This question already has answers here:
Pyinstaller 'failed to execute' script
(2 answers)
Processes stuck in loop with PyInstaller-executable
(1 answer)
Closed 20 days ago.
I'm trying to package this script but I keep getting this error message
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "systeminfo.py", line 1, in <module>
ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'cpuinfo'
[6308] Failed to execute script systeminfo
I tried this into cmd
pyinstaller -F --hidden-import="cpuinfo" systeminfo.py
I'm on the latest version of pyinstaller and pip.
This is the import section of my file:
import psutil, platform, GPUtil, cpuinfo, os, sys, wmi, winreg, getpass
from tabulate import tabulate
from datetime import datetime
When I run it, it just opens up and closes out. But when I run it through CMD, that's when I get that error message.
How do I fix this? I want to include all the modules so I can run this script on different computers that don't have python installed.
EDIT:
I fixed this issue by using this thread: Pyinstaller 'failed to execute' script
I use pycharm so this worked for me.
The only issue is whenever the CMD opens up, nothing happens. The only thing that can printed is if I hardcode a print(). Functions aren't working at all.
fix it with :
pip install py-cpuinfo
Related
I am trying to transform a mp3 to a wav file in pycharm using subprocess
import subprocess
subprocess.call(['ffmpeg', '-i','test.mp3','test.wav'])
It returns error of not finding file, so I change the 'ffmpeg' to its path on my pc and it work.
The problem is that I am making an app and others might install ffpmeg on other's location (since it is download with zip and can be unzip at any place), but I don't know how to get its full path.
I tried using os module
import os
print(os.path('ffmpeg.exe'))
but it seems like it is not able to get the path of exe
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\Users\Percy\PycharmProjects\APP\test3.py", line 8, in <module>
print(os.path('ffmpeg.exe'))
TypeError: 'module' object is not callable
I also tried shutil module
import shutil
print(shutil.which('ffmpeg'))
print(shutil.which('ffmpeg.exe'))
but it returns 2 None (prob wrong cause I am 100% sure I have installed ffmpeg)
None
None
I want to ask if there is any way to get the full path of ffmpeg in pycharm or any method that I can make ffmpeg install in designated path with the app when it is downloaded by users
If you can make "everyone" to install using my ffmpeg-downloader then all of you can install FFmpeg by:
pip install ffmpeg-downloader
ffdl install
Then in Python your package could use
import ffmpeg_downloader as ffdl
sp.run([ffdl.ffmpeg_path, '-i', 'input.mp4', 'output.mkv'])
Alternately, you can use static-ffmpeg to (dynamically) install FFmpeg to Lib/site-package. (See the linked GitHub page for howto.)
I have a package that I would like to automatically install and use from within my own Python script.
Right now I have this:
>>> # ... code for downloading and un-targzing
>>> from subprocess import call
>>> call(['python', 'setup.py', 'install'])
>>> from <package> import <name>
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: No module named <package>
Then I can continue like this:
>>> exit()
$ python
>>> from <package> import <name>
And it works just fine. For some reason, Python is able to pick up the package just fine if I restart after running the setup.py file, but not if I don't. How can I make it work without having the restart step in the middle?
(Also, is there a superior alternative to using subprocess.call() to run setup.py within a python script? Seems silly to spawn a whole new Python interpreter from within one, but I don't know how else to pass that install argument.)
Depending on your Python version, you want to look into imp or importlib.
e.g. for Python 3, you can do:
from importlib.machinery import SourceFileLoader
directory_name = # os.path to module
# where __init__.py is the module entry point
s = SourceFileloader(directory_name, __init__.py).load_module()
or, if you're feeling brave that your Python path knows about the directory:
map(__import__, 'new_package_name')
Hope this helps,
I downloaded from seaborn from GitHub.
Through command prompt, cd to downloads\seaborn folder
python install setup.py
Then using spyder from anaconda, checked if it was installed by running the following in a console
import pip
sorted(["%s==%s" % (i.key, i.version)
for i in pip.get_installed_distributions()])
Seeing that it was not there, go to tools and select "Update module names list"
Again trying the previous code in a python console, the lib was still not showing.
Restarting Spyder and trying import seaborn worked.
Hope this helps.
I'm having a problem with Python when importing module openpyxl. I'm using Python 3.4 and have followed instructions and managed to install the module.
