1 2.. _importsystem: 3 4***************** 5The import system 6***************** 7 8.. index:: single: import machinery 9 10Python code in one :term:`module` gains access to the code in another module 11by the process of :term:`importing` it. The :keyword:`import` statement is 12the most common way of invoking the import machinery, but it is not the only 13way. Functions such as :func:`importlib.import_module` and built-in 14:func:`__import__` can also be used to invoke the import machinery. 15 16The :keyword:`import` statement combines two operations; it searches for the 17named module, then it binds the results of that search to a name in the local 18scope. The search operation of the :keyword:`!import` statement is defined as 19a call to the :func:`__import__` function, with the appropriate arguments. 20The return value of :func:`__import__` is used to perform the name 21binding operation of the :keyword:`!import` statement. See the 22:keyword:`!import` statement for the exact details of that name binding 23operation. 24 25A direct call to :func:`__import__` performs only the module search and, if 26found, the module creation operation. While certain side-effects may occur, 27such as the importing of parent packages, and the updating of various caches 28(including :data:`sys.modules`), only the :keyword:`import` statement performs 29a name binding operation. 30 31When an :keyword:`import` statement is executed, the standard builtin 32:func:`__import__` function is called. Other mechanisms for invoking the 33import system (such as :func:`importlib.import_module`) may choose to bypass 34:func:`__import__` and use their own solutions to implement import semantics. 35 36When a module is first imported, Python searches for the module and if found, 37it creates a module object [#fnmo]_, initializing it. If the named module 38cannot be found, a :exc:`ModuleNotFoundError` is raised. Python implements various 39strategies to search for the named module when the import machinery is 40invoked. These strategies can be modified and extended by using various hooks 41described in the sections below. 42 43.. versionchanged:: 3.3 44 The import system has been updated to fully implement the second phase 45 of :pep:`302`. There is no longer any implicit import machinery - the full 46 import system is exposed through :data:`sys.meta_path`. In addition, 47 native namespace package support has been implemented (see :pep:`420`). 48 49 50:mod:`importlib` 51================ 52 53The :mod:`importlib` module provides a rich API for interacting with the 54import system. For example :func:`importlib.import_module` provides a 55recommended, simpler API than built-in :func:`__import__` for invoking the 56import machinery. Refer to the :mod:`importlib` library documentation for 57additional detail. 58 59 60 61Packages 62======== 63 64.. index:: 65 single: package 66 67Python has only one type of module object, and all modules are of this type, 68regardless of whether the module is implemented in Python, C, or something 69else. To help organize modules and provide a naming hierarchy, Python has a 70concept of :term:`packages <package>`. 71 72You can think of packages as the directories on a file system and modules as 73files within directories, but don't take this analogy too literally since 74packages and modules need not originate from the file system. For the 75purposes of this documentation, we'll use this convenient analogy of 76directories and files. Like file system directories, packages are organized 77hierarchically, and packages may themselves contain subpackages, as well as 78regular modules. 79 80It's important to keep in mind that all packages are modules, but not all 81modules are packages. Or put another way, packages are just a special kind of 82module. Specifically, any module that contains a ``__path__`` attribute is 83considered a package. 84 85All modules have a name. Subpackage names are separated from their parent 86package name by a dot, akin to Python's standard attribute access syntax. Thus 87you might have a module called :mod:`sys` and a package called :mod:`email`, 88which in turn has a subpackage called :mod:`email.mime` and a module within 89that subpackage called :mod:`email.mime.text`. 90 91 92Regular packages 93---------------- 94 95.. index:: 96 pair: package; regular 97 98Python defines two types of packages, :term:`regular packages <regular 99package>` and :term:`namespace packages <namespace package>`. Regular 100packages are traditional packages as they existed in Python 3.2 and earlier. 101A regular package is typically implemented as a directory containing an 102``__init__.py`` file. When a regular package is imported, this 103``__init__.py`` file is implicitly executed, and the objects it defines are 104bound to names in the package's namespace. The ``__init__.py`` file can 105contain the same Python code that any other module can contain, and Python 106will add some additional attributes to the module when it is imported. 107 108For example, the following file system layout defines a top level ``parent`` 109package with three subpackages:: 110 111 parent/ 112 __init__.py 113 one/ 114 __init__.py 115 two/ 116 __init__.py 117 three/ 118 __init__.py 119 120Importing ``parent.one`` will implicitly execute ``parent/__init__.py`` and 121``parent/one/__init__.py``. Subsequent imports of ``parent.two`` or 122``parent.three`` will execute ``parent/two/__init__.py`` and 123``parent/three/__init__.py`` respectively. 124 125 126Namespace packages 127------------------ 128 129.. index:: 130 pair: package; namespace 131 pair: package; portion 132 133A namespace package is a composite of various :term:`portions <portion>`, 134where each portion contributes a subpackage to the parent package. Portions 135may reside in different locations on the file system. Portions may also be 136found in zip files, on the network, or anywhere else that Python searches 137during import. Namespace packages may or may not correspond directly to 138objects on the file system; they may be virtual modules that have no concrete 139representation. 