I'm packaging some python packages using a well known third party packaging system, and I'm encountering an issue with the way entry points are created.

When I install an entry point on my machine, the entry point will contain a shebang pointed at whatever python interpreter, like so:

in /home/me/development/test/setup.py

from setuptools import setup
setup(
    entry_points={
        "console_scripts": [
            'some-entry-point = test:main',
        ]
    }
)        

in /home/me/.virtualenvs/test/bin/some-entry-point:

#!/home/me/.virtualenvs/test/bin/python
# EASY-INSTALL-ENTRY-SCRIPT: 'test==1.0.0','console_scripts','some-entry-point'
__requires__ = 'test==1.0.0'
import sys
from pkg_resources import load_entry_point

sys.exit(
   load_entry_point('test==1.0.0', 'console_scripts', 'some-entry-point')()
)

As you can see, the entry point boilerplate contains a hard-coded path to the python interpreter that's in the virtual environment that I'm using to create my third party package.

Installing this entry point using my third-party packaging system results in the entry point being installed on the machine. However, with this hard-coded reference to a python interpreter which doesn't exist on the target machine, the user must run python /path/to/some-entry-point.

The shebang makes this pretty unportable. (which isn't a design goal of virtualenv for sure; but I just need to MAKE it a little more portable here.)

I'd rather not resort to crazed find/xargs/sed commands. (Although that's my fallback.)

Is there some way that I can change the interpreter path after the shebang using setuptools flags or configs?

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up vote 12 down vote accepted

You can customize the console_scripts' shebang line by setting 'sys.executable' (learned this from a debian bug report). That is to say...

sys.executable = '/bin/custom_python'

setup(
  entry_points={
    'console_scripts': [
       ... etc...
    ]
  }
)

Better though would be to include the 'execute' argument when building...

setup(
  entry_points={
    'console_scripts': [
       ... etc...
    ]
  },
  options={
      'build_scripts': {
          'executable': '/bin/custom_python',
      },
  }
)
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That is exactly what I needed. Thanks! – gepoch Jul 1 '13 at 18:43

For future reference for someone who wants to do this at runtime without modifying the setup.py, it's possible to pass the interpreter path to setup.py build via pip with:

$ ./venv/bin/pip install --global-option=build \
--global-option='--executable=/bin/custom_python' .
...
$ head -1 ./venv/bin/some-entry-point
#!/bin/custom_python
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What are the chances that this option will get passed to the package's dependencies? About zero, I guess. – BrianTheLion Jul 13 '17 at 17:55

Simply change the shebang of your setup.py to match the python you want your entry points to use:

#!/bin/custom_python

(I tried @damian answer but not working for me, maybe the setuptools version on Debian Jessie is too old)

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