2

I am using pyinstaller to convert python script into a binary in Ubuntu (14.04). I use Canopy (Enthought) to manage all python libraries.

The code uses networkx, numpy, and scipy. Here is my spec file:

# -*- mode: python -*-
a = Analysis(['main_test.py'],
             pathex=['/home/sean/Desktop/prog',],
             hiddenimports=[],
             hookspath=None,
             runtime_hooks=None)
pyz = PYZ(a.pure)
exe = EXE(pyz,
          a.scripts,
          exclude_binaries=True,
          name='main_test',
          debug=False,
          strip=None,
          upx=True,
          console=True )
coll = COLLECT(exe,
               a.binaries,
               a.zipfiles,
               a.datas,
               strip=None,
               upx=True,
               name='main_test')

At first I got the error:

ImportError: libmkl_gf.so: cannot open shared object file: 
    No such file or directory

Then I found the .so library in

/home/sean/Canopy/appdata/canopy-1.3.0.1715.rh5-x86/lib

I manually copied several .so files into the dist direcotry.

However, I got another error:

  File "/home/sean/Enthought/Canopy_32bit/User/lib/python2.7/site-
        packages/PyInstaller/loader/pyi_importers.py", line 409, in load_module
        module = imp.load_module(fullname, fp, filename, self._c_ext_tuple)
  File "_ufuncs.pyx", line 1, in init scipy.special._ufuncs
        (scipy/special/_ufuncs.c:21824)
ImportError: No module named _ufuncs_cxx

How do I fix this error? And how should I modify the spec file to add those libraries and modules?

Edit:

I found the solutuion. My question is now: How can I modify the spec file to add the .so libraies? Now I have to mannually copy a number of .so files to the dist directory...

Edit2

It turns out that I have to add it to COLLECT:

a.binaries + ["libmkl_gf.so" , 
  "/home/sean/Canopy/appdata/canopy-1.3.0.1715.rh5-x86/lib/libmkl_gf.so", 
  "binaries"]

Is there any easy way to find the hidden imports or libraries?

Thanks

2 Answers 2

7

I just came out from solving the problem. I had to specify the missing modules with the --hidden-import flag. There were a lot of them missing, but I noticed most of them were from scipy.integrate. So I specified:

pyinstaller --hidden-import=scipy.integrate --hidden-import=scipy.integrate.quadpack --hidden-import=scipy.integrate._vode bla bla bla bla -F --windowed myscript.py

Painful, but worked

1

Do you want to try adding the library paths into LD_LIBRARY_PATH? something like,

export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/home/sean/Canopy/appdata/canopy-1.3.0.1715.rh5-x86/lib

or

export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:/home/sean/Canopy/appdata/canopy-1.3.0.1715.rh5-x86/lib (if already set up by admin) so that at run time all the .so in that folder won't give you linking error...

Oh I got what you mean,

import sys

sys.path.append('your_lib_path')

This should work.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.