140 141Namespace packages do not use an ordinary list for their ``__path__`` 142attribute. They instead use a custom iterable type which will automatically 143perform a new search for package portions on the next import attempt within 144that package if the path of their parent package (or :data:`sys.path` for a 145top level package) changes. 146 147With namespace packages, there is no ``parent/__init__.py`` file. In fact, 148there may be multiple ``parent`` directories found during import search, where 149each one is provided by a different portion. Thus ``parent/one`` may not be 150physically located next to ``parent/two``. In this case, Python will create a 151namespace package for the top-level ``parent`` package whenever it or one of 152its subpackages is imported. 153 154See also :pep:`420` for the namespace package specification. 155 156 157Searching 158========= 159 160To begin the search, Python needs the :term:`fully qualified <qualified name>` 161name of the module (or package, but for the purposes of this discussion, the 162difference is immaterial) being imported. This name may come from various 163arguments to the :keyword:`import` statement, or from the parameters to the 164:func:`importlib.import_module` or :func:`__import__` functions. 165 166This name will be used in various phases of the import search, and it may be 167the dotted path to a submodule, e.g. ``foo.bar.baz``. In this case, Python 168first tries to import ``foo``, then ``foo.bar``, and finally ``foo.bar.baz``. 169If any of the intermediate imports fail, a :exc:`ModuleNotFoundError` is raised. 170 171 172The module cache 173---------------- 174 175.. index:: 176 single: sys.modules 177 178The first place checked during import search is :data:`sys.modules`. This 179mapping serves as a cache of all modules that have been previously imported, 180including the intermediate paths. So if ``foo.bar.baz`` was previously 181imported, :data:`sys.modules` will contain entries for ``foo``, ``foo.bar``, 182and ``foo.bar.baz``. Each key will have as its value the corresponding module 183object. 184 185During import, the module name is looked up in :data:`sys.modules` and if 186present, the associated value is the module satisfying the import, and the 187process completes. However, if the value is ``None``, then a 188:exc:`ModuleNotFoundError` is raised. If the module name is missing, Python will 189continue searching for the module. 190 191:data:`sys.modules` is writable. Deleting a key may not destroy the 192associated module (as other modules may hold references to it), 193but it will invalidate the cache entry for the named module, causing 194Python to search anew for the named module upon its next 195import. The key can also be assigned to ``None``, forcing the next import 196of the module to result in a :exc:`ModuleNotFoundError`. 197 198Beware though, as if you keep a reference to the module object, 199invalidate its cache entry in :data:`sys.modules`, and then re-import the 200named module, the two module objects will *not* be the same. By contrast, 201:func:`importlib.reload` will reuse the *same* module object, and simply 202reinitialise the module contents by rerunning the module's code. 203 204 205.. _finders-and-loaders: 206 207Finders and loaders 208------------------- 209 210.. index:: 211 single: finder 212 single: loader 213 single: module spec 214 215If the named module is not found in :data:`sys.modules`, then Python's import 216protocol is invoked to find and load the module. This protocol consists of 217two conceptual objects, :term:`finders <finder>` and :term:`loaders <loader>`. 218A finder's job is to determine whether it can find the named module using 219whatever strategy it knows about. Objects that implement both of these 220interfaces are referred to as :term:`importers <importer>` - they return 221themselves when they find that they can load the requested module. 222 223Python includes a number of default finders and importers. The first one 224knows how to locate built-in modules, and the second knows how to locate 225frozen modules. A third default finder searches an :term:`import path` 226for modules. The :term:`import path` is a list of locations that may 227name file system paths or zip files. It can also be extended to search 228for any locatable resource, such as those identified by URLs. 229 230The import machinery is extensible, so new finders can be added to extend the 231range and scope of module searching. 232 233Finders do not actually load modules. If they can find the named module, they 234return a :dfn:`module spec`, an encapsulation of the module's import-related 235information, which the import machinery then uses when loading the module. 236 237The following sections describe the protocol for finders and loaders in more 238detail, including how you can create and register new ones to extend the 239import machinery. 240 241.. versionchanged:: 3.4 242 In previous versions of Python, finders returned :term:`loaders <loader>` 243 directly, whereas now they return module specs which *contain* loaders. 244 Loaders are still used during import but have fewer responsibilities. 245 246Import hooks 247------------ 248 249.. index:: 250 single: import hooks 251 single: meta hooks 252 single: path hooks 253 pair: hooks; import 254 pair: hooks; meta 255 pair: hooks; path 256 257The import machinery is designed to be extensible; the primary mechanism for 258this are the *import hooks*. There are two types of import hooks: *meta 259hooks* and *import path hooks*. 260 261Meta hooks are called at the start of import processing, before any other 262import processing has occurred, other than :data:`sys.modules` cache look up. 263This allows meta hooks to override :data:`sys.path` processing, frozen 264modules, or even built-in modules. Meta hooks are registered by adding new 265finder objects to :data:`sys.meta_path`, as described below. 266 267Import path hooks are called as part of :data:`sys.path` (or 268``package.__path__``) processing, at the point where their associated path 269item is encountered. Import path hooks are registered by adding new callables 270to :data:`sys.path_hooks` as described below. 