Added in version 3.14.
Python can be initialized with Py_InitializeFromInitConfig().
The Py_RunMain() function can be used to write a customized Python
program.
See also Initialization, Finalization, and Threads.
See also
PEP 741 “Python Configuration C API”.
Example of customized Python always running with the Python Development
Mode enabled; return -1 on error:
int init_python(void)
{
PyInitConfig *config = PyInitConfig_Create();
if (config == NULL) {
printf("PYTHON INIT ERROR: memory allocation failed\n");
return -1;
}
// Enable the Python Development Mode
if (PyInitConfig_SetInt(config, "dev_mode", 1) < 0) {
goto error;
}
// Initialize Python with the configuration
if (Py_InitializeFromInitConfig(config) < 0) {
goto error;
}
PyInitConfig_Free(config);
return 0;
error:
{
// Display the error message.
//
// This uncommon braces style is used, because you cannot make
// goto targets point to variable declarations.
const char *err_msg;
(void)PyInitConfig_GetError(config, &err_msg);
printf("PYTHON INIT ERROR: %s\n", err_msg);
PyInitConfig_Free(config);
return -1;
}
}
Opaque structure to configure the Python initialization.
Create a new initialization configuration using Isolated Configuration default values.
It must be freed by PyInitConfig_Free().
Return NULL on memory allocation failure.
Free memory of the initialization configuration config.
If config is NULL, no operation is performed.
Get the config error message.
Set *err_msg and return 1 if an error is set.
Set *err_msg to NULL and return 0 otherwise.
An error message is a UTF-8 encoded string.
If config has an exit code, format the exit code as an error message.
The error message remains valid until another PyInitConfig
function is called with config. The caller doesn’t have to free the
error message.
Get the config exit code.
Set *exitcode and return 1 if config has an exit code set.
Return 0 if config has no exit code set.
Only the Py_InitializeFromInitConfig() function can set an exit
code if the parse_argv option is non-zero.
An exit code can be set when parsing the command line failed (exit
code 2) or when a command line option asks to display the command
line help (exit code 0).
The configuration option name parameter must be a non-NULL null-terminated UTF-8 encoded string. See Configuration Options.
Test if the configuration has an option called name.
Return 1 if the option exists, or return 0 otherwise.
Get an integer configuration option.
Set *value, and return 0 on success.
Set an error in config and return -1 on error.
Get a string configuration option as a null-terminated UTF-8 encoded string.
Set *value, and return 0 on success.
Set an error in config and return -1 on error.
*value can be set to NULL if the option is an optional string and the
option is unset.
On success, the string must be released with free(value) if it’s not
NULL.
Get a string list configuration option as an array of null-terminated UTF-8 encoded strings.
Set *length and *value, and return 0 on success.
Set an error in config and return -1 on error.
On success, the string list must be released with
PyInitConfig_FreeStrList(length, items).
Free memory of a string list created by
PyInitConfig_GetStrList().
The configuration option name parameter must be a non-NULL null-terminated UTF-8 encoded string. See Configuration Options.
Some configuration options have side effects on other options. This logic is
only implemented when Py_InitializeFromInitConfig() is called, not by the
“Set” functions below. For example, setting dev_mode to 1 does not set
faulthandler to 1.
Set an integer configuration option.
Return 0 on success.
Set an error in config and return -1 on error.
Set a string configuration option from a null-terminated UTF-8 encoded string. The string is copied.
Return 0 on success.
Set an error in config and return -1 on error.
Set a string list configuration option from an array of null-terminated UTF-8 encoded strings. The string list is copied.
Return 0 on success.
Set an error in config and return -1 on error.
Add a built-in extension module to the table of built-in modules.
The new module can be imported by the name name, and uses the function initfunc as the initialization function called on the first attempted import.
Return 0 on success.
Set an error in config and return -1 on error.
If Python is initialized multiple times, PyInitConfig_AddModule() must
be called at each Python initialization.
