mirror of https://github.com/python/cpython
529 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
529 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
Quick Build Info
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================
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For testing, the installer should be built with the Tools/msi/build.bat
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script:
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build.bat [-x86] [-x64] [-ARM64] [--doc]
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For an official release, the installer should be built with the
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Tools/msi/buildrelease.bat script and environment variables:
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set PYTHON=<path to Python 3.8 or later>
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set SPHINXBUILD=<path to sphinx-build.exe>
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set PATH=<path to Git (git.exe)>;%PATH%
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buildrelease.bat [-x86] [-x64] [-ARM64] [-D] [-B]
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[-o <output directory>] [-c <certificate name>]
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See the Building the Installer section for more information.
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Overview
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========
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Python is distributed on Windows as an installer that will configure the
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user's system. This allows users to have a functioning copy of Python
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without having to build it themselves.
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The main tasks of the installer are:
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* copy required files into the expected layout
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* configure system settings so the installation can be located by
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other programs
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* add entry points for modifying, repairing and uninstalling Python
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* make it easy to launch Python, its documentation, and IDLE
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Each of these is discussed in a later section of this document.
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Structure of the Installer
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==========================
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The installer is structured as a 'layout', which consists of a number of
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CAB and MSI files and a single EXE.
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The EXE is the main entry point into the installer. It contains the UI
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and command-line logic, as well as the ability to locate and optionally
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download other parts of the layout.
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Each MSI contains the logic required to install a component or feature
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of Python. These MSIs should not be launched directly by users. MSIs can
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be embedded into the EXE or automatically downloaded as needed.
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Each CAB contains the files making up a Python installation. CABs are
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embedded into their associated MSI and are never seen by users.
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MSIs are only required when the related feature or component is being
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installed. When components are not selected for installation, the
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associated MSI is not downloaded. This allows the installer to offer
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options to install debugging symbols and binaries without increasing
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the initial download size by separating them into their own MSIs.
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Building the Installer
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======================
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Before building the installer, download extra build dependencies using
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Tools\msi\get_externals.bat. (Note that this is in addition to the
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similarly named file in PCbuild.)
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One of the dependencies used in builds is WiX, a toolset that lets developers
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create installers for Windows Installer, the Windows installation engine. WiX
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has a dependency on the Microsoft .NET Framework Version 3.5 (which may not be
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configured on recent versions of Windows, such as Windows 10). If you are
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building on a recent Windows version, use the Control Panel (Programs | Programs
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and Features | Turn Windows Features on or off) and ensure that the entry
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".NET Framework 3.5 (includes .NET 2.0 and 3.0)" is enabled.
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For testing, the installer should be built with the Tools/msi/build.bat
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script:
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build.bat [-x86] [-x64] [-ARM64] [--doc] [--test-marker] [--pack]
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This script will build the required configurations of Python and
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generate an installer layout in PCbuild/(win32|amd64)/en-us.
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Specify -x86, -x64 and/or -ARM64 to build for each platform. If none are
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specified, both x64 and x86 will be built. Currently, both the debug and
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release versions of Python are required for the installer.
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Specify --doc to include the documentation files. Ensure %PYTHON% and
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%SPHINXBUILD% are set when passing this option.
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Specify --test-marker to build an installer that works side-by-side with
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an official Python release. All registry keys and install locations will
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include an extra marker to avoid overwriting files. This marker is
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currently an 'x' prefix, but may change at any time.
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Specify --pack to build an installer that does not require all MSIs to
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be available alongside. This takes longer, but is easier to share.
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For an official release, the installer should be built with the
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Tools/msi/buildrelease.bat script:
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set PYTHON=<path to Python 2.7 or 3.4>
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set SPHINXBUILD=<path to sphinx-build.exe>
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set PATH=<path to Git (git.exe)>;%PATH%
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buildrelease.bat [-x86] [-x64] [-ARM64] [-D] [-B]
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[-o <output directory>] [-c <certificate name>]
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Specify -x86, -x64 and/or -ARM64 to build for each platform. If none are
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specified, both x64 and x86 will be built. Currently, both the debug and
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release versions of Python are required for the installer.