271 272 273The meta path 274------------- 275 276.. index:: 277 single: sys.meta_path 278 pair: finder; find_spec 279 280When the named module is not found in :data:`sys.modules`, Python next 281searches :data:`sys.meta_path`, which contains a list of meta path finder 282objects. These finders are queried in order to see if they know how to handle 283the named module. Meta path finders must implement a method called 284:meth:`~importlib.abc.MetaPathFinder.find_spec()` which takes three arguments: 285a name, an import path, and (optionally) a target module. The meta path 286finder can use any strategy it wants to determine whether it can handle 287the named module or not. 288 289If the meta path finder knows how to handle the named module, it returns a 290spec object. If it cannot handle the named module, it returns ``None``. If 291:data:`sys.meta_path` processing reaches the end of its list without returning 292a spec, then a :exc:`ModuleNotFoundError` is raised. Any other exceptions 293raised are simply propagated up, aborting the import process. 294 295The :meth:`~importlib.abc.MetaPathFinder.find_spec()` method of meta path 296finders is called with two or three arguments. The first is the fully 297qualified name of the module being imported, for example ``foo.bar.baz``. 298The second argument is the path entries to use for the module search. For 299top-level modules, the second argument is ``None``, but for submodules or 300subpackages, the second argument is the value of the parent package's 301``__path__`` attribute. If the appropriate ``__path__`` attribute cannot 302be accessed, a :exc:`ModuleNotFoundError` is raised. The third argument 303is an existing module object that will be the target of loading later. 304The import system passes in a target module only during reload. 305 306The meta path may be traversed multiple times for a single import request. 307For example, assuming none of the modules involved has already been cached, 308importing ``foo.bar.baz`` will first perform a top level import, calling 309``mpf.find_spec("foo", None, None)`` on each meta path finder (``mpf``). After 310``foo`` has been imported, ``foo.bar`` will be imported by traversing the 311meta path a second time, calling 312``mpf.find_spec("foo.bar", foo.__path__, None)``. Once ``foo.bar`` has been 313imported, the final traversal will call 314``mpf.find_spec("foo.bar.baz", foo.bar.__path__, None)``. 315 316Some meta path finders only support top level imports. These importers will 317always return ``None`` when anything other than ``None`` is passed as the 318second argument. 319 320Python's default :data:`sys.meta_path` has three meta path finders, one that 321knows how to import built-in modules, one that knows how to import frozen 322modules, and one that knows how to import modules from an :term:`import path` 323(i.e. the :term:`path based finder`). 324 325.. versionchanged:: 3.4 326 The :meth:`~importlib.abc.MetaPathFinder.find_spec` method of meta path 327 finders replaced :meth:`~importlib.abc.MetaPathFinder.find_module`, which 328 is now deprecated. While it will continue to work without change, the 329 import machinery will try it only if the finder does not implement 330 ``find_spec()``. 331 332 333Loading 334======= 335 336If and when a module spec is found, the import machinery will use it (and 337the loader it contains) when loading the module. Here is an approximation 338of what happens during the loading portion of import:: 339 340 module = None 341 if spec.loader is not None and hasattr(spec.loader, 'create_module'): 342 # It is assumed 'exec_module' will also be defined on the loader. 343 module = spec.loader.create_module(spec) 344 if module is None: 345 module = ModuleType(spec.name) 346 # The import-related module attributes get set here: 347 _init_module_attrs(spec, module) 348 349 if spec.loader is None: 350 # unsupported 351 raise ImportError 352 if spec.origin is None and spec.submodule_search_locations is not None: 353 # namespace package 354 sys.modules[spec.name] = module 355 elif not hasattr(spec.loader, 'exec_module'): 356 module = spec.loader.load_module(spec.name) 357 # Set __loader__ and __package__ if missing. 358 else: 359 sys.modules[spec.name] = module 360 try: 361 spec.loader.exec_module(module) 362 except BaseException: 363 try: 364 del sys.modules[spec.name] 365 except KeyError: 366 pass 367 raise 368 return sys.modules[spec.name] 369 370Note the following details: 371 372 * If there is an existing module object with the given name in 373 :data:`sys.modules`, import will have already returned it. 374 375 * The module will exist in :data:`sys.modules` before the loader 376 executes the module code. This is crucial because the module code may 377 (directly or indirectly) import itself; adding it to :data:`sys.modules` 378 beforehand prevents unbounded recursion in the worst case and multiple 379 loading in the best. 380 381 * If loading fails, the failing module -- and only the failing module -- 382 gets removed from :data:`sys.modules`. Any module already in the 383 :data:`sys.modules` cache, and any module that was successfully loaded 384 as a side-effect, must remain in the cache. This contrasts with 385 reloading where even the failing module is left in :data:`sys.modules`. 386 387 * After the module is created but before execution, the import machinery 388 sets the import-related module attributes ("_init_module_attrs" in 389 the pseudo-code example above), as summarized in a 390 :ref:`later section <import-mod-attrs>`. 391 392 * Module execution is the key moment of loading in which the module's 393 namespace gets populated. Execution is entirely delegated to the 394 loader, which gets to decide what gets populated and how. 395 396 * The module created during loading and passed to exec_module() may 397 not be the one returned at the end of import [#fnlo]_. 398 399.. versionchanged:: 3.4 400 The import system has taken over the boilerplate responsibilities of 401 loaders. These were previously performed by the 402 :meth:`importlib.abc.Loader.load_module` method. 