Similar to the PyImport_AppendInittab() function.
Initialize Python from the initialization configuration.
Return 0 on success.
Set an error in config and return -1 on error.
Set an exit code in config and return -1 if Python wants to
exit.
See PyInitConfig_GetExitcode() for the exit code case.
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Visibility:
Public: Can by get by PyConfig_Get() and set by
PyConfig_Set().
Read-only: Can by get by PyConfig_Get(), but cannot be set by
PyConfig_Set().
At runtime, it’s possible to get and set configuration options using
PyConfig_Get() and PyConfig_Set() functions.
The configuration option name parameter must be a non-NULL null-terminated UTF-8 encoded string. See Configuration Options.
Some options are read from the sys attributes. For example, the option
"argv" is read from sys.argv.
Get the current runtime value of a configuration option as a Python object.
Return a new reference on success.
Set an exception and return NULL on error.
The object type depends on the configuration option. It can be:
bool
int
str
list[str]
dict[str, str]
The caller must have an attached thread state. The function cannot be called before Python initialization nor after Python finalization.
Added in version 3.14.
Similar to PyConfig_Get(), but get the value as a C int.
Return 0 on success.
Set an exception and return -1 on error.
Added in version 3.14.
Get all configuration option names as a frozenset.
Return a new reference on success.
Set an exception and return NULL on error.
The caller must have an attached thread state. The function cannot be called before Python initialization nor after Python finalization.
Added in version 3.14.
Set the current runtime value of a configuration option.
Raise a ValueError if there is no option name.
Raise a ValueError if value is an invalid value.
Raise a ValueError if the option is read-only (cannot be set).
Raise a TypeError if value has not the proper type.
The caller must have an attached thread state. The function cannot be called before Python initialization nor after Python finalization.
Raises an auditing event cpython.PyConfig_Set with arguments name, value.
Added in version 3.14.
Added in version 3.8.
Python can be initialized with Py_InitializeFromConfig() and the
PyConfig structure. It can be preinitialized with
Py_PreInitialize() and the PyPreConfig structure.
There are two kinds of configuration:
The Python Configuration can be used to build a customized Python which behaves as the regular Python. For example, environment variables and command line arguments are used to configure Python.
The Isolated Configuration can be used to embed Python into an application. It isolates Python from the system. For example, environment variables are ignored, the LC_CTYPE locale is left unchanged and no signal handler is registered.
The Py_RunMain() function can be used to write a customized Python
program.
See also Initialization, Finalization, and Threads.
See also
PEP 587 “Python Initialization Configuration”.
Example of customized Python always running in isolated mode:
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
PyStatus status;
PyConfig config;
PyConfig_InitPythonConfig(&config);
config.isolated = 1;
/* Decode command line arguments.
Implicitly preinitialize Python (in isolated mode). */
status = PyConfig_SetBytesArgv(&config, argc, argv);
if (PyStatus_Exception(status)) {
goto exception;
}
status = Py_InitializeFromConfig(&config);
if (PyStatus_Exception(status)) {
goto exception;
}
PyConfig_Clear(&config);
return Py_RunMain();
exception:
PyConfig_Clear(&config);
if (PyStatus_IsExit(status)) {
return status.exitcode;
}
/* Display the error message and exit the process with
non-zero exit code */
Py_ExitStatusException(status);
}
List of wchar_t* strings.
If length is non-zero, items must be non-NULL and all strings must be
non-NULL.
Methods:
Append item to list.
Python must be preinitialized to call this function.
Insert item into list at index.
If index is greater than or equal to list length, append item to list.
index must be greater than or equal to 0.
Python must be preinitialized to call this function.
Structure fields:
List length.
List items.
Structure to store an initialization function status: success, error or exit.
For an error, it can store the C function name which created the error.
Structure fields:
Exit code. Argument passed to exit().
Error message.
Name of the function which created an error, can be NULL.
