Release history =============== 0.12.1 ------ * Issue #25: Complex python files could cause an "maximum recursion depth exceeded" exception due to using stack-based recursion to walk the module AST. 0.12 ---- * Added 'modulegraph.modulegraph.InvalidSourceModule'. This graph node is used for Python source modules that cannot be compiled (for example because they contain syntax errors). This is primarily useful for being able to create a graph for packages that have python 2.x or python 3.x compatibility in separate modules that contain code that isn't valid in the "other" python version. * Added 'modulegraph.modulegraph.InvalidCompiledModule'. This graph node is used for Python bytecode modules that cannot be loaded. * Added 'modulegraph.modulegraph.NamespacePackage'. Patch by bitbucket user htgoebel. * No longer add a MissingModule node to the graph for 'collections.defaultdict' when using 'from collections import defaultdict' ('collections.defaultdict' is an attribute of 'collections', not a submodule). * Fixed typo in ModuleGraph.getReferences() * Added ModuleGraph.getReferers(tonode). This methods yields the nodes that are referencing *tonode* (the reverse of getReferences) * The graph will no longer contain MissingModule nodes when using 'from ... import name' to import a global variable in a python module. There will still be MissingModule nodes for global variables in C extentions, and for 'from missing import name' when 'missing' is itself a MissingModule. * Issue #18: Don't assume that a PEP 302 loader object has a ``path`` attribute. That attribute is not documented and is not always present. 0.11.2 ------ * 0.11.1 ------ * Issue #145: Don't exclude the platform specific 'path' modules (like ntpath) 0.11 ---- This is a feature release Features ........ * Hardcode knowlegde about the compatibility aliases in the email module (for python 2.5 upto 3.0). This makes it possible to remove a heavy-handed recipe from py2app. * Added ``modegraph.zipio.getmode`` to fetch the Unix file mode for a file. * Added some handy methods to ``modulegraph.modulegraph.ModuleGraph``. 0.10.5 ------ This is a bugfix release * Don't look at the file extension to determine the file type in modulegraph.find_modules.parse_mf_results, but use the class of the item. * Issue #13: Improved handing of bad relative imports ("from .foo import bar"), these tended to raise confusing errors and are now handled like any other failed import. 0.10.4 ------ This is a bugfix release * There were no 'classifiers' in the package metadata due to a bug in setup.py. 0.10.3 ------ This is a bugfix release Bugfixes ........ * ``modulegraph.find.modules.parse_mf_results`` failed when the main script of a py2app module didn't have a file name ending in '.py'. 0.10.2 ------ This is a bugfix release Bugfixes ........ * Issue #12: modulegraph would sometimes find the wrong package *__init__* module due to using the wrong search method. One easy way to reproduce the problem was to have a toplevel module named *__init__*. Reported by Kentzo. 0.10.1 ------ This is a bugfix release Bugfixes ........ * Issue #11: creating xrefs and dotty graphs from modulegraphs (the --xref and --graph options of py2app) didn't work with python 3 due to use of APIs that aren't available in that version of python. Reported by Andrew Barnert. 0.10 ---- This is a minor feature release Features ........ * ``modulegraph.find_modules.find_needed_modules`` claimed to automaticly include subpackages for the "packages" argument as well, but that code didn't work at all. * Issue #9: The modulegraph script is deprecated, use "python -mmodulegraph" instead. * Issue #10: Ensure that the result of "zipio.open" can be used in a with statement (that is, ``with zipio.open(...) as fp``. * No longer use "2to3" to support Python 3. Because of this modulegraph now supports Python 2.6 and later. * Slightly improved HTML output, which makes it easier to manipulate the generated HTML using JavaScript. Patch by anatoly techtonik. * Ensure modulegraph works with changes introduced after Python 3.3b1. * Implement support for PEP 420 ("Implicit namespace packages") in Python 3.3. * ``modulegraph.util.imp_walk`` is deprecated and will be removed in the next release of this package. Bugfixes ........ * The module graph was incomplete, and generated incorrect warnings along the way, when a subpackage contained import statements for submodules. An example of this is ``sqlalchemy.util``, the ``__init__.py`` file for this package contains imports of modules in that modules using the classic relative import syntax (that is ``import compat`` to import ``sqlalchemy.util.compat``). Until this release modulegraph searched the wrong path to locate these modules (and hence failed to find them). 0.9.2 ----- This is a bugfix release Bugfixes ........ * The 'packages' option to modulegraph.find_modules.find_modules ignored the search path argument but always used the default search path. * The 'imp_find_modules' function in modulegraph.util has an argument 'path', this was a string in previous release and can now also be a sequence. * Don't crash when a module on the 'includes' list doesn't exist, but warn just like for missing 'packages' (modulegraph.find_modules.find_modules) 0.9.1 ----- This is a bugfix release Bug fixes ......... - Fixed the name of nodes imports in packages where the first element of a dotted name can be found but the rest cannot. This used to create a MissingModule node for the dotted name in the global namespace instead of relative to the package. That is, given a package "pkg" with submodule "sub" if the "__init__.py" of "pkg" contains "import sub.nomod" we now create a MissingModule node for "pkg.sub.nomod" instead of "sub.nomod". This fixes an issue with including the crcmod package in application bundles, first reported on the pythonmac-sig mailinglist by Brendan Simon. 0.9 --- This is a minor feature release Features: - Documentation is now generated using `sphinx `_ and can be viewed at . The documention is very rough at this moment and in need of reorganisation and language cleanup. I've basiclly writting the current version by reading the code and documenting what it does, the order in which classes and methods are document is therefore not necessarily the most useful. - The repository has moved to bitbucket - Renamed ``modulegraph.modulegraph.AddPackagePath`` to ``addPackagePath``, likewise ``ReplacePackage`` is now ``replacePackage``. The old name is still available, but is deprecated and will be removed before the 1.0 release. - ``modulegraph.modulegraph`` contains two node types that are unused and have unclear semantics: ``FlatPackage`` and ``ArchiveModule``. These node types are deprecated and will be removed before 1.0 is released. - Added a simple commandline tool (``modulegraph``) that will print information about the dependency graph of a script. - Added a module (``zipio``) for dealing with paths that may refer to entries inside zipfiles (such as source paths referring to modules in zipped eggfiles). With this addition ``modulegraph.modulegraph.os_listdir`` is deprecated and it will be removed before the 1.0 release. Bug fixes: - The ``__cmp__`` method of a Node no longer causes an exception when the compared-to object is not a Node. Patch by Ivan Kozik. - Issue #1: The initialiser for ``modulegraph.ModuleGraph`` caused an exception when an entry on the path (``sys.path``) doesn't actually exist. Fix by "skurylo", testcase by Ronald. - The code no longer worked with python 2.5, this release fixes that. - Due to the switch to mercurial setuptools will no longer include all required files. Fixed by adding a MANIFEST.in file - The method for printing a ``.dot`` representation of a ``ModuleGraph`` works again. 0.8.1 ----- This is a minor feature release Features: - ``from __future__ import absolute_import`` is now supported - Relative imports (``from . import module``) are now supported - Add support for namespace packages when those are installed using option ``--single-version-externally-managed`` (part of setuptools/distribute) 0.8 --- This is a minor feature release Features: - Initial support for Python 3.x - It is now possible to run the test suite using ``python setup.py test``. (The actual test suite is still fairly minimal though)