403 404Loaders 405------- 406 407Module loaders provide the critical function of loading: module execution. 408The import machinery calls the :meth:`importlib.abc.Loader.exec_module` 409method with a single argument, the module object to execute. Any value 410returned from :meth:`~importlib.abc.Loader.exec_module` is ignored. 411 412Loaders must satisfy the following requirements: 413 414 * If the module is a Python module (as opposed to a built-in module or a 415 dynamically loaded extension), the loader should execute the module's code 416 in the module's global name space (``module.__dict__``). 417 418 * If the loader cannot execute the module, it should raise an 419 :exc:`ImportError`, although any other exception raised during 420 :meth:`~importlib.abc.Loader.exec_module` will be propagated. 421 422In many cases, the finder and loader can be the same object; in such cases the 423:meth:`~importlib.abc.MetaPathFinder.find_spec` method would just return a 424spec with the loader set to ``self``. 425 426Module loaders may opt in to creating the module object during loading 427by implementing a :meth:`~importlib.abc.Loader.create_module` method. 428It takes one argument, the module spec, and returns the new module object 429to use during loading. ``create_module()`` does not need to set any attributes 430on the module object. If the method returns ``None``, the 431import machinery will create the new module itself. 432 433.. versionadded:: 3.4 434 The :meth:`~importlib.abc.Loader.create_module` method of loaders. 435 436.. versionchanged:: 3.4 437 The :meth:`~importlib.abc.Loader.load_module` method was replaced by 438 :meth:`~importlib.abc.Loader.exec_module` and the import 439 machinery assumed all the boilerplate responsibilities of loading. 440 441 For compatibility with existing loaders, the import machinery will use 442 the ``load_module()`` method of loaders if it exists and the loader does 443 not also implement ``exec_module()``. However, ``load_module()`` has been 444 deprecated and loaders should implement ``exec_module()`` instead. 445 446 The ``load_module()`` method must implement all the boilerplate loading 447 functionality described above in addition to executing the module. All 448 the same constraints apply, with some additional clarification: 449 450 * If there is an existing module object with the given name in 451 :data:`sys.modules`, the loader must use that existing module. 452 (Otherwise, :func:`importlib.reload` will not work correctly.) If the 453 named module does not exist in :data:`sys.modules`, the loader 454 must create a new module object and add it to :data:`sys.modules`. 455 456 * The module *must* exist in :data:`sys.modules` before the loader 457 executes the module code, to prevent unbounded recursion or multiple 458 loading. 459 460 * If loading fails, the loader must remove any modules it has inserted 461 into :data:`sys.modules`, but it must remove **only** the failing 462 module(s), and only if the loader itself has loaded the module(s) 463 explicitly. 464 465.. versionchanged:: 3.5 466 A :exc:`DeprecationWarning` is raised when ``exec_module()`` is defined but 467 ``create_module()`` is not. 468 469.. versionchanged:: 3.6 470 An :exc:`ImportError` is raised when ``exec_module()`` is defined but 471 ``create_module()`` is not. 472 473Submodules 474---------- 475 476When a submodule is loaded using any mechanism (e.g. ``importlib`` APIs, the 477``import`` or ``import-from`` statements, or built-in ``__import__()``) a 478binding is placed in the parent module's namespace to the submodule object. 479For example, if package ``spam`` has a submodule ``foo``, after importing 480``spam.foo``, ``spam`` will have an attribute ``foo`` which is bound to the 481submodule. Let's say you have the following directory structure:: 482 483 spam/ 484 __init__.py 485 foo.py 486 bar.py 487 488and ``spam/__init__.py`` has the following lines in it:: 489 490 from .foo import Foo 491 from .bar import Bar 492 493then executing the following puts a name binding to ``foo`` and ``bar`` in the 494``spam`` module:: 495 496 >>> import spam 497 >>> spam.foo 498 <module 'spam.foo' from '/tmp/imports/spam/foo.py'> 499 >>> spam.bar 500 <module 'spam.bar' from '/tmp/imports/spam/bar.py'> 501 502Given Python's familiar name binding rules this might seem surprising, but 503it's actually a fundamental feature of the import system. The invariant 504holding is that if you have ``sys.modules['spam']`` and 505``sys.modules['spam.foo']`` (as you would after the above import), the latter 506must appear as the ``foo`` attribute of the former. 507 508Module spec 509----------- 510 511The import machinery uses a variety of information about each module 512during import, especially before loading. Most of the information is 513common to all modules. The purpose of a module's spec is to encapsulate 514this import-related information on a per-module basis. 515 516Using a spec during import allows state to be transferred between import 517system components, e.g. between the finder that creates the module spec 518and the loader that executes it. Most importantly, it allows the 519import machinery to perform the boilerplate operations of loading, 520whereas without a module spec the loader had that responsibility. 521 522The module's spec is exposed as the ``__spec__`` attribute on a module object. 523See :class:`~importlib.machinery.ModuleSpec` for details on the contents of 524the module spec. 525 526.. versionadded:: 3.4 527 528.. _import-mod-attrs: 529 530Import-related module attributes 531-------------------------------- 532 533The import machinery fills in these attributes on each module object 534during loading, based on the module's spec, before the loader executes 535the module. 536 537.. attribute:: __name__ 538 539 The ``__name__`` attribute must be set to the fully-qualified name of 540 the module. This name is used to uniquely identify the module in 541 the import system. 542 543.. attribute:: __loader__ 544 545 The ``__loader__`` attribute must be set to the loader object that 546 the import machinery used when loading the module. This is mostly 547 for introspection, but can be used for additional loader-specific 548 functionality, for example getting data associated with a loader. 