Functions to create a status:
Initialization error with a message.
err_msg must not be NULL.
Functions to handle a status:
Is the status an error or an exit? If true, the exception must be
handled; by calling Py_ExitStatusException() for example.
Note
Internally, Python uses macros which set PyStatus.func,
whereas functions to create a status set func to NULL.
Example:
PyStatus alloc(void **ptr, size_t size)
{
*ptr = PyMem_RawMalloc(size);
if (*ptr == NULL) {
return PyStatus_NoMemory();
}
return PyStatus_Ok();
}
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
void *ptr;
PyStatus status = alloc(&ptr, 16);
if (PyStatus_Exception(status)) {
Py_ExitStatusException(status);
}
PyMem_Free(ptr);
return 0;
}
Structure used to preinitialize Python.
Function to initialize a preconfiguration:
Initialize the preconfiguration with Python Configuration.
Initialize the preconfiguration with Isolated Configuration.
Structure fields:
Name of the Python memory allocators:
PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_NOT_SET (0): don’t change memory allocators
(use defaults).
PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_DEFAULT (1): default memory allocators.
PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_DEBUG (2): default memory allocators with debug hooks.
PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_MALLOC (3): use malloc() of the C library.
PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_MALLOC_DEBUG (4): force usage of
malloc() with debug hooks.
PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_PYMALLOC (5): Python pymalloc memory
allocator.
PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_PYMALLOC_DEBUG (6): Python pymalloc
memory allocator with debug hooks.
PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_MIMALLOC (6): use mimalloc, a fast
malloc replacement.
PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_MIMALLOC_DEBUG (7): use mimalloc, a fast
malloc replacement with debug hooks.
PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_PYMALLOC and PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_PYMALLOC_DEBUG are
not supported if Python is configured using --without-pymalloc.
PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_MIMALLOC and PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_MIMALLOC_DEBUG are
not supported if Python is configured using --without-mimalloc or if the underlying atomic support isn’t
available.
See Memory Management.
Default: PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_NOT_SET.
Set the LC_CTYPE locale to the user preferred locale.
If equals to 0, set coerce_c_locale and
coerce_c_locale_warn members to 0.
See the locale encoding.
Default: 1 in Python config, 0 in isolated config.
If equals to 2, coerce the C locale.
If equals to 1, read the LC_CTYPE locale to decide if it should be
coerced.
See the locale encoding.
Default: -1 in Python config, 0 in isolated config.
If non-zero, emit a warning if the C locale is coerced.
Default: -1 in Python config, 0 in isolated config.
Python Development Mode: see
PyConfig.dev_mode.
Default: -1 in Python mode, 0 in isolated mode.
Isolated mode: see PyConfig.isolated.
Default: 0 in Python mode, 1 in isolated mode.
If non-zero:
Set PyPreConfig.utf8_mode to 0,
Set PyConfig.filesystem_encoding to "mbcs",
Set PyConfig.filesystem_errors to "replace".
Initialized from the PYTHONLEGACYWINDOWSFSENCODING environment
variable value.
Only available on Windows. #ifdef MS_WINDOWS macro can be used for
Windows specific code.
Default: 0.
If non-zero, Py_PreInitializeFromArgs() and
Py_PreInitializeFromBytesArgs() parse their argv argument the
same way the regular Python parses command line arguments: see
Command Line Arguments.
Default: 1 in Python config, 0 in isolated config.
Use environment variables? See
PyConfig.use_environment.
Default: 1 in Python config and 0 in isolated config.
If non-zero, enable the Python UTF-8 Mode.
Set to 0 or 1 by the -X utf8 command line option
and the PYTHONUTF8 environment variable.
Default: 1.
The preinitialization of Python:
Set the Python memory allocators (PyPreConfig.allocator)
Configure the LC_CTYPE locale (locale encoding)
Set the Python UTF-8 Mode
(PyPreConfig.utf8_mode)
The current preconfiguration (PyPreConfig type) is stored in
_PyRuntime.preconfig.
