the
bootloader. This results in a completely thin build even when building
in universal2
python environment.
macOS binary code signing¶
With Apple Silicon M1 architecture, macOS introduced mandatory code signing,
even if ad-hoc (i.e., without actual code-signing identity). This means
that arm64
arch slices (but possibly also x86_64
ones, especially
in universal2
binaries) in collected binaries always come with signature.
The processing of binaries done by PyInstaller (e.g., library path rewriting in binaries’ headers) invalidates their signatures. Therefore, the signatures need to be re-generated, otherwise the OS refuses to load a binary.
By default, PyInstaller ad-hoc (re)signs all collected binaries and
the generated executable itself. Instead of ad-hoc signing, it is also
possible to use real code-signing identity. To do so, either specify your
identity in the .spec
file via codesign_identity=
argument to
EXE()
, or on command-line via the --codesign-identity
switch.
Being able to provide codesign identity allows user to ensure that all
collected binaries in either onefile
or onedir
build are signed
with their identity. This is useful because for onefile
builds,
signing of embedded binaries cannot be performed in a post-processing step.
Note
When codesign identity is specified, PyInstaller also turns on
hardened runtime by passing --options=runtime
to the codesign
command. This requires the codesign identity to be a valid Apple-issued
code signing certificate, and will not work with self-signed certificates.
Trying to use self-signed certificate as a codesign identity will result in shared libraries failing to load, with the following reason reported:
[libname]: code signature in ([libname]) not valid for use in process using Library Validation: mapped file has no Team ID and is not a platform binary (signed with custom identity or adhoc?)
Furthermore, it is possible to specify entitlements file to be used
when signing the collected binaries and the executable. This can be
done in the .spec
file via entitlements_file=
argument to
EXE()
, or on command-line via the --osx-entitlements-file
switch.
App bundles¶
PyInstaller also automatically attempts to sign .app bundles, either
using ad-hoc identity or actual signing identity, if provided via
--codesign-identity
switch. In addition to passing same options as
when signing collected binaries (identity, hardened runtime, entitlement),
deep signing is also enabled via by passing --deep
option to the
codesign
utility.
Should the signing of the bundle fail for whatever reason, the error
message from the codesign
utility will be printed to the console,
along with a warning that manual intervention and manual signing of the
bundle are required.
macOS event forwarding and argv emulation in app bundles¶
The user interaction with macOS app bundles takes place via so called
Apple Events. When the user double clicks on the application’s icon, the
application is started and receives an Open Application ('oapp'
) event.
Dragging a document on the application’s icon or attempting to open
an application-registered file generates an Open Document ('odoc'
) event.
Similarly, launching an URL with application-registered schema generates
a Launch/Get URL ('GURL'
) event. Typically, a long-running UI application
installs Carbon
or Cocoa
event handlers (or their equivalents provided
by higher-level UI toolkit) to handle these requests during its runtime.
PyInstaller provides two aspects of support for macOS event handling;
automatic event forwarding, which enables frozen application to receive
events in onefile
mode, and optional argv emulation for converting
initial opening event into sys.argv
arguments. Both aspects apply only
to app bundles (i.e., the windowed
bootloader variant) and not to
POSIX (command-line) frozen applications.
Changed in version 5.0: In earlier PyInstaller versions, argv emulation was always enabled
in onefile
mode and was unavailable in onedir
mode.
As PyInstaller 5.0, argv emulation must be explicitly opted-in,
and is available in both onefile
and onedir
mode.
Event forwarding¶
In PyInstaller onedir
bundles, the application runs as a single
process, and therefore receives Apple Events normally, as other macOS
applications would.
In onefile
bundles, the application has a parent launcher process and
the child process; the open document requests generated by user are
received by the parent process, and are automatically forwarded to
the child process, where the frozen python code is running.
Event forwarding is implemented for the following types of Apple Events:
kAEOpenDocuments
('odoc'
): open document request
kAEGetURL
('GURL'
): open/launch URL request
kAEReopenApplication
('rapp'
): reopen application
kAEActivate
('actv'
): activate application (bring to front)
Optional argv emulation¶
PyInstaller implements an optional feature called argv emulation,
which can be toggled via argv_emulation=
argument to EXE()
in the .spec file, or enabled on command-line
via --argv-emulation
flag.
If enabled, the bootloader performs initial Apple Event handling to
intercept events during the application’s start-up sequence, and appends
file paths or URLs received via Open Document/URL (‘odoc’ and ‘GURL’)
events to sys.argv
, as if they were received via command-line.
This feature is intended for simple applications that do not implement
the event handling, but still wish to process initial open document
request. This applies only to initial open events; events that occur
after the frozen python code is started are dispatched via event queue
(in onedir
mode directly, and forwarded to child process in onefile
mode.) and as such need to be handled via event handlers.
Note
This feature is not suitable for long-running applications that may need to service multiple open requests during their lifetime. Such applications will require proper event handling anyay, and therefore do not benefit from having initial events processed by argv emulation.
Warning
The initial event processing performed by bootloader in onedir
mode
may interfere with UI toolkit used by frozen python application, such
as Tcl/Tk
via tkinter
module. The symptoms may range from window
not being brought to front when the application startup to application
crash with segmentation fault.