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Specify -D to skip rebuilding the documentation. The documentation is
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required for a release and the build will fail if it is not available.
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Ensure %PYTHON% and %SPHINXBUILD% are set if you omit this option.
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Specify -B to skip rebuilding Python. This is useful to only rebuild the
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installer layout after a previous call to buildrelease.bat.
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Specify -o to set an output directory. The installer layouts will be
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copied to platform-specific subdirectories of this path.
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Specify -c to choose a code-signing certificate to be used for all the
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signable binaries in Python as well as each file making up the
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installer. Official releases of Python must be signed.
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If WiX is not found on your system, it will be automatically downloaded
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and extracted to the externals/ directory.
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To manually build layouts of the installer, build one of the projects in
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the bundle folder.
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msbuild bundle\snapshot.wixproj
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msbuild bundle\releaseweb.wixproj
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msbuild bundle\releaselocal.wixproj
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msbuild bundle\full.wixproj
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snapshot.wixproj produces a test installer versioned based on the date.
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releaseweb.wixproj produces a release installer that does not embed any
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of the layout.
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releaselocal.wixproj produces a release installer that embeds the files
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required for a default installation.
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full.wixproj produces a test installer that embeds the entire layout.
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The following properties may be passed when building these projects.
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/p:BuildForRelease=(true|false)
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When true, adds extra verification to ensure a complete installer is
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produced. Defaults to false.
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/p:ReleaseUri=(any URI)
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Used to generate unique IDs for the installers to allow side-by-side
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installation. Forks of Python can use the same installer infrastructure
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by providing a unique URI for this property. It does not need to be an
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active internet address. Defaults to $(ComputerName).
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Official releases use https://www.python.org/(architecture name)
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/p:DownloadUrlBase=(any URI)
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Specifies the base of a URL where missing parts of the installer layout
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can be downloaded from. The build version and architecture will be
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appended to create the full address. If omitted, missing components will
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not be automatically downloaded.
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/p:DownloadUrl=(any URI)
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Specifies the full URL where missing parts of the installer layout can
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be downloaded from. Should normally include '{2}', which will be
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substituted for the filename. If omitted, missing components will not be
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automatically downloaded. If specified, this value overrides
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DownloadUrlBase.
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/p:SigningCertificate=(certificate name)
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Specifies the certificate to sign the installer layout with. If omitted,
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the layout will not be signed.
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/p:RebuildAll=(true|false)
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When true, rebuilds all of the MSIs making up the layout. Defaults to
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true.
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Uploading the Installer
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=======================
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For official releases, the uploadrelease.bat script should be used.
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You will require PuTTY so that plink.exe and pscp.exe can be used, and your
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SSH key can be activated in pageant.exe. PuTTY should be either on your path
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or in %ProgramFiles(x86)%\PuTTY.
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To include signatures for each uploaded file, you will need gpg2.exe on your
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path or have run get_externals.bat. You may also need to "gpg2.exe --import"
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your key before running the upload script.
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uploadrelease.bat --host <host> --user <username> [--dry-run] [--no-gpg]
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The host is the URL to the server. This can be provided by the Release
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Manager. You should be able to SSH to this address.
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The username is your own username, which you have permission to SSH into
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the server containing downloads.
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Use --dry-run to display the generated upload commands without executing
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them. Signatures for each file will be generated but not uploaded unless
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--no-gpg is also passed.
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Use --no-gpg to suppress signature generation and upload.
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The default target directory (which appears in uploadrelease.proj) is
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correct for official Python releases, but may be overridden with
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--target <path> for other purposes. This path should generally not include
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any version specifier, as that will be added automatically.