Functions to preinitialize Python:
Preinitialize Python from preconfig preconfiguration.
preconfig must not be NULL.
Preinitialize Python from preconfig preconfiguration.
Parse argv command line arguments (bytes strings) if
parse_argv of preconfig is non-zero.
preconfig must not be NULL.
Preinitialize Python from preconfig preconfiguration.
Parse argv command line arguments (wide strings) if
parse_argv of preconfig is non-zero.
preconfig must not be NULL.
The caller is responsible to handle exceptions (error or exit) using
PyStatus_Exception() and Py_ExitStatusException().
For Python Configuration
(PyPreConfig_InitPythonConfig()), if Python is initialized with
command line arguments, the command line arguments must also be passed to
preinitialize Python, since they have an effect on the pre-configuration
like encodings. For example, the -X utf8 command line option
enables the Python UTF-8 Mode.
PyMem_SetAllocator() can be called after Py_PreInitialize() and
before Py_InitializeFromConfig() to install a custom memory allocator.
It can be called before Py_PreInitialize() if
PyPreConfig.allocator is set to PYMEM_ALLOCATOR_NOT_SET.
Python memory allocation functions like PyMem_RawMalloc() must not be
used before the Python preinitialization, whereas calling directly malloc()
and free() is always safe. Py_DecodeLocale() must not be called
before the Python preinitialization.
Example using the preinitialization to enable the Python UTF-8 Mode:
PyStatus status;
PyPreConfig preconfig;
PyPreConfig_InitPythonConfig(&preconfig);
preconfig.utf8_mode = 1;
status = Py_PreInitialize(&preconfig);
if (PyStatus_Exception(status)) {
Py_ExitStatusException(status);
}
/* at this point, Python speaks UTF-8 */
Py_Initialize();
/* ... use Python API here ... */
Py_Finalize();
Structure containing most parameters to configure Python.
When done, the PyConfig_Clear() function must be used to release the
configuration memory.
Structure methods:
Initialize configuration with the Python Configuration.
Initialize configuration with the Isolated Configuration.
Copy the wide character string str into *config_str.
Preinitialize Python if needed.
Decode str using Py_DecodeLocale() and set the result into
*config_str.
Preinitialize Python if needed.
Set command line arguments (argv member of
config) from the argv list of wide character strings.
Preinitialize Python if needed.
Set command line arguments (argv member of
config) from the argv list of bytes strings. Decode bytes using
Py_DecodeLocale().
Preinitialize Python if needed.
Set the list of wide strings list to length and items.
Preinitialize Python if needed.
Read all Python configuration.
Fields which are already initialized are left unchanged.
Fields for path configuration are no longer calculated or modified when calling this function, as of Python 3.11.
The PyConfig_Read() function only parses
PyConfig.argv arguments once: PyConfig.parse_argv
is set to 2 after arguments are parsed. Since Python arguments are
stripped from PyConfig.argv, parsing arguments twice would
parse the application options as Python options.
Preinitialize Python if needed.
Changed in version 3.10: The PyConfig.argv arguments are now only parsed once,
PyConfig.parse_argv is set to 2 after arguments are
parsed, and arguments are only parsed if
PyConfig.parse_argv equals 1.
Changed in version 3.11: PyConfig_Read() no longer calculates all paths, and so fields
listed under Python Path Configuration may
no longer be updated until Py_InitializeFromConfig() is
called.
Most PyConfig methods preinitialize Python if needed.
In that case, the Python preinitialization configuration
(PyPreConfig) in based on the PyConfig. If configuration
fields which are in common with PyPreConfig are tuned, they must
be set before calling a PyConfig method:
Moreover, if PyConfig_SetArgv() or PyConfig_SetBytesArgv()
is used, this method must be called before other methods, since the
preinitialization configuration depends on command line arguments (if
parse_argv is non-zero).