While PyInstaller tries to mitigate the issue on its end, we recommend against using argv emulation in combination with UI toolkits.
Practical examples¶
This section provides some practical examples on handling file and URL open events in macOS application bundles, via argv emulation in a simple one-shot program, or via installed event handlers in a GUI application.
Registering supported file types and custom URL schemas¶
In order for macOS application bundle to handle open operations
on files and custom URL schemas, the OS needs to be informed what
file types and what URL schemas the application supports. This
is done in the bundle’s Info.plist
file, via CFBundleDocumentTypes
and CFBundleURLTypes
entries:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
[...] <!-- preceding entries --->
<key>CFBundleDocumentTypes</key>
<array>
<dict>
<key>CFBundleTypeName</key>
<string>MyCustomFileType</string>
<key>CFBundleTypeExtensions</key>
<array>
<string>mcf</string>
</array>
<key>CFBundleTypeRole</key>
<string>Viewer</string>
</dict>
</array>
<key>CFBundleURLTypes</key>
<array>
<dict>
<key>CFBundleURLName</key>
<string>MyCustomUrlSchema</string>
<key>CFBundleTypeRole</key>
<string>Viewer</string>
<key>CFBundleURLSchemes</key>
<array>
<string>my-url</string>
</array>
</dict>
</array>
</dict>
</plist>
In the above example, the application declares itself a viewer for
made-up .mcf
files, and as a viewer for URLs beginning with
my-url://
.
PyInstaller automatically generates an Info.plist
file for your
application bundle; to have it include the entries shown above, add the
info_plist
argument to the BUNDLE()
directive in the
.spec file, and set its content as follows:
app = BUNDLE(
# [...]
info_plist={
'CFBundleURLTypes': [{
'CFBundleURLName': 'MyCustomUrlSchema',
'CFBundleTypeRole': 'Viewer',
'CFBundleURLSchemes': ['my-url', ],
}],
'CFBundleDocumentTypes': [{
'CFBundleTypeName': 'MyCustomFileType',
'CFBundleTypeExtensions': ['mcf', ],
'CFBundleTypeRole': "Viewer",
}],
}
)
Open event handling with argv emulation¶
Consider the following python script that began its life as a command-line utility, to be invoked from the terminal:
python3 img2gray.py image1.png image2.png ...
The script processes each passed image, converts it to grayscale, and saves it next to the original, with -gray appended to the file name:
# img2gray.py
import sys
import os
import PIL.Image
if len(sys.argv) < 2:
print(f"Usage: {sys.argv[0]} <filename> [filenames...]")
sys.exit(1)
# Convert all given files
for input_filename in sys.argv[1:]:
filename, ext = os.path.splitext(input_filename)
output_filename = filename + '-gray' + ext
img = PIL.Image.open(input_filename)
img_g = img.convert('L')
img_g.save(output_filename)
If you generate an application bundle (as opposed to a command-line
POSIX application), the most likely way of user interaction will be
dragging image files onto the bundle’s icon or using Open with...
entry from the image file’s context menu. Such interaction generates
open file events, and in general requires your application code to
implement event handling.
Enabling argv emulation in PyInstaller causes its bootloader to
process events during the application startup, and extend sys.argv
with any file paths or URLs that might have been received via open file
or URL requests. This allows your application to process the received
filenames as if they were passed via command-line, without any
modifications to the code itself.
The following .spec file provides
a complete example for a onedir
application bundle that allows
conversion of .png
and .jpg
images:
# img2gray.spec
a = Analysis(['img2gray.py'], )
pyz = PYZ(a.pure, a.zipped_data)
exe = EXE(
pyz,
a.scripts,
exclude_binaries=True,
name='img2gray',
debug=False,
bootloader_ignore_signals=False,
strip=False,
upx=False,
console=False,
argv_emulation=True, # enable argv emulation
)
coll = COLLECT(
exe,
a.binaries,
a.zipfiles,
a.datas,
strip=False,
upx=False,
upx_exclude=[],
name='img2gray'
)
app = BUNDLE(
coll,
name='img2gray.app',
# Register .png and .jpg as supported file types
info_plist={
'CFBundleDocumentTypes': [{
'CFBundleTypeName': "Convertible image types",
'CFBundleTypeExtensions': [
'png', 'jpg',
],
'CFBundleTypeRole': "Viewer",
}],
}
)
The user can now drag image file(s) onto the icon of the resulting img2gray
application bundle, or select img2gray
under the Open with...
entry
in the image file’s context menu.
Note
The argv emulation handles only initial open event, which is received before your frozen python code is started. If you wish to handle subsequent open requests while the application is still running, you need to implement proper event handling in your python code.
Open event handling in a tkinter
-based GUI application¶
The Tcl/Tk framework used by tkinter
allows application to
provide event handlers for pre-defined types of Apple Events, by
registering macOS-specific commands.
The handler for open file events can be registered via
::tk::mac::OpenDocument
command, while the handler for open URL
events can be registered via ::tk::mac::LaunchURL
command. The
latter is available starting with Tcl/Tk 8.6.10 †.