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Modifying the Installer
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=======================
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The code for the installer is divided into three main groups: packages,
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the bundle and the bootstrap application.
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Packages
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--------
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Packages appear as subdirectories of Tools/msi (other than the bundle/
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directory). The project file is a .wixproj and the build output is a
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single MSI. Packages are built with the WiX Toolset. Some project files
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share source files and use preprocessor directives to enable particular
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features. These are typically used to keep the sources close when the
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files are related, but produce multiple independent packages.
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A package is the smallest element that may be independently installed or
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uninstalled (as used in this installer). For example, the test suite has
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its own package, as users can choose to add or remove it after the
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initial installation.
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All the files installed by a single package should be related, though
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some packages may not install any files. For example, the pip package
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executes the ensurepip package, but does not add or remove any of its
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own files. (It is represented as a package because of its
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installed/uninstalled nature, as opposed to the "precompile standard
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library" option, for example.) Dependencies between packages are handled
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by the bundle, but packages should detect when dependencies are missing
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and raise an error.
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Packages that include a lot of files may use an InstallFiles element in
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the .wixproj file to generate sources. See lib/lib.wixproj for an
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example, and msi.targets and csv_to_wxs.py for the implementation. This
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element is also responsible for generating the code for cleaning up and
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removing __pycache__ folders in any directory containing .py files.
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All packages are built with the Tools/msi/common.wxs file, and so any
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directory or property in this file may be referenced. Of particular
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interest:
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REGISTRYKEY (property)
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The registry key for the current installation.
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InstallDirectory (directory)
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The root install directory for the current installation. Subdirectories
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are also specified in this file (DLLs, Lib, etc.)
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MenuDir (directory)
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The Start Menu folder for the current installation.
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UpgradeTable (property)
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Every package should reference this property to include upgrade
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information.
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OptionalFeature (Component)
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Packages that may be enabled or disabled should reference this component
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and have an OPTIONAL_FEATURES entry in the bootstrap application to
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properly handle Modify and Upgrade.
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The .wxl_template file is specially handled by the build system for this
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project to perform {{substitutions}} as defined in msi.targets. They
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should be included in projects as <WxlTemplate> items, where .wxl files
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are normally included as <EmbeddedResource> items.
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Bundle
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------
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The bundle is compiled to the main EXE entry point that for most users
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will represent the Python installer. It is built from Tools/msi/bundle
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with packages references in Tools/msi/bundle/packagegroups.
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Build logic for the bundle is in bundle.targets, but should be invoked
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through one of the .wixproj files as described in Building the
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Installer.
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The UI is separated between Default.thm (UI layout), Default.wxl
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(strings), bundle.wxs (properties) and the bootstrap application.
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Bundle.wxs also contains the chain, which is the list of packages to
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install and the order they should be installed in. These refer to named
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package groups in bundle/packagegroups.
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Each package group specifies one or more packages to install. Most
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packages require two separate entries to support both per-user and
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all-users installations. Because these reuse the same package, it does
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not increase the overall size of the package.
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Package groups refer to payload groups, which allow better control over
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embedding and downloading files than the default settings. Whether files
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are embedded and where they are downloaded from depends on settings
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created by the project files.
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Package references can include install conditions that determine when to
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install the package. When a package is a dependency for others, the
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condition should be crafted to ensure it is installed.
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MSI packages are installed or uninstalled based on their current state
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and the install condition. This makes them most suitable for features
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that are clearly present or absent from the user's machine.
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EXE packages are executed based on a customisable condition that can be
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omitted. This makes them suitable for pre- or post-install tasks that
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need to run regardless of whether features have been added or removed.
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Bootstrap Application
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---------------------
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The bootstrap application is a C++ application that controls the UI and
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installation. While it does not directly compile into the main EXE of
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the installer, it forms the main active component. Most of the
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installation functionality is provided by WiX, and so the bootstrap
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application is predominantly responsible for the code behind the UI that
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is defined in the Default.thm file. The bootstrap application code is in
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bundle/bootstrap and is built automatically when building the bundle.