The caller of these methods is responsible to handle exceptions (error or
exit) using PyStatus_Exception() and Py_ExitStatusException().
Structure fields:
Set sys.argv command line arguments based on
argv. These parameters are similar to those passed
to the program’s main() function with the difference that the
first entry should refer to the script file to be executed rather than
the executable hosting the Python interpreter. If there isn’t a script
that will be run, the first entry in argv can be an
empty string.
Set parse_argv to 1 to parse
argv the same way the regular Python parses Python
command line arguments and then to strip Python arguments from
argv.
If argv is empty, an empty string is added to
ensure that sys.argv always exists and is never empty.
Default: NULL.
See also the orig_argv member.
If equals to zero, Py_RunMain() prepends a potentially unsafe path to
sys.path at startup:
If argv[0] is equal to L"-m"
(python -m module), prepend the current working directory.
If running a script (python script.py), prepend the script’s
directory. If it’s a symbolic link, resolve symbolic links.
Otherwise (python -c code and python), prepend an empty string,
which means the current working directory.
Set to 1 by the -P command line option and the
PYTHONSAFEPATH environment variable.
Default: 0 in Python config, 1 in isolated config.
Added in version 3.11.
Default: NULL.
Part of the Python Path Configuration output.
See also PyConfig.exec_prefix.
Python base executable: sys._base_executable.
Set by the __PYVENV_LAUNCHER__ environment variable.
Set from PyConfig.executable if NULL.
Default: NULL.
Part of the Python Path Configuration output.
See also PyConfig.executable.
Default: NULL.
Part of the Python Path Configuration output.
See also PyConfig.prefix.
If equals to 0 and configure_c_stdio is non-zero,
disable buffering on the C streams stdout and stderr.
Set to 0 by the -u command line option and the
PYTHONUNBUFFERED environment variable.
stdin is always opened in buffered mode.
Default: 1.
If equals to 1, issue a warning when comparing bytes or
bytearray with str, or comparing bytes with
int.
If equal or greater to 2, raise a BytesWarning exception in these
cases.
Incremented by the -b command line option.
Default: 0.
Deprecated since version 3.15, will be removed in version 3.17: The -b and -bb options will become no-op in 3.17.
bytes_warning member will be removed in 3.17.
If non-zero, emit a EncodingWarning warning when io.TextIOWrapper
uses its default encoding. See Opt-in EncodingWarning for details.
Default: 0.
Added in version 3.10.
If equals to 0, disables the inclusion of the end line and column
mappings in code objects. Also disables traceback printing carets to
specific error locations.
Set to 0 by the PYTHONNODEBUGRANGES environment variable
and by the -X no_debug_ranges command line option.
Default: 1.
Added in version 3.11.
Control the validation behavior of hash-based .pyc files:
value of the --check-hash-based-pycs command line option.
Valid values:
L"always": Hash the source file for invalidation regardless of
value of the ‘check_source’ flag.
L"never": Assume that hash-based pycs always are valid.
L"default": The ‘check_source’ flag in hash-based pycs
determines invalidation.
Default: L"default".
See also PEP 552 “Deterministic pycs”.
If non-zero, configure C standard streams:
On Windows, set the binary mode (O_BINARY) on stdin, stdout and
stderr.
If buffered_stdio equals zero, disable buffering
of stdin, stdout and stderr streams.
If interactive is non-zero, enable stream
buffering on stdin and stdout (only stdout on Windows).
Default: 1 in Python config, 0 in isolated config.
If non-zero, enable the Python Development Mode.
Set to 1 by the -X dev option and the
PYTHONDEVMODE environment variable.
Default: -1 in Python mode, 0 in isolated mode.
Dump Python references?
If non-zero, dump all objects which are still alive at exit.
Set to 1 by the PYTHONDUMPREFS environment variable.
Needs a special build of Python with the Py_TRACE_REFS macro defined:
see the configure --with-trace-refs option.
Default: 0.
Filename where to dump Python references.