- †
At the time of writing, python.org builds use Tcl/Tk 8.6.5, except for the Python 3.9.x macOS 64-bit universal2 installer builds, which use Tcl/Tk 8.6.10. Homebrew Python requires
tkinter
to be explicitly installed aspython-tk
, and uses latest version of Tcl/Tk, 8.6.11. Registering::tk::mac::LaunchURL
command with versions of Tcl/Tk older than 8.6.10 is essentially no-op.
The following application illustrates the event handling using tkinter
,
by logging all received open file/URL events into a scrollable text
widget:
# eventlogger_tk.py
import sys
import tkinter
import tkinter.scrolledtext
class Application:
def __init__(self):
# Create UI
self.window = tkinter.Tk()
self.window.geometry('800x600')
self.window.title("Tk-based event logger")
self.text_view = tkinter.scrolledtext.ScrolledText()
self.text_view.pack(fill=tkinter.BOTH, expand=1)
self.text_view.configure(state='disabled')
# Register event handlers
# See https://tcl.tk/man/tcl/TkCmd/tk_mac.html for list of
# macOS-specific commands
self.window.createcommand("::tk::mac::OpenDocument", self.open_document_handler)
self.window.createcommand("::tk::mac::LaunchURL", self.open_url_handler) # works with Tcl/Tk >= 8.6.10
def append_message(self, msg):
"""Append message to text view."""
self.text_view.configure(state='normal')
self.text_view.insert('end', msg + '\n')
self.text_view.configure(state='disabled')
def run(self):
"""Run the main loop."""
app.append_message("Application started!")
app.append_message(f"Args: {sys.argv[1:]}")
self.window.mainloop()
# Event handlers
def open_document_handler(self, *args):
app.append_message(f"Open document event: {args}")
def open_url_handler(self, *args):
app.append_message(f"Open URL event: {args}")
if __name__ == '__main__':
app = Application()
app.run()
The corresponding .spec file that builds
a onedir
application bundle with a custom file association
(.pyi_tk
) and a custom URL schema (pyi-tk://
):
a = Analysis(['eventlogger_tk.py'])
pyz = PYZ(a.pure, a.zipped_data)
exe = EXE(
pyz,
a.scripts,
exclude_binaries=True,
name='eventlogger_tk',
debug=False,
bootloader_ignore_signals=False,
strip=False,
upx=False,
console=False,
argv_emulation=False, # unnecessary as app handles events
)
coll = COLLECT(
exe,
a.binaries,
a.zipfiles,
a.datas,
strip=False,
upx=False,
name='eventlogger_tk'
)
app = BUNDLE(
coll,
name='eventlogger_tk.app',
# Register custom protocol handler and custom file extension
info_plist={
'CFBundleURLTypes': [{
'CFBundleURLName': 'MyCustomUrlSchemaTk',
'CFBundleTypeRole': 'Viewer',
'CFBundleURLSchemes': ['pyi-tk'],
}],
'CFBundleDocumentTypes': [{
'CFBundleTypeName': 'MyCustomFileTypeTk',
'CFBundleTypeExtensions': [
'pyi_tk',
],
'CFBundleTypeRole': "Viewer",
}],
}
)
Once running, the application logs all received open file and open URL
requests. These are generated either by trying to open a file with
.pyi_tk
extension using the UI, or using open
command from
the terminal:
$ touch file1.pyi_tk file2.pyi_tk file3.pyi_tk file4.pyi_tk
$ open file1.pyi_tk
$ open file2.pyi_tk
$ open pyi-tk://test1
$ open pyi-tk://test2
$ open file3.pyi_tk file4.pyi_tk
Open event handling in a Qt-based GUI application¶
In Qt-based applications, open file and open URL requests are handled by installing application-wide event filter for QFileOpenEvent.
This event abstracts both open file and open URL request, with file
open requests having file://
URL schema. An event contains a
single file name or URL, so an open request containing multiple
targets generates corresponding number of QFileOpenEvent
events.
Below is an example application and its corresponding .spec file:
# eventlogger_qt.py
import sys
import signal
from PySide2 import QtCore, QtWidgets
class Application(QtWidgets.QApplication):
"""
QtWidgets.QApplication with extra handling for macOS Open
document/URL events.
"""
openFileRequest = QtCore.Signal(QtCore.QUrl, name='openFileRequest')
def event(self, event):
if event.type() == QtCore.QEvent.FileOpen:
# Emit signal so that main window can handle the given URL.
# Or open a new application window for the file, or whatever
# is appropriate action for your application.
self.openFileRequest.emit(event.url())
return True
return super().event(event)
class MainWindow(QtWidgets.QMainWindow):
"""
Main window.
"""
def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs):
super().__init__(*args, **kwargs)
self.resize(800, 600)
self.setWindowTitle("Qt-based event logger")
# Construct the UI
self.scroll_area = QtWidgets.QScrollArea()
self.scroll_area.setWidgetResizable(True)
self.setCentralWidget(self.scroll_area)
self.text_edit = QtWidgets.QTextEdit()
self.scroll_area.setWidget(self.text_edit)
self.text_edit.setReadOnly(True)
def append_message(self, msg):
"""
Append message to text view.
