Getting Started

Installing

Installing Rust

PyOxidizer is a Rust application and requires Rust 2018 (1.31 or newer) to be installed in order to build PyOxidizer itself as well as Python application binaries.

You can verify your installed version of Rust by running:

$ rustc --version
rustc 1.35.0 (3c235d560 2019-05-20)

If you don’t have Rust installed, https://www.rust-lang.org/ has very detailed instructions on how to install it.

Rust releases a new version every 6 weeks and language development moves faster than other programming languages. It is common for the Rust packages provided by common package managers to lag behind the latest Rust release by several releases. For that reason, use of the rustup tool for managing Rust is highly recommended.

If you are a security paranoid individual and don’t want to follow the official rustup install instructions involving a curl | sh (your paranoia is understood), you can find instructions for alternative installation methods at https://github.com/rust-lang/rustup.rs/#other-installation-methods.

Other System Dependencies

You will need a working C compiler/toolchain in order to build some Rust crates and their dependencies. If Rust cannot find a C compiler, it should print a message at build time and give you instructions on how to install one.

There is a known issue with PyOxidizer on Fedora 30+ that will require you to install the libxcrypt-compat package to avoid an error due to a missing libcrypt.so.1 file. See https://github.com/indygreg/PyOxidizer/issues/89 for more info.

Installing PyOxidizer

PyOxidizer can be installed from its latest published crate:

$ cargo install pyoxidizer

From a Git repository using cargo:

# The latest commit in source control.
$ cargo install --git https://github.com/indygreg/PyOxidizer.git --branch main pyoxidizer

$ A specific release
$ cargo install --git https://github.com/indygreg/PyOxidizer.git --tag <TAG> pyoxidizer

Or by cloning the Git repository and building the project locally:

$ git clone https://github.com/indygreg/PyOxidizer.git
$ cd PyOxidizer
$ cargo install --path pyoxidizer

Note

PyOxidizer’s project policy is for the main branch to be stable. So it should always be relatively safe to use main instead of a released version.

Once the pyoxidizer executable is installed, try to run it:

$ pyoxidizer
PyOxidizer 0.1
Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
Build and distribute Python applications

USAGE:
    pyoxidizer [SUBCOMMAND]

...

Congratulations, PyOxidizer is installed! Now let’s move on to using it.

Your First PyOxidizer Project

The pyoxidizer init command will create a new [Rust] project which supports embedding Python. Invoke it with the directory you want to create your new project in:

$ pyoxidizer init pyapp

This should have printed out details on what happened and what to do next. If you actually ran this in a terminal, hopefully you don’t need to continue following the directions here as the printed instructions are sufficient! But if you aren’t, keep reading.

The default project created by pyoxidizer init will produce an executable that embeds Python and starts a Python REPL by default. Let’s test that:

$ cd pyapp
$ pyoxidizer run
no existing PyOxidizer artifacts found
processing config file /home/gps/src/pyapp/pyoxidizer.toml
resolving Python distribution...
...
   Compiling pyapp v0.1.0 (/home/gps/src/pyapp)
    Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 53.14s
     Running `target/debug/testapp`
>>>

If all goes according to plan, you just started a Rust executable which started a Python interpreter, which started an interactive Python debugger! Try typing in some Python code:

>>> print("hello, world")
hello, world

It works!

(To exit the REPL, press CTRL+d or CTRL+z.)

Continue reading Managing Projects with pyoxidizer to learn more about the pyoxidizer tool. Or read on for a preview of how to customize your application’s behavior.

Customizing Python and Packaging Behavior

Embedding Python in a Rust executable and starting a REPL is cool and all. But you probably want to do something more exciting.

Inside the project’s root directory is an autogenerated pyoxidizer.toml file. This file configures how the embedded Python interpreter is built as well as defines default run-time behavior. See New Project Layout if you are interested in what all the files do.

Open pyoxidizer.toml in your favorite editor and find the [[python_run]] section. This section configures what to do when the interpreter starts. By default, it should have a mode = "repl" line. Let’s comment that out or delete it and replace it with the following:

[[embedded_python_run]]
mode = "eval"
code = "import uuid; print(uuid.uuid4())"

We’re now telling the interpreter to effectively run the Python statement eval(import uuid; print(uuid.uuid4()) when it starts. Test that out:

$ pyoxidizer run
   Compiling pyembed v0.1.0 (/home/gps/src/pyapp/pyembed)
   Compiling pyapp v0.1.0 (/home/gps/src/pyapp)
    Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 3.92s
     Running `target/debug/pyapp`
96f776c8-c32d-48d8-8c1c-aef8a735f535

It works!

This is still pretty trivial. But it demonstrates how the pyoxidizer.toml is used to influence the behavior of built binaries.

Let’s do something a little bit more complicated, like package an existing Python application!

Find the existing [[python_packages]] section in the pyoxidizer.toml. Now let’s add the following lines after the last of those sections:

[[packaging_rule]]
type = "pip-install-simple"
package = "pyflakes==2.1.1"

And change the [[embedded_python_run]] section to:

[[embedded_python_run]]
mode = "eval"
code = "from pyflakes.api import main; main()"

This tells PyOxidizer that you want to install version 2.1.1 of the pyflakes package. At build time, this will effectively perform a pip install pyflakes==2.1.1 and take all installed files and add them to the produced binary. Let’s try that:

$ pyoxidizer run -- --help
   Compiling pyembed v0.1.0 (/home/gps/tmp/pyapp/pyembed)
   Compiling pyapp v0.1.0 (/home/gps/tmp/pyapp)
    Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 5.49s
     Running `target/debug/pyapp --help`
Usage: pyapp [options]

Options:
  --version   show program's version number and exit
  -h, --help  show this help message and exit

You’ve just produced an executable for pyflakes!

There are far more powerful packaging and configuration settings available. Read all about them at Configuration Files and Packaging User Guide. Or continue on to Managing Projects with pyoxidizer to learn more about the pyoxidizer tool.