Set by the PYTHONDUMPREFSFILE environment variable.
Default: NULL.
Added in version 3.11.
The site-specific directory prefix where the platform-dependent Python
files are installed: sys.exec_prefix.
Default: NULL.
Part of the Python Path Configuration output.
See also PyConfig.base_exec_prefix.
The absolute path of the executable binary for the Python interpreter:
sys.executable.
Default: NULL.
Part of the Python Path Configuration output.
See also PyConfig.base_executable.
Enable faulthandler?
If non-zero, call faulthandler.enable() at startup.
Set to 1 by -X faulthandler and the
PYTHONFAULTHANDLER environment variable.
Default: -1 in Python mode, 0 in isolated mode.
Filesystem encoding:
sys.getfilesystemencoding().
On macOS, Android and VxWorks: use "utf-8" by default.
On Windows: use "utf-8" by default, or "mbcs" if
legacy_windows_fs_encoding of
PyPreConfig is non-zero.
Default encoding on other platforms:
"utf-8" if PyPreConfig.utf8_mode is non-zero.
"ascii" if Python detects that nl_langinfo(CODESET) announces
the ASCII encoding, whereas the mbstowcs() function
decodes from a different encoding (usually Latin1).
"utf-8" if nl_langinfo(CODESET) returns an empty string.
Otherwise, use the locale encoding:
nl_langinfo(CODESET) result.
At Python startup, the encoding name is normalized to the Python codec
name. For example, "ANSI_X3.4-1968" is replaced with "ascii".
See also the filesystem_errors member.
Filesystem error handler:
sys.getfilesystemencodeerrors().
On Windows: use "surrogatepass" by default, or "replace" if
legacy_windows_fs_encoding of
PyPreConfig is non-zero.
On other platforms: use "surrogateescape" by default.
Supported error handlers:
"strict"
"surrogateescape"
"surrogatepass" (only supported with the UTF-8 encoding)
See also the filesystem_encoding member.
If non-zero, use frozen modules.
Set by the PYTHON_FROZEN_MODULES environment variable.
Default: 1 in a release build, or 0 in a debug build.
Randomized hash function seed.
If use_hash_seed is zero, a seed is chosen randomly
at Python startup, and hash_seed is ignored.
Set by the PYTHONHASHSEED environment variable.
Default use_hash_seed value: -1 in Python mode, 0 in isolated
mode.
Set the default Python “home” directory, that is, the location of the
standard Python libraries (see PYTHONHOME).
Set by the PYTHONHOME environment variable.
Default: NULL.
Part of the Python Path Configuration input.
If
1, profile import time. If2, include additional output that indicates when an imported module has already been loaded.Set by the
-X importtimeoption and thePYTHONPROFILEIMPORTTIMEenvironment variable.Default:
0.
Changed in version 3.14: Added support for import_time = 2
Enter interactive mode after executing a script or a command.
If greater than 0, enable inspect: when a script is passed as first
argument or the -c option is used, enter interactive mode after executing
the script or the command, even when sys.stdin does not appear to
be a terminal.
Incremented by the -i command line option. Set to 1 if the
PYTHONINSPECT environment variable is non-empty.
Default: 0.
Install Python signal handlers?
Default: 1 in Python mode, 0 in isolated mode.
If greater than 0, enable the interactive mode (REPL).
Incremented by the -i command line option.
Default: 0.
Configures the integer string conversion length limitation. An initial value of -1 means the value will
be taken from the command line or environment or otherwise default to
4300 (sys.int_info.default_max_str_digits). A value of 0
disables the limitation. Values greater than zero but less than 640
(sys.int_info.str_digits_check_threshold) are unsupported and
will produce an error.
Configured by the -X int_max_str_digits command line
flag or the PYTHONINTMAXSTRDIGITS environment variable.
Default: -1 in Python mode. 4300
(sys.int_info.default_max_str_digits) in isolated mode.
Added in version 3.12.