"""
self.text_edit.append(msg)
def handle_open_file_request(self, url):
self.append_message(f"Open request: {url.toString()}")
if __name__ == '__main__':
# Make Ctrl+C work
signal.signal(signal.SIGINT, signal.SIG_DFL)
app = Application(list(sys.argv))
window = MainWindow()
window.show()
window.append_message("Application started!")
window.append_message(f"Args: {sys.argv[1:]}")
app.openFileRequest.connect(window.handle_open_file_request)
app.exec_()
# eventlogger_qt.spec
a = Analysis(['eventlogger_qt.py'])
pyz = PYZ(a.pure, a.zipped_data)
exe = EXE(
pyz,
a.scripts,
exclude_binaries=True,
name='eventlogger_qt',
debug=False,
bootloader_ignore_signals=False,
strip=False,
upx=False,
console=False,
argv_emulation=False, # unnecessary as app handles events
)
coll = COLLECT(
exe,
a.binaries,
a.zipfiles,
a.datas,
strip=False,
upx=False,
name='eventlogger_qt'
)
app = BUNDLE(
coll,
name='eventlogger_qt.app',
# Register custom protocol handler and custom file extension
info_plist={
'CFBundleURLTypes': [{
'CFBundleURLName': 'MyCustomUrlSchemaQt',
'CFBundleTypeRole': 'Viewer',
'CFBundleURLSchemes': ['pyi-qt'],
}],
'CFBundleDocumentTypes': [{
'CFBundleTypeName': 'MyCustomFileTypeQt',
'CFBundleTypeExtensions': [
'pyi_qt',
],
'CFBundleTypeRole': "Viewer",
}],
}
)
The application behaves in the same way as its tkinter
-based
counterpart, except that the associated file extension and URL
schema have been adjusted to prevent interference between the two
example applications.
Initial open event¶
This section contains notes about behavior of the initial open event received by appliation, as seen by the frozen python code (or the UI toolkit it uses).
When application is opened normally, this is done via Open Application
('oapp'
) event, which is the first event received by the application.
If application is opened in response to open document or open URL request
(i.e., it is not yet running when request is made), then the first
received event is 'odoc'
or 'GURL'
, respectively.
In PyInstaller-frozen onefile
bundles, the child process always
starts with 'oapp'
event, regardless how the application was
started. This is because the child is always started “normally”, and
it is the parent who receives the actual opening event; if the parent
was opened with 'odoc'
or 'GURL'
event, then event is either
forwarded to child or converted to sys.argv
that is passed to the
child, depending on whether argv emulation is enabled or not.
Therefore, in onefile
mode, argv emulation has no direct effect
on the initial open event (as seen by the frozen python code), which is
always 'oapp'
.
In onedir
bundles, there application consists of single process,
which receives the events. Without argv emulation, the initial open
event (as seen by the frozen python code) may be either 'oapp'
,
'odoc'
, or 'GURL'
, depending on how application was started.
However, if argv emulation is enabled in a onedir
bundle, its
processing of initial event leaves the event queue empty. The lack
of initial open event seems to cause segmentation fault with Tcl/Tk 8.6.11
and Homebrew Python 3.9.6 (#5581). As a work-around, the
bootloader attempts to submit an 'oapp'
event to itself, so that
when the frozen python code inspects the event queue, it finds an
initial open event (i.e., 'oapp'
). These potential side effects
of argv emulation on UI toolkits are the reason why we recommend
against using them together.
Signal handling in console Windows applications and onefile application cleanup¶
The signal handling in console applications on Windows differs
from POSIX-based operating systems, such as linux and macOS.
While signals generated by abnormal conditions, such as SIGABRT
(abnormal termination; for example due to C code calling abort),
SIGFPE
(floating-point error), and SIGSEGV
(illegal storage access),
are generated and can be handled using handlers installed via the signal
function, this is not the case for signals associated with program
interruption and termination.
Specifically, interrupting a console-enabled program by pressing Ctrl+C
does not generate the SIGINT
signal, but rather a special console
control signal called CTRL_C_EVENT
, which can be handled by a handler
installed via the SetConsoleCtrlHandler win32 API function 1.
Similarly, as noted in MSDN documentation on signal, the SIGTERM
signal is not generated under Windows. Instead, there are several
console control signals:
CTRL_C_EVENT
: interrupt via Ctrl+C key combinationCTRL_BREAK_EVENT
: interrupt via Ctrl+Break key combinationCTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
: closing the parent console windowCTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT
: a user logging offCTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT
: system shutting down
When a console control signal is generated, the handler installed via SetConsoleCtrlHandler (if any) is executed in a separate thread, spawned within the program process by the operating system. In other words, the handler function is executed in parallel to the main program thread, which is necessary as the latter might be waiting on a blocking operation or performing an endless loop.
As noted here,
upon receiving CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
, CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT
, or
CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT
, the handler function can perform any necessary
clean-up 2, and either:
call ExitProcess to terminate the process.
return
FALSE
(0). Other registered handlers are called, and if none returnedTRUE
, the default handler terminates the process by calling ExitProcess.return
TRUE
(non-zero). The system terminates the process immediately, without calling any other registered handler functions.