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Installation Layout
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===================
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There are two installation layouts for Python on Windows, with the only
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differences being supporting files. A layout is selected implicitly
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based on whether the install is for all users of the machine or just for
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the user performing the installation.
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The default installation location when installing for all users is
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"%ProgramFiles%\Python3X" for the 64-bit interpreter and
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"%ProgramFiles(x86)%\Python3X-32" for the 32-bit interpreter. (Note that
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the latter path is equivalent to "%ProgramFiles%\Python3X-32" when
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running a 32-bit version of Windows.) This location requires
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administrative privileges to install or later modify the installation.
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The default installation location when installing for the current user
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is "%LocalAppData%\Programs\Python\Python3X" for the 64-bit interpreter
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and "%LocalAppData%\Programs\Python\Python3X-32" for the 32-bit
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interpreter. Only the current user can access this location. This
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provides a suitable level of protection against malicious modification
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of Python's files.
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(Default installation locations are set in Tools\msi\bundle\bundle.wxs.)
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Within this install directory is the following approximate layout:
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.\python[w].exe The core executable files
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.\python3x.dll The core interpreter
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.\python3.dll The stable ABI reference
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.\DLLs Stdlib extensions (*.pyd) and dependencies
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.\Doc Documentation (*.html)
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.\include Development headers (*.h)
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.\Lib Standard library
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.\Lib\test Test suite
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.\libs Development libraries (*.lib)
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.\Scripts Launcher scripts (*.exe, *.py)
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.\tcl Tcl dependencies (*.dll, *.tcl and others)
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.\Tools Tool scripts (*.py)
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When installed for all users, the following files are installed to
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"%SystemRoot%" (typically "C:\Windows") to ensure they are always
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available on PATH. (See Launching Python below.) For the current user,
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they are installed in "%LocalAppData%\Programs\Python\PyLauncher".
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.\py[w].exe PEP 397 launcher
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System Settings
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===============
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On installation, registry keys are created so that other applications
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can locate and identify installations of Python. The locations of these
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keys vary based on the install type.
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For 64-bit interpreters installed for all users, the root key is:
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HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Python\PythonCore\3.X
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For 32-bit interpreters installed for all users on a 64-bit operating
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system, the root key is:
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HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Wow6432Node\Python\PythonCore\3.X-32
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For 32-bit interpreters installed for all users on a 32-bit operating
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system, the root key is:
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HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Python\PythonCore\3.X-32
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For 64-bit interpreters installed for the current user:
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HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Python\PythonCore\3.X
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For 32-bit interpreters installed for the current user:
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HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Python\PythonCore\3.X-32
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When the core Python executables are installed, a key "InstallPath" is
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created within the root key with its default value set to the
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executable's install directory. A value named "ExecutablePath" is added
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with the full path to the main Python interpreter, and a key
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"InstallGroup" is created with its default value set to the product
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name "Python 3.X".
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When the Python standard library is installed, a key "PythonPath" is
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created within the root key with its default value set to the full path
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to the Lib folder followed by the path to the DLLs folder, separated by
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a semicolon.
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When the documentation is installed, a key "Help" is created within the
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root key, with a subkey "Main Python Documentation" with its default
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value set to the full path to the main index.html file.
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The py.exe launcher is installed as part of a regular Python install,
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but using a separate mechanism that allows it to more easily span
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versions of Python. As a result, it has different root keys for its
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registry entries:
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When installed for all users on a 64-bit operating system, the
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launcher's root key is:
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HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Wow6432Node\Python\Launcher
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When installed for all users on a 32-bit operating system, the
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launcher's root key is:
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HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Python\Launcher
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When installed for the current user:
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HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Python\Launcher
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When the launcher is installed, a key "InstallPath" is created within
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its root key with its default value set to the launcher's install
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directory. File associations are also created for .py, .pyw, .pyc and
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.pyo files.
