30.4. pkgutil
— Package extension utility¶
New in version 2.3.
This module provides functions to manipulate packages:
-
pkgutil.
extend_path
(path, name)¶ Extend the search path for the modules which comprise a package. Intended use is to place the following code in a package’s
__init__.py
:from pkgutil import extend_path __path__ = extend_path(__path__, __name__)
This will add to the package’s
__path__
all subdirectories of directories onsys.path
named after the package. This is useful if one wants to distribute different parts of a single logical package as multiple directories.It also looks for
*.pkg
files beginning where*
matches the name argument. This feature is similar to*.pth
files (see thesite
module for more information), except that it doesn’t special-case lines starting withimport
. A*.pkg
file is trusted at face value: apart from checking for duplicates, all entries found in a*.pkg
file are added to the path, regardless of whether they exist on the filesystem. (This is a feature.)If the input path is not a list (as is the case for frozen packages) it is returned unchanged. The input path is not modified; an extended copy is returned. Items are only appended to the copy at the end.
It is assumed that
sys.path
is a sequence. Items ofsys.path
that are not (Unicode or 8-bit) strings referring to existing directories are ignored. Unicode items onsys.path
that cause errors when used as filenames may cause this function to raise an exception (in line withos.path.isdir()
behavior).
-
pkgutil.
get_data
(package, resource)¶ Get a resource from a package.
This is a wrapper for the PEP 302 loader
get_data()
API. The package argument should be the name of a package, in standard module format (foo.bar). The resource argument should be in the form of a relative filename, using/
as the path separator. The parent directory name..
is not allowed, and nor is a rooted name (starting with a/
).The function returns a binary string that is the contents of the specified resource.
For packages located in the filesystem, which have already been imported, this is the rough equivalent of:
d = os.path.dirname(sys.modules[package].__file__) data = open(os.path.join(d, resource), 'rb').read()
If the package cannot be located or loaded, or it uses a PEP 302 loader which does not support
get_data()
, then None is returned.