In other words, all options result in eventual program termination.
On the other hand, the default handler for CTRL_C_EVENT
and
CTRL_BREAK_EVENT
also terminates the process, but this behavior can
be modified by suppressing the default handler by returning TRUE
in the user-installed one.
Another important aspect of console control signals is that
handling CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
, CTRL_LOGOFF_EVENT
, and CTRL_SHUTDOWN_EVENT
is subject to system-imposed time-outs
(e.g., five seconds for the CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
); if the process does
not exit within the time-out limit, the operating system itself
unconditionally terminates the process.
The above effectively means that once the program receives such control signal, its termination is inevitable (i.e., the signal cannot be ignored). At best, the termination can be delayed to perform any necessary clean-up, but even this must be done within system-imposed time limits.
- 1
The higher-level programming languages, such as python, might emulate the standard signals; but under-the-hood mechanics still involve console control signals discussed in this section.
- 2
Note that at this point, however, the program is essentially a multi-threaded one, so usual multi-threading caveats may apply.
Example of console control signal handling in python application¶
The following code demonstrates the basic implementation of a graceful console application shutdown. If the application is interrupted by user pressing Ctrl+C or Ctrl+Break, or closed due to user closing the console window, the application’s state is stored to a file, so it can be restored on a subsequent run.
# console_counter.py
import sys
import time
import pathlib
import win32api # pip install pywin32
def console_handler(signal):
print(f"Console handler (signal {signal})!")
global keep_running
keep_running = False
# Sleep until process either finishes or is killed by the OS
time.sleep(20)
return True
if __name__ == '__main__':
keep_running = True
# Install console handler
win32api.SetConsoleCtrlHandler(console_handler, 1)
# Restore state, if available
state_file = pathlib.Path.home() / 'counter_state.txt'
if state_file.is_file():
print(f"Restoring state from {state_file}...", file=sys.stderr)
try:
with open(state_file, 'r') as fp:
counter = int(fp.readline())
except Exception:
print("Failed to restore state from file!", file=sys.stderr)
counter = 0
else:
print("State file does not exist!", file=sys.stderr)
counter = 0
print(f"Initial counter value: {counter}", file=sys.stderr)
# Main loop
while keep_running:
print(f"Counter value: {counter}")
counter += 1
time.sleep(1)
# Clean-up
print(f"Storing state to {state_file}...", file=sys.stderr)
try:
with open(state_file, 'w') as fp:
print(f"{counter}", file=fp)
except Exception:
print(f"Failed to store state to {state_file}!", file=sys.stderr)
print("Goodbye!")
time.sleep(1) # Delay exit for another second
The console control signal handler in the above code handles all
console signals. This includes Ctrl+C event, which would otherwise
generate a KeyboardInterrupt
exception in the program’s main
thread 3. After signalling the loop in the
main thread to exit via the global boolean variable, the handler sleeps
“forever”. This approach works because the handler is executed in a
separate thread, and this thread is terminated once the process ends -
either due to main thread reaching its end, or due to the operating
system terminating the process.
The above code should work as expected when executed as an unfrozen
python script, and also when frozen by PyInstaller as a
onedir
application. However, onefile
applications frozen with PyInstaller versions prior to 5.3 exhibit a
problem; due to the lack of console control signals handling in the parent
application process, the latter is always terminated immediately and leaves
behind the unpacked temporary directory.
Changed in version 5.3: implemented handling of console control signals in the frozen application’s parent process, which allows us to delay its termination until after the child process is terminated, and clean up the unpacked temporary directory. However, various caveats still apply, as discussed in the following sub-sections.
- 3
The
KeyboardInterrupt
exception could have been used to terminate the loop as well. However, that would not handle theCtrl+Break
key combination nor console window being closed.
Onefile mode and temporary directory cleanup¶
The onefile
mode in PyInstaller uses two processes.
When the application is launched, the parent process extracts the contents
of the embedded archive into a temporary directory, sets up the environment
and library search paths, and launches the child process. The child process
sets up the embedded python interpreter and runs the frozen python application.
Meanwhile, the parent process waits for the child process to exit; when
that happens, it cleans up the extracted temporary data, and exits.
From the perspective of the parent process, it does not matter whether
the child process exits cleanly (i.e., with success code), or exits with
an error code (for example, python code throws an exception that is not
handled), or exits abnormally (e.g., crashes due to abnormal operation
raising the SIGABRT
signal), or is terminated by the OS (for example,
from the Task Manager). In all cases, after the child process exits or is
terminated, the parent process performs the cleanup, then exits with the
exit code that was returned from the child process.
Therefore, in order for the application’s temporary directory to be cleaned up, the parent process must never be forcefully terminated (for example, via the TerminateProcess function). If that happens, the clean-up code has no chance to run, and the temporary directory is left behind. On the other hand, from the perspective of the temporary directory clean-up, the child process can be terminated in any way, even forcefully. For the proper clean-up during a graceful shutdown triggered via console control signal (for example, due to Ctrl+C being pressed, or due to console window being closed), the bootloader in PyInstaller 5.3 and later attempts to delay the shut-down of the parent process so that the child process has time to exit and the main thread of the parent process has the chance to run the clean-up code.
