fastentrypoints

Makes entry_points specified in setup.py load more quickly


License
BSD-3-Clause
Install
pip install fastentrypoints==0.5

Documentation

Fast entry_points

Using entry_points in your setup.py makes scripts that start really slowly because it imports pkg_resources, which is a horrible thing to do if you want your trivial script to execute more or less instantly. Check it out: pypa/setuptools#510

Importing fastentrypoints in your setup.py file produces scripts that looks (more or less) like this:

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys

from package.module import entry_function

if __name__ == '__main__':
  sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw?|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
  sys.exit(entry_function())

This is ripped directly from the way wheels do it and is faster than whatever the heck the normal console scripts do.

Note:

This bug in setuptools only affects packages built with the normal setup.py method. Building wheels avoids the problem and has many other benefits as well. fastentrypoints simply ensures that your user scripts will not automatically import pkg_resources, no matter how they are built.

When using Python 3.8 and setuptools 47.2 (or newer), console scripts do not import pkg_resources.

Usage

To use fastentrypoints, simply copy fastentrypoints.py into your project folder in the same directory as setup.py, and import fastentrypoints in your setup.py file. This monkey-patches setuptools.command.easy_install.ScriptWriter.get_args() in the background, which in turn produces simple entry scripts (like the one above) when you install the package.

If you install fastentrypoints as a module, you have the fastep executable, which will copy fastentrypoints.py into the working directory (or into a list of directories you give it as arguments) and append include fastentrypoints.py to the MANIFEST.in file, and add an import statement to setup.py. It is available from PyPI.

Be sure to add fastentrypoints.py to MANIFEST.ini if you want to distribute your package on PyPI.

Alternatively, you can specify fastentrypoints as a build system dependency by adding a pyproject.toml file (PEP 518) with these lines to your project folder:

[build-system]
requires = ["setuptools", "wheel", "fastentrypoints"]

It is also possible to install it from PyPI with easy_install in the setup script:

try:
    import fastentrypoints
except ImportError:
    from setuptools.command import easy_install
    import pkg_resources
    easy_install.main(['fastentrypoints'])
    pkg_resources.require('fastentrypoints')
    import fastentrypoint

Let me know if there are places where this doesn't work well. I've mostly tested it with console_scripts so far, since I don't write the other thing.

Test

There is one test. To run it, do test/runtest.py. It installs a dummy package with fastentrypoints and ensures the generated script is what is expected.