549 550.. attribute:: __package__ 551 552 The module's ``__package__`` attribute must be set. Its value must 553 be a string, but it can be the same value as its ``__name__``. When 554 the module is a package, its ``__package__`` value should be set to 555 its ``__name__``. When the module is not a package, ``__package__`` 556 should be set to the empty string for top-level modules, or for 557 submodules, to the parent package's name. See :pep:`366` for further 558 details. 559 560 This attribute is used instead of ``__name__`` to calculate explicit 561 relative imports for main modules, as defined in :pep:`366`. It is 562 expected to have the same value as ``__spec__.parent``. 563 564 .. versionchanged:: 3.6 565 The value of ``__package__`` is expected to be the same as 566 ``__spec__.parent``. 567 568.. attribute:: __spec__ 569 570 The ``__spec__`` attribute must be set to the module spec that was 571 used when importing the module. Setting ``__spec__`` 572 appropriately applies equally to :ref:`modules initialized during 573 interpreter startup <programs>`. The one exception is ``__main__``, 574 where ``__spec__`` is :ref:`set to None in some cases <main_spec>`. 575 576 When ``__package__`` is not defined, ``__spec__.parent`` is used as 577 a fallback. 578 579 .. versionadded:: 3.4 580 581 .. versionchanged:: 3.6 582 ``__spec__.parent`` is used as a fallback when ``__package__`` is 583 not defined. 584 585.. attribute:: __path__ 586 587 If the module is a package (either regular or namespace), the module 588 object's ``__path__`` attribute must be set. The value must be 589 iterable, but may be empty if ``__path__`` has no further significance. 590 If ``__path__`` is not empty, it must produce strings when iterated 591 over. More details on the semantics of ``__path__`` are given 592 :ref:`below <package-path-rules>`. 593 594 Non-package modules should not have a ``__path__`` attribute. 595 596.. attribute:: __file__ 597.. attribute:: __cached__ 598 599 ``__file__`` is optional. If set, this attribute's value must be a 600 string. The import system may opt to leave ``__file__`` unset if it 601 has no semantic meaning (e.g. a module loaded from a database). 602 603 If ``__file__`` is set, it may also be appropriate to set the 604 ``__cached__`` attribute which is the path to any compiled version of 605 the code (e.g. byte-compiled file). The file does not need to exist 606 to set this attribute; the path can simply point to where the 607 compiled file would exist (see :pep:`3147`). 608 609 It is also appropriate to set ``__cached__`` when ``__file__`` is not 610 set. However, that scenario is quite atypical. Ultimately, the 611 loader is what makes use of ``__file__`` and/or ``__cached__``. So 612 if a loader can load from a cached module but otherwise does not load 613 from a file, that atypical scenario may be appropriate. 614 615.. _package-path-rules: 616 617module.__path__ 618--------------- 619 620By definition, if a module has a ``__path__`` attribute, it is a package. 621 622A package's ``__path__`` attribute is used during imports of its subpackages. 623Within the import machinery, it functions much the same as :data:`sys.path`, 624i.e. providing a list of locations to search for modules during import. 625However, ``__path__`` is typically much more constrained than 626:data:`sys.path`. 627 628``__path__`` must be an iterable of strings, but it may be empty. 629The same rules used for :data:`sys.path` also apply to a package's 630``__path__``, and :data:`sys.path_hooks` (described below) are 631consulted when traversing a package's ``__path__``. 632 633A package's ``__init__.py`` file may set or alter the package's ``__path__`` 634attribute, and this was typically the way namespace packages were implemented 635prior to :pep:`420`. With the adoption of :pep:`420`, namespace packages no 636longer need to supply ``__init__.py`` files containing only ``__path__`` 637manipulation code; the import machinery automatically sets ``__path__`` 638correctly for the namespace package. 639 640Module reprs 641------------ 642 643By default, all modules have a usable repr, however depending on the 644attributes set above, and in the module's spec, you can more explicitly 645control the repr of module objects. 646 647If the module has a spec (``__spec__``), the import machinery will try 648to generate a repr from it. If that fails or there is no spec, the import 649system will craft a default repr using whatever information is available 650on the module. It will try to use the ``module.__name__``, 651``module.__file__``, and ``module.__loader__`` as input into the repr, 652with defaults for whatever information is missing. 653 654Here are the exact rules used: 655 656 * If the module has a ``__spec__`` attribute, the information in the spec 657 is used to generate the repr. The "name", "loader", "origin", and 658 "has_location" attributes are consulted. 659 660 * If the module has a ``__file__`` attribute, this is used as part of the 661 module's repr. 662 663 * If the module has no ``__file__`` but does have a ``__loader__`` that is not 664 ``None``, then the loader's repr is used as part of the module's repr. 665 666 * Otherwise, just use the module's ``__name__`` in the repr. 667 668.. versionchanged:: 3.4 669 Use of :meth:`loader.module_repr() <importlib.abc.Loader.module_repr>` 670 has been deprecated and the module spec is now used by the import 671 machinery to generate a module repr. 672 673 For backward compatibility with Python 3.3, the module repr will be 674 generated by calling the loader's 675 :meth:`~importlib.abc.Loader.module_repr` method, if defined, before 676 trying either approach described above. However, the method is deprecated. 677 678.. _pyc-invalidation: 679 680Cached bytecode invalidation 681---------------------------- 682 683Before Python loads cached bytecode from a ``.pyc`` file, it checks whether the 684cache is up-to-date with the source ``.py`` file. By default, Python does this 685by storing the source's last-modified timestamp and size in the cache file when 686writing it. At runtime, the import system then validates the cache file by 687checking the stored metadata in the cache file against the source's 688metadata. 