The following sections provide additional details on this behavior for different situations.
Interrupting via Ctrl+C or Ctrl+Break¶
When Ctrl+C or Ctrl+Break is pressed in the console window,
the CTRL_C_EVENT
or CTRL_BREAK_EVENT
is sent to all processes
attached to that console 4.
In a onefile
frozen application, the parent process
ignores/suppresses the signal, so the outcome depends on how the frozen
python code in the child process handles the signal. If the python code
exits (for example, no handler is installed and KeyboardInterrupt
exception interrupts the program flow), the parent process performs the
clean-up and exits as well. If the python code in the child process
handles the signal without shutting the child process down, the
application keeps running.
This behavior is readily available in any PyInstaller version; in
versions prior to 5.3, the parent process explicitly ignores
SIGABRT
and SIGBREAK
signals, which achieves the same result
as handling the corresponding console control signals, which is
implemented from version 5.3 on.
- 4(1,2)
If a
windowed/noconsole
application is started from a console, it is completely independent from it as long as it has a window. If the application has no window (i.e., a “hidden” application), its process does not receiveCTRL_C_EVENT
andCTRL_BREAK_EVENT
signals in response to Ctrl+C and Ctrl+Break being pressed in the console, but is nevertheless terminated when the console is closed. The termination seems to be immediate and uncodnitional, i.e., withoutCTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
signal being received.
Closing the console window¶
When the console window is closed (by pressing X button on title bar),
the CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
is sent to all processes attached to that
console 4.
In a onefile
frozen application, the parent process
receives the signal and suspends the handler’s execution thread for 20
seconds. This way, the termination of the parent process is delayed, in
order to give time to the child process (who also received the signal)
to exit, and to the main thread of the parent process to perform cleanup
and exit (which then also terminates the handler’s execution thread).
This behavior was implemented in PyInstaller 5.3 to ensure that closing
the console window cleans up the application’s temporary directory.
In versions prior to 5.3, the CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
is not handled; the
parent process is terminated immediately without having the chance
to perform the cleanup, leaving the application’s temporary directory
behind.
Note
The child process (i.e., the frozen python application code) might install its own console control signal handler in order to perform its own cleanup (for example, save the application’s state). If so, it is important to keep in mind the system-imposed five-second timeout, and the fact that the parent process can perform the temporary directory cleanup only after the child process exits. In other words, if the clean up in the child process takes close to five seconds, the parent process may not have a chance to peform its own clean up before the OS kills the process.
Terminating the application via the Task Manager¶
Terminating the application via the Task Manager is somewhat unpredictable due to distinction between “Apps” and “Background processes”.
“Apps” are closed by sending a close request to the application.
Such applications may close gracefully if they close their window in
response to the request, of, if they have a console, they handle the
resulting CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
console control signal.
“Background processes” are terminated unconditionally using the TerminateProcess, leaving no hope for graceful shut-down and clean up.
The distinction between the two is based on whether the program has a visible window or not, but in practice, there are additional nuances when it comes to console-enabled applications and applications with multiple processes.
To see the detailed classification on per-process basis, right click on
the header of the process list view in the Task Manager, and enable
display of the Type
column. The newly added column will show the
process classification for each process, and not just for the whole
process group.
In the following sub-sections, we detail the behavior when attempting to shut down different processes involved with frozen applications. Roughly, the behavior higly depends on the following factors:
build type:
onedir
(single-process) vs.onefile
(two-process) PyInstaller build option.console enabled or not:
console
vs.noconsole/windowed
PyInstaller build option.application has a window or not: regardless of whether an application has console enabled or not, it might have a window (window + console) or not (pure console-based application; or a “hidden”, window-less and console-less, application that runs as a background process).
how the application is launched: by double-clicking on the executable (“stand-alone”, with its own console window) or by running it in an already-opened command prompt.
Windowed/noconsole onedir applications¶
Windowed/noconsole
onedir
applications are single-process applications without console, so they are
the easiest to understand when it comes to the Task Manager and the shutdown
behavior.
If the application has a window (for example, a Qt-based GUI), it is treated as an “App”. It is listed under “Apps”, and its process name is listed next to the top-level entry in the list. Shutting it down via the “End task” results in a window close event being posted, which allows for graceful application shutdown.
If the application has no window (a window-less and console-less “hidden” application), it is treated as a “Background process”, and is listed under “Background processes”. Shutting it down via the “End task” results in its unconditional termination, with no hope for graceful application shutdown.
As noted in earlier sections, windowed/noconsole
applications are independent of the console even if they are launched
from one, as long as they have a window. On the other hand, if an
application has no window, the shutdown of the console process results
in the immediate and uncoditional termination of the application process
(background process within the console).
Because onedir
applications do not need to unpack
their contents to the temporary directory, the termination mode does not
really affect the clean-up from PyInstaller’s perspective. But it may be
of concern if the application wishes to perform some clean-up on its own;
for example, saving the current state during the shutdown as was done in
the earlier example.