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Launching Python
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================
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When a feature offering user entry points in the Start Menu is
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installed, a folder "Python 3.X" is created. Every shortcut should be
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created within this folder, and each shortcut should include the version
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and platform to allow users to identify the shortcut in a search results
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page.
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The core Python executables creates a shortcut "Python 3.X (32-bit)" or
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"Python 3.X (64-bit)" depending on the interpreter.
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The documentation creates a shortcut "Python 3.X 32-bit Manuals" or
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"Python 3.X 64-bit Manuals". The documentation is identical for all
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platforms, but the shortcuts need to be separate to avoid uninstallation
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conflicts.
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Installing IDLE creates a shortcut "IDLE (Python 3.X 32-bit)" or "IDLE
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(Python 3.X 64-bit)" depending on the interpreter.
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For users who often launch Python from a Command Prompt, an option is
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provided to add the directory containing python.exe to the user or
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system PATH variable. If the option is selected, the install directory
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and the Scripts directory will be added at the start of the system PATH
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for an all users install and the user PATH for a per-user install.
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When the user only has one version of Python installed, this will behave
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as expected. However, because Windows searches the system PATH before
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the user PATH, users cannot override a system-wide installation of
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Python on their PATH. Further, because the installer can only prepend to
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the path, later installations of Python will take precedence over
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earlier installations, regardless of interpreter version.
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Because it is not possible to automatically create a sensible PATH
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configuration, users are recommended to use the py.exe launcher and
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manually modify their PATH variable to add Scripts directories in their
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preferred order. System-wide installations of Python should consider not
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modifying PATH, or using an alternative technology to modify their
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users' PATH variables.
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The py.exe launcher is recommended because it uses a consistent and
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sensible search order for Python installations. User installations are
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preferred over system-wide installs, and later versions are preferred
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regardless of installation order (with the exception that py.exe
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currently prefers 2.x versions over 3.x versions without the -3 command
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line argument).
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For both 32-bit and 64-bit interpreters, the 32-bit version of the
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launcher is installed. This ensures that the search order is always
|
|
consistent (as the 64-bit launcher is subtly different from the 32-bit
|
|
launcher) and also avoids the need to install it multiple times. Future
|
|
versions of Python will upgrade the launcher in-place, using Windows
|
|
Installer's upgrade functionality to avoid conflicts with earlier
|
|
installed versions.
|
|
|
|
When installed, file associations are created for .py, .pyc and .pyo
|
|
files to launch with py.exe and .pyw files to launch with pyw.exe. This
|
|
makes Python files respect shebang lines by default and also avoids
|
|
conflicts between multiple Python installations.
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|
|
|
|
|
Repair, Modify and Uninstall
|
|
============================
|
|
|
|
After installation, Python may be modified, repaired or uninstalled by
|
|
running the original EXE again or via the Programs and Features applet
|
|
(formerly known as Add or Remove Programs).
|
|
|
|
Modifications allow features to be added or removed. The install
|
|
directory and kind (all users/single user) cannot be modified. Because
|
|
Windows Installer caches installation packages, removing features will
|
|
not require internet access unless the package cache has been corrupted
|
|
or deleted. Adding features that were not previously installed and are
|
|
not embedded or otherwise available will require internet access.
|
|
|
|
Repairing will rerun the installation for all currently installed
|
|
features, restoring files and registry keys that have been modified or
|
|
removed. This operation generally will not redownload any files unless
|
|
the cached packages have been corrupted or deleted.
|
|
|
|
Removing Python will clean up all the files and registry keys that were
|
|
created by the installer, as well as __pycache__ folders that are
|
|
explicitly handled by the installer. Python packages installed later
|
|
using a tool like pip will not be removed. Some components may be
|
|
installed by other installers and these will not be removed if another
|
|
product has a dependency on them.
|
|
|