689 690Python also supports "hash-based" cache files, which store a hash of the source 691file's contents rather than its metadata. There are two variants of hash-based 692``.pyc`` files: checked and unchecked. For checked hash-based ``.pyc`` files, 693Python validates the cache file by hashing the source file and comparing the 694resulting hash with the hash in the cache file. If a checked hash-based cache 695file is found to be invalid, Python regenerates it and writes a new checked 696hash-based cache file. For unchecked hash-based ``.pyc`` files, Python simply 697assumes the cache file is valid if it exists. Hash-based ``.pyc`` files 698validation behavior may be overridden with the :option:`--check-hash-based-pycs` 699flag. 700 701.. versionchanged:: 3.7 702 Added hash-based ``.pyc`` files. Previously, Python only supported 703 timestamp-based invalidation of bytecode caches. 704 705 706The Path Based Finder 707===================== 708 709.. index:: 710 single: path based finder 711 712As mentioned previously, Python comes with several default meta path finders. 713One of these, called the :term:`path based finder` 714(:class:`~importlib.machinery.PathFinder`), searches an :term:`import path`, 715which contains a list of :term:`path entries <path entry>`. Each path 716entry names a location to search for modules. 717 718The path based finder itself doesn't know how to import anything. Instead, it 719traverses the individual path entries, associating each of them with a 720path entry finder that knows how to handle that particular kind of path. 721 722The default set of path entry finders implement all the semantics for finding 723modules on the file system, handling special file types such as Python source 724code (``.py`` files), Python byte code (``.pyc`` files) and 725shared libraries (e.g. ``.so`` files). When supported by the :mod:`zipimport` 726module in the standard library, the default path entry finders also handle 727loading all of these file types (other than shared libraries) from zipfiles. 728 729Path entries need not be limited to file system locations. They can refer to 730URLs, database queries, or any other location that can be specified as a 731string. 732 733The path based finder provides additional hooks and protocols so that you 734can extend and customize the types of searchable path entries. For example, 735if you wanted to support path entries as network URLs, you could write a hook 736that implements HTTP semantics to find modules on the web. This hook (a 737callable) would return a :term:`path entry finder` supporting the protocol 738described below, which was then used to get a loader for the module from the 739web. 740 741A word of warning: this section and the previous both use the term *finder*, 742distinguishing between them by using the terms :term:`meta path finder` and 743:term:`path entry finder`. These two types of finders are very similar, 744support similar protocols, and function in similar ways during the import 745process, but it's important to keep in mind that they are subtly different. 746In particular, meta path finders operate at the beginning of the import 747process, as keyed off the :data:`sys.meta_path` traversal. 748 749By contrast, path entry finders are in a sense an implementation detail 750of the path based finder, and in fact, if the path based finder were to be 751removed from :data:`sys.meta_path`, none of the path entry finder semantics 752would be invoked. 753 754 755Path entry finders 756------------------ 757 758.. index:: 759 single: sys.path 760 single: sys.path_hooks 761 single: sys.path_importer_cache 762 single: PYTHONPATH 763 764The :term:`path based finder` is responsible for finding and loading 765Python modules and packages whose location is specified with a string 766:term:`path entry`. Most path entries name locations in the file system, 767but they need not be limited to this. 768 769As a meta path finder, the :term:`path based finder` implements the 770:meth:`~importlib.abc.MetaPathFinder.find_spec` protocol previously 771described, however it exposes additional hooks that can be used to 772customize how modules are found and loaded from the :term:`import path`. 773 774Three variables are used by the :term:`path based finder`, :data:`sys.path`, 775:data:`sys.path_hooks` and :data:`sys.path_importer_cache`. The ``__path__`` 776attributes on package objects are also used. These provide additional ways 777that the import machinery can be customized. 778 779:data:`sys.path` contains a list of strings providing search locations for 780modules and packages. It is initialized from the :data:`PYTHONPATH` 781environment variable and various other installation- and 782implementation-specific defaults. Entries in :data:`sys.path` can name 783directories on the file system, zip files, and potentially other "locations" 784(see the :mod:`site` module) that should be searched for modules, such as 785URLs, or database queries. Only strings and bytes should be present on 786:data:`sys.path`; all other data types are ignored. The encoding of bytes 787entries is determined by the individual :term:`path entry finders <path entry 788finder>`. 789 790The :term:`path based finder` is a :term:`meta path finder`, so the import 791machinery begins the :term:`import path` search by calling the path 792based finder's :meth:`~importlib.machinery.PathFinder.find_spec` method as 793described previously. When the ``path`` argument to 794:meth:`~importlib.machinery.PathFinder.find_spec` is given, it will be a 795list of string paths to traverse - typically a package's ``__path__`` 796attribute for an import within that package. If the ``path`` argument is 797``None``, this indicates a top level import and :data:`sys.path` is used. 798 799The path based finder iterates over every entry in the search path, and 800for each of these, looks for an appropriate :term:`path entry finder` 801(:class:`~importlib.abc.PathEntryFinder`) for the 802path entry. Because this can be an expensive operation (e.g. there may be 803`stat()` call overheads for this search), the path based finder maintains 804a cache mapping path entries to path entry finders. This cache is maintained 805in :data:`sys.path_importer_cache` (despite the name, this cache actually 806stores finder objects rather than being limited to :term:`importer` objects). 