Console-enabled onedir applications¶
The shutdown behavior of Task Manager and console-enabled
onedir
applications depends on whether the application
itself has a window (for example, a Qt-based GUI application with console
enabled) or not (a “pure” console application), and whether the application
owns the console window or not.
Pure console onedir application, ran via double-click¶
Running a pure-console application by double clicking on the executable opens a new console with the application running in it. The top-level entry in the process list is placed under “Apps”; however, it does not have a process name listed next to it. Instead, it is a group consisting of a “Console Window Host” (a “Windows process”) and the actual application process, which is classified as an “App”.
Shutting down the whole group (i.e., the top-level entry) via the “End task” results in everything being unconditionally terminated.
Shutting down the application process results in it receiving the
CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
for graceful shutdown.
Pure console onedir application, ran in existing console¶
Opening a new command prompt results in a new “Windows Command Processor” group entry being added under “Apps”. It consists of a “Console Window Host” (a “Windows process”) and a “Command Prompt” (an “App”). Running a pure-console application from the opened command prompt results in a new process being added to the existing “Windows Command Processor” group, and the process is classified as a “Background process”.
Therefore, shutting down the whole group results in everything being unconditionally terminated.
Shutting down the application process results in it being unconditionally terminated.
Shutting down the “Command Prompt” process results in application
process receiving the CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
for graceful shutdown.
Console-enabled onedir application with window, ran via double-click¶
Running a console-enabled application with a window via double-click behaves similarly to the corresponding pure-console application case. The resulting process list entry is placed under “Apps”, and is a group consisting of a “Console Window Host” (a “Windows process”) and the actual application process, which is classified as an “App”.
Shutting down the whole group results in everything being unconditionally terminated.
Shutting down the application process results in it receiving the
CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
for graceful shutdown.
Console-enabled onedir application with window, ran in existing console¶
Running a console-enabled application with a window from an existing
command prompt does not place the application process under the existing
“Windows Command Processor” group, but rather results in a new “App”
top-level entry in the process list. This entry behaves similarly to
the windowed
onedir
case;
it has process name listed nex to it and shutting it down via the
“End task” results in a window close event being posted, which allows
for graceful application shutdown.
Shutting down the whole “Windows Command Processor” closes the console, but the application itself keeps running (although its console handles likely become invalid 5).
Shutting down the “Command Prompt” process within the “Windows
Command Processor” group results in the application process receiving
the CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
for graceful shutdown.
Console-enabled onefile applications¶
The shutdown behavior of onefile
applications is
complicated by the fact that two processes are involved, and that
application contents need to be extracted to the temporary directory
that should, ideally, be cleaned up when the application is shut down.
Pure-console onefile application, ran via double-click¶
Running a pure-console application by double clicking on the executable opens a new console with the application running in it. The top-level entry in the process list is placed under “Apps”, and is a group consisting of:
a “Console Window Host” (a “Windows process”)
the parent process, classified as an “App”
the child process, classified as a “Background process”
Shutting down the whole group results in everything being unconditionally terminated. The temporary directory is left behind.
Shutting down the child process results in its immediate and unconditional termination. After the child process is terminated, the parent process performs temporary directory cleanup and exits, which also closes the console. The only potential drawback of this situation is that the application code cannot perform its own clean up.
Shutting down the parent process results in the CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
received by both parent and child process. After the child performs
its cleanup (if any) and exits, the parent performs temporary directory
cleanup and exits as well. This is the ideal situation 6.
Pure console onefile application, ran in existing console¶
Running a pure-console application from the opened command prompt results in two new processes being added to the existing “Windows Command Processor” group, and both of them are classified as a “Background process”.
Shutting down the whole “Windows Command Processor” group results in everything being unconditionally terminated, and the temporary directory being left behind.
Shutting down the parent process results in its immediate and unconditional termination. The console accepts input again, while the child process (the actual application) keeps running in the background (i.e., still writing its output to the console). Since the parent process was terminated before it could perform clean-up, the temporary directory is left behind.
Shutting down the child process similarly results in its immediate and unconditional termination. After the child process is terminated, the parent process performs temporary directory cleanup and exits. The only potential drawback of this situation is that the application code cannot perform its own clean up.
Shutting down the “Command Prompt” process is the best choice,
as it results in both the parent and the child process receiving
the CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
for graceful shutdown.
But perhaps the most surefire way of closing the application in this case would be using Ctrl+C or Ctrl+Break, or even closing the console window.
Console-enabled onefile application with window, ran via double-click¶
Running a console-enabled application with a window via double-click results in two top-level entries in the process list.
The first entry is a group that belongs to the parent process; it contains a “Console Window Host” (a “Windows process”) and the parent process, which is classified as an “App”.
The child process is listed as a separate top-level entry that is also classified as an “App” and has process name listed next to it.
Shutting down the whole parent process group results in everything in that group being unconditionally terminated, while the child process (the actual application) keeps running. The temporary directory is left behind.
Shutting down the parent process results in the CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
received by both the parent and the child process. After the child
performs its cleanup (if any) and exits, the parent performs temporary
directory cleanup and exits as well. This is the ideal situation 6.