If the value of cpu_count is not -1 then it will
override the return values of os.cpu_count(),
os.process_cpu_count(), and multiprocessing.cpu_count().
Configured by the -X cpu_count=n|default command line
flag or the PYTHON_CPU_COUNT environment variable.
Default: -1.
Added in version 3.13.
If greater than 0, enable isolated mode:
Set safe_path to 1:
don’t prepend a potentially unsafe path to sys.path at Python
startup, such as the current directory, the script’s directory or an
empty string.
Set use_environment to 0: ignore PYTHON
environment variables.
Set user_site_directory to 0: don’t add the user
site directory to sys.path.
Python REPL doesn’t import readline nor enable default readline
configuration on interactive prompts.
Set to 1 by the -I command line option.
Default: 0 in Python mode, 1 in isolated mode.
See also the Isolated Configuration and
PyPreConfig.isolated.
If non-zero, use io.FileIO instead of
io._WindowsConsoleIO for sys.stdin, sys.stdout
and sys.stderr.
Set to 1 if the PYTHONLEGACYWINDOWSSTDIO environment
variable is set to a non-empty string.
Only available on Windows. #ifdef MS_WINDOWS macro can be used for
Windows specific code.
Default: 0.
See also the PEP 528 (Change Windows console encoding to UTF-8).
If non-zero, dump statistics on Python pymalloc memory allocator at exit.
Set to 1 by the PYTHONMALLOCSTATS environment variable.
The option is ignored if Python is configured using
the --without-pymalloc option.
Default: 0.
Platform library directory name: sys.platlibdir.
Set by the PYTHONPLATLIBDIR environment variable.
Default: value of the PLATLIBDIR macro which is set by the
configure --with-platlibdir option
(default: "lib", or "DLLs" on Windows).
Part of the Python Path Configuration input.
Added in version 3.9.
Changed in version 3.11: This macro is now used on Windows to locate the standard
library extension modules, typically under DLLs. However,
for compatibility, note that this value is ignored for any
non-standard layouts, including in-tree builds and virtual
environments.
Module search paths (sys.path) as a string separated by DELIM
(os.pathsep).
Set by the PYTHONPATH environment variable.
Default: NULL.
Part of the Python Path Configuration input.
Module search paths: sys.path.
If module_search_paths_set is equal to 0,
Py_InitializeFromConfig() will replace
module_search_paths and sets
module_search_paths_set to 1.
Default: empty list (module_search_paths) and 0
(module_search_paths_set).
Part of the Python Path Configuration output.
Compilation optimization level:
0: Peephole optimizer, set __debug__ to True.
1: Level 0, remove assertions, set __debug__ to False.
2: Level 1, strip docstrings.
Incremented by the -O command line option. Set to the
PYTHONOPTIMIZE environment variable value.
Default: 0.
The list of the original command line arguments passed to the Python
executable: sys.orig_argv.
If orig_argv list is empty and
argv is not a list only containing an empty
string, PyConfig_Read() copies argv into
orig_argv before modifying
argv (if parse_argv is
non-zero).
See also the argv member and the
Py_GetArgcArgv() function.
Default: empty list.
Added in version 3.10.
Parse command line arguments?
If equals to 1, parse argv the same way the regular
Python parses command line arguments, and strip
Python arguments from argv.
The PyConfig_Read() function only parses
PyConfig.argv arguments once: PyConfig.parse_argv
is set to 2 after arguments are parsed. Since Python arguments are
stripped from PyConfig.argv, parsing arguments twice would
parse the application options as Python options.
Default: 1 in Python mode, 0 in isolated mode.
Changed in version 3.10: The PyConfig.argv arguments are now only parsed if
PyConfig.parse_argv equals to 1.
Parser debug mode. If greater than 0, turn on parser debugging output (for expert only, depending
on compilation options).
Incremented by the -d command line option. Set to the
PYTHONDEBUG environment variable value.
