summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/AppPkg/Applications/Python/PythonReadMe.txt
blob: c8cd503b768e21446440f09cda4d63e8455a55cf (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
                                EDK II Python
                                   ReadMe
                                Version 2.7.2
                                Release 1.02
                                18 Jan. 2013


1. OVERVIEW
===========
This document is devoted to general information on building and setup of the
Python environment for UEFI 2.3, the invocation of the interpreter, and things
that make working with Python easier.

It is assumed that you already have either UDK2010 or a current snapshot of
the EDK II sources from www.tianocore.org, and that you can successfully build
packages within that distribution.

2. Release Notes
================
  1)  All C extension modules must be statically linked (built in)
  2)  The site and os modules must exist as discrete files in ...\lib\python.27
  3)  User-specific configurations are not supported.
  4)  Environment variables are not supported.

3. Getting and Building Python
======================================================
  3.1 Getting Python
  ==================
  For development ease, a subset of the Python 2.7.2 distribution has been
  included in the AppPkg source tree.  If a full distribution is desired, the
  Python-2.7.2 directory can be removed or renamed and the full source code
  downloaded from http://www.python.org/ftp/python/2.7.2/.

  A.  Within your EDK II development tree, extract the Python distribution into
    AppPkg/Applications/Python.  This should create the
    AppPkg/Applications/Python/Python-2.7.2 directory.

  B.  Copy the files from PyMod-2.7.2 into the corresponding directories within
    the Python-2.7.2 tree.  This will overwrite existing files with files
    modified for UEFI usage.

  3.2 Building Python
  ===================
  A.  Edit Efi/config.c to enable the built-in modules you need.
        Mandatory Built-in Modules:
        edk2      errno       imp         marshal

      Additional built-in modules which are required to use the help()
      functionality provided by PyDoc, are:
        _codecs     _collections    _functools    _random
        _sre        _struct         _weakref      binascii
        cStringIO   gc              itertools     math
        operator    time

  B.  Edit AppPkg/AppPkg.dsc to enable (uncomment) the PythonCore.inf line
    within the [Components] section.

  C.  Build AppPkg, which includes Python, using the standard "build" command:
    For example, to build Python for an X64 CPU architecture:
                    build -a X64 -p AppPkg\AppPkg.dsc

4. Python-related paths and files
=================================
Python depends upon the existence of several directories and files on the
target system.

  \EFI                              Root of the UEFI system area.
   |- \Tools                        Location of the Python.efi executable.
   |- \Boot                         UEFI specified Boot directory.
   |- \StdLib                       Root of the Standard Libraries sub-tree.
       |- \etc                      Configuration files used by libraries.
       |- \tmp                      Temporary files created by tmpfile(), etc.
       |- \lib                      Root of the libraries tree.
           |- \python.27            Directory containing the Python library
               |                    modules.
               |- \lib-dynload      Dynamically loadable Python extensions.
               |- \site-packages    Site-specific packages and modules.


5. Installing Python
====================
These directories, on the target system, are populated from the development
system as follows:

  * \Efi\Tools receives a copy of Build/AppPkg/DEBUG_VS2005/X64/Python.efi.
                                               ^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^
    Modify the host path to match the your build type and compiler.

  * The \Efi\StdLib\etc directory is populated from the StdLib/Efi/StdLib/etc
    source directory.

  * Directory \Efi\StdLib\lib\python.27 is populated with packages and modules
    from the AppPkg/Applications/Python/Python-2.7.2/Lib directory.
    The recommended minimum set of modules (.py, .pyc, and/or .pyo):
        os      stat      ntpath      warnings      traceback
        site    types     copy_reg    linecache     genericpath

  * Python C Extension Modules built as dynamically loadable extensions go into
    the \Efi\StdLib\lib\python.27\lib-dynload directory.  This functionality is
    not yet implemented.


6. Example: Enabling socket support
===================================
  1.  enable {"_socket", init_socket}, in Efi\config.c
  2.  enable Python-2.7.2/Modules/socketmodule.c in PythonCore.inf.
  3.  copy socket.py over to /Efi/StdLib/lib/python.27 on your target system.
  4.  Make sure dependent modules are present(.py) or built in(.c):
        functools, types, os, sys, warnings, cStringIO, StringIO, errno

  5.  build -a X64 -p AppPkg\AppPkg.dsc
  6.  copy Build\AppPkg\DEBUG_VS2005\X64\Python.efi to \Efi\Tools on your
      target system. Replace "DEBUG_VS2005\X64", in the source path, with
      values appropriate for your tool chain and processor architecture.


7. Running Python
=================
  Python must currently be run from an EFI FAT-32 partition, or volume, under
  the UEFI Shell.  At the Shell prompt enter the desired volume name, followed
  by a colon ':', then press Enter.  Python can then be executed by typing its
  name, followed by any desired options and arguments.