Shutting down the child process results in it receiving the
CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
for graceful shutdown. After the child performs
its cleanup (if any) and exits, the parent performs temporary directory
cleanup and exits as well. This is the ideal situation; in this case,
the parent process performs temporary directory cleanup even if the
child process exceeds the signal handling timeout and is forcefully
terminated by the operating system.
Console-enabled onefile application with window, ran in existing console¶
Running a console-enabled application with a window from the opened command prompt results in parent process being added to the existing “Windows Command Processor” group, as a “Background process”.
The child process is listed as a separate top-level entry that is classified as an “App” and has process name listed next to it.
Shutting down the whole “Windows Command Processor” closes the console and results in immediate and unconditional termination of the parent process. The child process (the application itself) keeps running (although its console handles likely become invalid 5). The temporary directory is left behind.
Shutting down the parent process results in its immediate and unconditional termination. The console is left open and accepts input again, while the child process (the actual application) keeps running in the background (i.e., still writing its output to the console). Since the parent process was terminated before it could perform clean-up, the temporary directory is left behind.
Shutting down the child process results in it receiving the
CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
for graceful shutdown. After the child performs
its cleanup (if any) and exits, the parent performs temporary directory
cleanup and exits as well. This is the ideal situation; in this case,
the parent process performs temporary directory cleanup even if the
child process exceeds the signal handling timeout and is forcefully
terminated by the operating system.
Shutting down the “Command Prompt” process results in both the parent
and the child application process receiving the CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
for graceful shutdown. This is the ideal situation 6.
Windowed/noconsole onefile applications¶
In case of windowed/noconsole
onefile
applications, the application’s parent process is usually classified as
a “Background process”. The classification of the child process depends
on whether the application has a window or not.
Noconsole onefile application without window, ran via double-click¶
Running a “hidden” application (noconsole/windowed
application without a window) by double clicking on the executable results
in parent and child process being added to the process list as two distinct
top-level entries, under “Background processes”.
Shutting down the parent process results in its immediate and unconditional termination. The child process (the actual application) keeps running. Since the parent process was terminated before it could perform clean-up, the temporary directory is left behind.
Shutting down the child process also results in its immediate and unconditional termination. After the child process is terminated, the parent process performs temporary directory cleanup and exits. The only potential drawback of this situation is that the application code cannot perform its own clean up.
Noconsole onefile application without window, ran in existing console¶
Running a “hidden” application from the opened command prompt results in two new processes being added to the existing “Windows Command Processor” group, and both of them are classified as a “Background process”.
Shutting down the whole “Windows Command Processor” group results in everything being unconditionally terminated, and the temporary directory being left behind.
Shutting down the parent process results in its immediate and unconditional termination. The child process (the actual application) keeps running as a background process. Since the parent process was terminated before it could perform clean-up, the temporary directory is left behind.
Shutting down the child process similarly results in its immediate and unconditional termination. After the child process is terminated, the parent process performs temporary directory cleanup and exits. The only potential drawback of this situation is that the application code cannot perform its own clean up.
Shutting down the “Command Prompt” process closes the console, but both parent and child process keep on running as background processes. Their entries are moved from the removed “Windows Command Processor” group into a new group entry under “Background processes”.
Noconsole onefile application with window, ran via double-click¶
Running a regular GUI noconsole
application via
double click results in the parent process being classified as a
“Background process” and the child process being classified as an “App”.
Each of them get their own top-level entry in the process list (under
“Background processes” and under “Apps”, respectively), and both have
their process name listed next to them.
Shutting down the parent process results in its immediate and unconditional termination. The child process (the actual application) keeps running. Since the parent process was terminated before it could perform clean-up, the temporary directory is left behind.
Shutting down the child process results in a window close request (and
the CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
signal) being sent to the child process for
a graceful shutdown. After the child performs its cleanup (if any) and
exits, the parent performs temporary directory cleanup and exits as
well. This is the ideal situation; in this case, the parent process
performs temporary directory cleanup even if the child process exceeds
the signal handling timeout and is forcefully terminated by the
operating system.
Noconsole onefile application with window, ran in existing console¶
Running a regular GUI noconsole
application
from an existing console is similar to running it via double-click,
except that the parent process (classified as a “Background process”)
is listed under the “Windows Command Processor” group under “Apps”
instead of a stand-alone entry under “Background processes”.
Shutting down the whole “Windows Command Processor” closes the console and results in immediate and unconditional termination of the parent process. The child process (the application itself) keeps running. The temporary directory is left behind.
Shutting down the parent process results in its immediate and unconditional termination. This affects neither console nor the child process, both of which keep running. Since the parent process was terminated before it could perform clean-up, the temporary directory is left behind.
Shutting down the child process results in it receiving the
CTRL_CLOSE_EVENT
for graceful shutdown. After the child performs
its cleanup (if any) and exits, the parent performs temporary directory
cleanup and exits as well. This is the ideal situation; in this case,
the parent process performs temporary directory cleanup even if the
child process exceeds the signal handling timeout and is forcefully
terminated by the operating system.
Shutting down the “Command Prompt” process results in console being closed and the parent process being immediately and unconditionally terminated. The child process keeps running. Since the parent process was terminated before it could perform clean-up, the temporary directory is left behind.