When I'm importing the module like this:
from openpyxl import workbook
It gives me the following error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:/Python34/test.py", line 1, in <module>
from openpyxl import workbook
ImportError: No module named 'openpyxl'
I installed the module following this step-by-step method:
I went in to the control panel - system and security - System - advanced system - system - enviroment variables - find path in the scroll bar and write in at the end where Python is installed. After this is done you can go in CMD and write python and it will find it.
In your modulepackage you downloaded there is a setup.py look up the directory of this.
Go to the CMD and write in cd followed by the directory.
Then write python setup.py and the setup will begin.
After the setup is done go in to the CMD and write python and then import "module name" if no error is shown the setup is finished.
Help me Stackoverflow, you're my only hope!
Im trying to compile Godot engine following the instructions here
When I run scons bin/godot as the tutorial says, I get the following error:
scons: Reading SConscript files ...
ImportError: cannot import name _args_from_interpreter_flags:
File "/home/grayfox/github/godot2/godot/SConstruct", line 9:
import multiprocessing
File "/usr/lib64/python2.7/multiprocessing/__init__.py", line 65:
from multiprocessing.util import SUBDEBUG, SUBWARNING
File "/usr/lib64/python2.7/multiprocessing/util.py", line 40:
from subprocess import _args_from_interpreter_flags
The SConstruct file starts this way:
EnsureSConsVersion(0,14);
import string
import os
import os.path
import glob
import sys
import methods
import multiprocessing
...
If I try to run python SConstruct I get an error complaining about missing functions defined by scons (i.e. the script fails after doing all the imports).
Commenting import multiprocessing fixes the issue but I don't want to modify that file, as I would have to revert the change if I ever make a pull request. The project is quite active so I believe this has something to do with my local configuration.
Any ideas why the script is failing to import _args_from_interpreter_flags only if I execute it via scons?
[UPDATE]
I did a fresh Gentoo install and the problem persists. I did some tests and I found this:
In a python terminal>
>>> import SCons.Script
>>> from subprocess import _args_from_interpreter_flags
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
ImportError: cannot import name _args_from_interpreter_flags
>>> import subprocess
>>> subprocess.__file__
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/SCons/compat/_scons_subprocess.pyc'
But the output is different if I do this:
>>> import subprocess
>>> subprocess.__file__
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/subprocess.pyc'
So I update my question: Is this a bug? Can anybody reproduce it in other distros? If it's a bug, should I report it to Gentoo or to SCons?
[ANOTHER UPDATE]
Adding temp.extend([os.path.join(x, 'lib64') for x in prefs]) did't work, same error.
Adding print sys.path at the beginning of the compact module gives:
['/usr/lib64/python-exec/python2.7/scons-local-2.3.0',
'/usr/lib64/python-exec/python2.7/scons-local',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/lib32/scons-2.3.0',
'/usr/lib32/scons-2.3.0',
'/usr/local/lib32/scons-2.3.0',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/lib/python2.7/site-packages/scons-2.3.0',
'/usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/scons-2.3.0',
'/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/scons-2.3.0',
'/usr/lib64/scons-2.3.0',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/lib32/scons',
'/usr/lib32/scons',
'/usr/local/lib32/scons',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/lib/python2.7/site-packages/scons',
'/usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/scons',
'/usr/local/lib/python2.7/site-packages/scons',
'/usr/lib64/scons',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/RBTools-0.6-py2.7.egg',
'/usr/lib64/python27.zip',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7', #It's here, so what's the problem?
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/plat-linux2',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/lib-tk',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/lib-old',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/lib-dynload',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/gtk-2.0',
'/usr/lib64/python2.7/site-packages/wx-2.8-gtk2-unicode']
It looks as if this isn't really a problem connected to SCons directly. You might have an alien "subprocess" module/package installed in your system. Also check out Cannot import name _args_from_interpreter_flags which seems to be related.
Based on your updated question: I tried to compile Godot on my machine (Python 2.7.3, SCons 2.3.1, Ubuntu 12.04 LTS) and it's running fine, so the problem is not related to the provided SConstruct (and its supporting build description files in subfolders). The "_scons_subprocess" module gets used only when the import of the original "subprocess.py" fails. So I suspect that the SCons start script sets up a wrong sys.path, which may happen under 64bit (see issue http://scons.tigris.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=2657 ).