807In this way, the expensive search for a particular :term:`path entry` 808location's :term:`path entry finder` need only be done once. User code is 809free to remove cache entries from :data:`sys.path_importer_cache` forcing 810the path based finder to perform the path entry search again [#fnpic]_. 811 812If the path entry is not present in the cache, the path based finder iterates 813over every callable in :data:`sys.path_hooks`. Each of the :term:`path entry 814hooks <path entry hook>` in this list is called with a single argument, the 815path entry to be searched. This callable may either return a :term:`path 816entry finder` that can handle the path entry, or it may raise 817:exc:`ImportError`. An :exc:`ImportError` is used by the path based finder to 818signal that the hook cannot find a :term:`path entry finder` 819for that :term:`path entry`. The 820exception is ignored and :term:`import path` iteration continues. The hook 821should expect either a string or bytes object; the encoding of bytes objects 822is up to the hook (e.g. it may be a file system encoding, UTF-8, or something 823else), and if the hook cannot decode the argument, it should raise 824:exc:`ImportError`. 825 826If :data:`sys.path_hooks` iteration ends with no :term:`path entry finder` 827being returned, then the path based finder's 828:meth:`~importlib.machinery.PathFinder.find_spec` method will store ``None`` 829in :data:`sys.path_importer_cache` (to indicate that there is no finder for 830this path entry) and return ``None``, indicating that this 831:term:`meta path finder` could not find the module. 832 833If a :term:`path entry finder` *is* returned by one of the :term:`path entry 834hook` callables on :data:`sys.path_hooks`, then the following protocol is used 835to ask the finder for a module spec, which is then used when loading the 836module. 837 838The current working directory -- denoted by an empty string -- is handled 839slightly differently from other entries on :data:`sys.path`. First, if the 840current working directory is found to not exist, no value is stored in 841:data:`sys.path_importer_cache`. Second, the value for the current working 842directory is looked up fresh for each module lookup. Third, the path used for 843:data:`sys.path_importer_cache` and returned by 844:meth:`importlib.machinery.PathFinder.find_spec` will be the actual current 845working directory and not the empty string. 846 847Path entry finder protocol 848-------------------------- 849 850In order to support imports of modules and initialized packages and also to 851contribute portions to namespace packages, path entry finders must implement 852the :meth:`~importlib.abc.PathEntryFinder.find_spec` method. 853 854:meth:`~importlib.abc.PathEntryFinder.find_spec` takes two arguments: the 855fully qualified name of the module being imported, and the (optional) target 856module. ``find_spec()`` returns a fully populated spec for the module. 857This spec will always have "loader" set (with one exception). 858 859To indicate to the import machinery that the spec represents a namespace 860:term:`portion`, the path entry finder sets "submodule_search_locations" to 861a list containing the portion. 862 863.. versionchanged:: 3.4 864 :meth:`~importlib.abc.PathEntryFinder.find_spec` replaced 865 :meth:`~importlib.abc.PathEntryFinder.find_loader` and 866 :meth:`~importlib.abc.PathEntryFinder.find_module`, both of which 867 are now deprecated, but will be used if ``find_spec()`` is not defined. 868 869 Older path entry finders may implement one of these two deprecated methods 870 instead of ``find_spec()``. The methods are still respected for the 871 sake of backward compatibility. However, if ``find_spec()`` is 872 implemented on the path entry finder, the legacy methods are ignored. 873 874 :meth:`~importlib.abc.PathEntryFinder.find_loader` takes one argument, the 875 fully qualified name of the module being imported. ``find_loader()`` 876 returns a 2-tuple where the first item is the loader and the second item 877 is a namespace :term:`portion`. 878 879 For backwards compatibility with other implementations of the import 880 protocol, many path entry finders also support the same, 881 traditional ``find_module()`` method that meta path finders support. 882 However path entry finder ``find_module()`` methods are never called 883 with a ``path`` argument (they are expected to record the appropriate 884 path information from the initial call to the path hook). 885 886 The ``find_module()`` method on path entry finders is deprecated, 887 as it does not allow the path entry finder to contribute portions to 888 namespace packages. If both ``find_loader()`` and ``find_module()`` 889 exist on a path entry finder, the import system will always call 890 ``find_loader()`` in preference to ``find_module()``. 891 892 893Replacing the standard import system 894==================================== 895 896The most reliable mechanism for replacing the entire import system is to 897delete the default contents of :data:`sys.meta_path`, replacing them 898entirely with a custom meta path hook. 899 900If it is acceptable to only alter the behaviour of import statements 901without affecting other APIs that access the import system, then replacing 902the builtin :func:`__import__` function may be sufficient. This technique 903may also be employed at the module level to only alter the behaviour of 904import statements within that module. 905 906To selectively prevent the import of some modules from a hook early on the 907meta path (rather than disabling the standard import system entirely), 908it is sufficient to raise :exc:`ModuleNotFoundError` directly from 909:meth:`~importlib.abc.MetaPathFinder.find_spec` instead of returning 910``None``. The latter indicates that the meta path search should continue, 911while raising an exception terminates it immediately. 