  EXAMPLE:
      2.0 Shell> fs0:
      2.0 FS0:\> python
      Python 2.7.2 (default, Oct 13 2015, 16:21:53) [C] on uefi
      Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
      >>> exit()
      2.0 FS0:\>

  NOTE:
      Python, as distributed, sends its interactive prompts to stderr.  If
      STDERR isn't enabled in UEFI Setup so that it's output goes to the
      console, it may appear that Python hangs on startup.  If this happens,
      one may be able to rectify the condition by typing "exit()" followed
      by <enter> to exit out of Python.  Then, type "exit" at the Shell prompt
      which should enter Setup where you can use the Boot Maintenance
      Manager to modify your Console settings.

  NOTE:
      Some platforms don't include the Setup utility, or don't allow STDERR to
      be modified.  In these cases, Python may be started with the '-#' option
      which will cause stderr to be the same as stdout and should allow
      Python to be used interactively on those platforms.

      Depending upon the version of Shell you are using, it may be necessary
      to escape the '#' character so that the Shell doesn't interpret it as
      the start of a comment.  The escape character is '^'.
      Example:
          python -^# -V

8. Supported C Modules
======================
    Module Name               C File(s)
  ===============       =============================================
  _ast                  Python/Python-ast.c
  _bisect               Modules/_bisectmodule.c
  _codecs               Modules/_codecsmodule.c
  _codecs_cn            Modules/cjkcodecs/_codecs_cn.c
  _codecs_hk            Modules/cjkcodecs/_codecs_hk.c
  _codecs_iso2022       Modules/cjkcodecs/_codecs_iso2022.c
  _codecs_jp            Modules/cjkcodecs/_codecs_jp
  _codecs_kr            Modules/cjkcodecs/_codecs_kr
  _codecs_tw            Modules/cjkcodecs/_codecs_tw
  _collections          Modules/_collectionsmodule.c
  _csv                  Modules/_csv.c
  _functools            Modules/_functoolsmodule.c
  _heapq                Modules/_heapqmodule.c
  _io                   Modules/_io/_iomodule.c       Modules/_io/*
  _json                 Modules/_json.c
  _md5                  Modules/md5module.c           Modules/md5.c
  _multibytecodec       Modules/cjkcodecs/_multibytecodec.c
  _random               Modules/_randommodule.c
  _sha                  Modules/shamodule.c
  _sha256               Modules/sha256module.c
  _sha512               Modules/sha512module.c
  _socket               Modules/socketmodule.c
  _sre                  Modules/_sre.c
  _struct               Modules/_struct.c
  _symtable             Modules/symtablemodule.c
  _weakref              Modules/_weakref.c
  array                 Modules/arraymodule.c
  binascii              Modules/binascii.c
  cmath                 Modules/cmathmodule.c
  cPickle               Modules/cPickle.c
  cStringIO             Modules/cStringIO.c
  datetime              Modules/datetimemodule.c
  edk2                  Modules/Efi/edk2module.c
  errno                 Modules/errnomodule.c
  future_builtins       Modules/future_builtins.c
  gc                    Modules/gcmodule.c
  imp                   Python/import.c
  itertools             Modules/itertoolsmodule.c
  marshal               Python/marshal.c
  math                  Modules/mathmodule.c          Modules/_math.c
  operator              Modules/operator.c
  parser                Modules/parsermodule.c
  select                Modules/selectmodule.c
  signal                Modules/signalmodule.c
  strop                 Modules/stropmodule.c
  time                  Modules/timemodule.c
  xxsubtype             Modules/xxsubtype.c
  zipimport             Modules/zipimport.c
  zlib                  Modules/zlibmodule.c          Modules/zlib/*


9. Tested Python Library Modules
================================
This is a partial list of the packages and modules of the Python Standard
Library that have been tested or used in some manner.

  encodings               genericpath.py            sha.py
  importlib               getopt.py                 SimpleHTTPServer.py
  json                    hashlib.py                site.py
  pydoc_data              heapq.py                  socket.py
  xml                     HTMLParser.py             SocketServer.py
  abc.py                  inspect.py                sre.py
  argparse.py             io.py                     sre_compile.py
  ast.py                  keyword.py                sre_constants.py
  atexit.py               linecache.py              sre_parse.py
  BaseHTTPServer.py       locale.py                 stat.py
  binhex.py               md5.py                    string.py
  bisect.py               modulefinder.py           StringIO.py
  calendar.py             ntpath.py                 struct.py
  cmd.py                  numbers.py                textwrap.py
  codecs.py               optparse.py               token.py
  collections.py          os.py                     tokenize.py
  copy.py                 platform.py               traceback.py
  copy_reg.py             posixpath.py              types.py
  csv.py                  pydoc.py                  warnings.py
  dummy_thread.py         random.py                 weakref.py
  fileinput.py            re.py                     xmllib.py
  formatter.py            repr.py                   zipfile.py
  functools.py            runpy.py                  expat

# # #