After you added "temp.extend([os.path.join(x, 'lib64') for x in prefs])", your "print sys.path" statement shows paths like "/usr/lib64/python-exec" in its output. A Google search turned up the page http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-985402-start-0.html for me. It describes an issue with Gentoo, where programs are installed as links to pip. Please follow the given advice and see if this fixes your problem.
It's a bug in Gentoo's scons-2.3.0 and scons-2.3.1 ebuilds (see bug report). It has been fixed in versions 2.3.1-r1 and higher.
I have a software that has python 2.5.5. I want to send a command that would start a script in python 2.7.5 and then proceed with the script.
I tried using
#!python2.7.5
and http://redsymbol.net/articles/env-and-python-scripts-version/
But I cant get it to work...
In my python 2.5.5 I can execute script as
execfile("c:/script/test.py")
The problem is that the 2.7.5 has a module comtypes + few other. I dont know how to install it for my 2.5.5 so I'm trying to start a separate script and run it under python27. Now another reason why I want it its because I want to take the load off program. I have 2 heavy tasks to perform. The second task is the one that need comptypes so sending it to external shell/app would do perfect trick. Is there a way to do it ?
I wish I could just type run("C:/Python27/python.exe % C:/script/test,py")
Thanks, bye.
Little update. I try to run
import os
os.system("\"C:\Python27\python.exe\" D:\test\runTest.py")
But I'm getting a quick pop up and close window saying that
Import Error : no module named site...
This works if I run from external shell but not from here :(
So I've tried another approach this time to add modules to python... in any case I run this :
import os
import sys
sys.path.append("C:/python27")
sys.path.append("C:/Python27/libs")
sys.path.append("C:/Python27/Lib")
sys.path.append("C:/Python27/Lib/logging")
sys.path.append("C:/Python27/Lib/site-packages")
sys.path.append("C:/Python27/Lib/ctypes")
sys.path.append("C:/Python27/DLLs")
import PyQt4
print PyQt4
import comtypes
import logging
but it crashes with C error...
Runtime Error :
Program: c:\Pr...
R6034
An application has made attempt to load the C runtime library incorectly.
blablabla....
How can I import it ? Maybe if I can import it I can run it directly from my app rather than starting separate python...
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 18, in <module>
File "C:\Python27\Lib\site-packages\comtypes\__init__.py", line 22, in <module>
from ctypes import *
File "C:\Python27\Lib\ctypes\__init__.py", line 10, in <module>
from _ctypes import Union, Structure, Array
ImportError: DLL load failed: A dynamic link library (DLL) initialization routine failed.
Another update to isseu
so I run now
import os
os.system("start cmd {D:\test\runTest.py}")
now this works and he open CMD with c:\Python27 as directory but he dont run the file... any hitns how to fix it?
Use "raw" strings so that you don't need to escape as much; I think the backslashes are what was breaking your code since backslash is considered an escape character except in raw strings.
Also, use the subprocess module. It makes it easy to avoid manually making a safe command string (the module takes care of that for you). All you need to do is pass it a list of arguments.
Your code would then look something like this:
import subprocess
proc = subprocess.Popen([r"C:\Python27\python.exe", r"D:\test\runTest.py"])
# then either do this
proc.wait() # wait until the process finishes
# or this
while True:
# NOTE: do something else here
# poll the process until it is done
if proc.poll() is not None:
break # break out of loop
See subprocess docs for Python 2 here. Be sure to check if a feature was added after Python 2.5 (the 2.5 docs aren't available online anymore AFAIK).
UPDATE:
I just noticed that you tried to use the Python 2.7 libraries and modules in your 2.5 code. This probably won't work due to new features added after 2.5. But it got me thinking how you might be able to make 2.7 work.
It may be that your Python2.7 install can't find its libraries; this is probably why you get the error Import Error : no module named site. You can do something like the above and modify the PYTHONPATH environment variable before starting the subprocess, like this:
import os
import subprocess
paths = [r"C:\python27", r"C:\python27\libs", r"C:\python27\Lib\site-packages", r"C:\python27\DLLs"]
paths += os.environ.get('PYTHONPATH', '').split(os.pathsep)
env27 = dict(os.environ)
env27['PYTHONPATH'] = os.pathsep.join(paths)
proc = subprocess.Popen([r"C:\Python27\python.exe", r"D:\test\runTest.py"], env=env27)