912 913.. _relativeimports: 914 915Package Relative Imports 916======================== 917 918Relative imports use leading dots. A single leading dot indicates a relative 919import, starting with the current package. Two or more leading dots indicate a 920relative import to the parent(s) of the current package, one level per dot 921after the first. For example, given the following package layout:: 922 923 package/ 924 __init__.py 925 subpackage1/ 926 __init__.py 927 moduleX.py 928 moduleY.py 929 subpackage2/ 930 __init__.py 931 moduleZ.py 932 moduleA.py 933 934In either ``subpackage1/moduleX.py`` or ``subpackage1/__init__.py``, 935the following are valid relative imports:: 936 937 from .moduleY import spam 938 from .moduleY import spam as ham 939 from . import moduleY 940 from ..subpackage1 import moduleY 941 from ..subpackage2.moduleZ import eggs 942 from ..moduleA import foo 943 944Absolute imports may use either the ``import <>`` or ``from <> import <>`` 945syntax, but relative imports may only use the second form; the reason 946for this is that:: 947 948 import XXX.YYY.ZZZ 949 950should expose ``XXX.YYY.ZZZ`` as a usable expression, but .moduleY is 951not a valid expression. 952 953 954Special considerations for __main__ 955=================================== 956 957The :mod:`__main__` module is a special case relative to Python's import 958system. As noted :ref:`elsewhere <programs>`, the ``__main__`` module 959is directly initialized at interpreter startup, much like :mod:`sys` and 960:mod:`builtins`. However, unlike those two, it doesn't strictly 961qualify as a built-in module. This is because the manner in which 962``__main__`` is initialized depends on the flags and other options with 963which the interpreter is invoked. 964 965.. _main_spec: 966 967__main__.__spec__ 968----------------- 969 970Depending on how :mod:`__main__` is initialized, ``__main__.__spec__`` 971gets set appropriately or to ``None``. 972 973When Python is started with the :option:`-m` option, ``__spec__`` is set 974to the module spec of the corresponding module or package. ``__spec__`` is 975also populated when the ``__main__`` module is loaded as part of executing a 976directory, zipfile or other :data:`sys.path` entry. 977 978In :ref:`the remaining cases <using-on-interface-options>` 979``__main__.__spec__`` is set to ``None``, as the code used to populate the 980:mod:`__main__` does not correspond directly with an importable module: 981 982- interactive prompt 983- :option:`-c` option 984- running from stdin 985- running directly from a source or bytecode file 986 987Note that ``__main__.__spec__`` is always ``None`` in the last case, 988*even if* the file could technically be imported directly as a module 989instead. Use the :option:`-m` switch if valid module metadata is desired 990in :mod:`__main__`. 991 992Note also that even when ``__main__`` corresponds with an importable module 993and ``__main__.__spec__`` is set accordingly, they're still considered 994*distinct* modules. This is due to the fact that blocks guarded by 995``if __name__ == "__main__":`` checks only execute when the module is used 996to populate the ``__main__`` namespace, and not during normal import. 997 998 999Open issues 1000=========== 1001 1002XXX It would be really nice to have a diagram. 1003 1004XXX * (import_machinery.rst) how about a section devoted just to the 1005attributes of modules and packages, perhaps expanding upon or supplanting the 1006related entries in the data model reference page? 1007 1008XXX runpy, pkgutil, et al in the library manual should all get "See Also" 1009links at the top pointing to the new import system section. 1010 1011XXX Add more explanation regarding the different ways in which 1012``__main__`` is initialized? 1013 1014XXX Add more info on ``__main__`` quirks/pitfalls (i.e. copy from 1015:pep:`395`). 1016 1017 1018References 1019========== 1020 1021The import machinery has evolved considerably since Python's early days. The 1022original `specification for packages 1023<https://www.python.org/doc/essays/packages/>`_ is still available to read, 1024although some details have changed since the writing of that document. 1025 1026The original specification for :data:`sys.meta_path` was :pep:`302`, with 1027subsequent extension in :pep:`420`. 1028 1029:pep:`420` introduced :term:`namespace packages <namespace package>` for 1030Python 3.3. :pep:`420` also introduced the :meth:`find_loader` protocol as an 1031alternative to :meth:`find_module`. 1032 1033:pep:`366` describes the addition of the ``__package__`` attribute for 1034explicit relative imports in main modules. 1035 1036:pep:`328` introduced absolute and explicit relative imports and initially 1037proposed ``__name__`` for semantics :pep:`366` would eventually specify for 1038``__package__``. 1039 1040:pep:`338` defines executing modules as scripts. 1041 1042:pep:`451` adds the encapsulation of per-module import state in spec 1043objects. It also off-loads most of the boilerplate responsibilities of 1044loaders back onto the import machinery. These changes allow the 1045deprecation of several APIs in the import system and also addition of new 1046methods to finders and loaders. 1047 1048.. rubric:: Footnotes 1049 1050.. [#fnmo] See :class:`types.ModuleType`. 1051 1052.. [#fnlo] The importlib implementation avoids using the return value 1053 directly. Instead, it gets the module object by looking the module name up 1054 in :data:`sys.modules`. The indirect effect of this is that an imported 1055 module may replace itself in :data:`sys.modules`. This is 1056 implementation-specific behavior that is not guaranteed to work in other 1057 Python implementations. 1058 1059.. [#fnpic] In legacy code, it is possible to find instances of 1060 :class:`imp.NullImporter` in the :data:`sys.path_importer_cache`. It 1061 is recommended that code be changed to use ``None`` instead. See 1062 :ref:`portingpythoncode` for more details. 1063