Needs a debug build of Python (the Py_DEBUG macro
must be defined).
Default: 0.
If non-zero, calculation of path configuration is allowed to log
warnings into stderr. If equals to 0, suppress these warnings.
Default: 1 in Python mode, 0 in isolated mode.
Part of the Python Path Configuration input.
Changed in version 3.11: Now also applies on Windows.
The site-specific directory prefix where the platform independent Python
files are installed: sys.prefix.
Default: NULL.
Part of the Python Path Configuration output.
See also PyConfig.base_prefix.
Program name used to initialize executable and in
early error messages during Python initialization.
On macOS, use PYTHONEXECUTABLE environment variable if set.
If the WITH_NEXT_FRAMEWORK macro is defined, use
__PYVENV_LAUNCHER__ environment variable if set.
Use argv[0] of argv if available and
non-empty.
Otherwise, use L"python" on Windows, or L"python3" on other
platforms.
Default: NULL.
Part of the Python Path Configuration input.
Directory where cached .pyc files are written:
sys.pycache_prefix.
Set by the -X pycache_prefix=PATH command line option and
the PYTHONPYCACHEPREFIX environment variable.
The command-line option takes precedence.
If NULL, sys.pycache_prefix is set to None.
Default: NULL.
Quiet mode. If greater than 0, don’t display the copyright and version at
Python startup in interactive mode.
Incremented by the -q command line option.
Default: 0.
Value of the -c command line option.
Used by Py_RunMain().
Default: NULL.
Filename passed on the command line: trailing command line argument
without -c or -m. It is used by the
Py_RunMain() function.
For example, it is set to script.py by the python3 script.py arg
command line.
See also the PyConfig.skip_source_first_line option.
Default: NULL.
Value of the -m command line option.
Used by Py_RunMain().
Default: NULL.
package.module path to module that should be imported before
site.py is run.
Set by the -X presite=package.module command-line
option and the PYTHON_PRESITE environment variable.
The command-line option takes precedence.
Needs a debug build of Python (the Py_DEBUG macro
must be defined).
Default: NULL.
Show total reference count at exit (excluding immortal objects)?
Set to 1 by -X showrefcount command line option.
Needs a debug build of Python (the Py_REF_DEBUG
macro must be defined).
Default: 0.
Import the site module at startup?
If equal to zero, disable the import of the module site and the
site-dependent manipulations of sys.path that it entails.
Also disable these manipulations if the site module is explicitly
imported later (call site.main() if you want them to be triggered).
Set to 0 by the -S command line option.
sys.flags.no_site is set to the inverted value of
site_import.
Default: 1.
If non-zero, skip the first line of the PyConfig.run_filename
source.
It allows the usage of non-Unix forms of #!cmd. This is intended for
a DOS specific hack only.
Set to 1 by the -x command line option.
Default: 0.
Encoding and encoding errors of sys.stdin, sys.stdout and
sys.stderr (but sys.stderr always uses
"backslashreplace" error handler).
Use the PYTHONIOENCODING environment variable if it is
non-empty.
Default encoding:
"UTF-8" if PyPreConfig.utf8_mode is non-zero.
Otherwise, use the locale encoding.
Default error handler:
On Windows: use "surrogateescape".
"surrogateescape" if PyPreConfig.utf8_mode is non-zero,
or if the LC_CTYPE locale is “C” or “POSIX”.
"strict" otherwise.
See also PyConfig.legacy_windows_stdio.
Enable tracemalloc?
If non-zero, call tracemalloc.start() at startup.
Set by -X tracemalloc=N command line option and by the
PYTHONTRACEMALLOC environment variable.
Default: -1 in Python mode, 0 in isolated mode.
Enable the Linux perf profiler support?
If equals to 1, enable support for the Linux perf profiler.
If equals to 2, enable support for the Linux perf profiler with
DWARF JIT support.
Set to 1 by -X perf command-line option and the
PYTHONPERFSUPPORT environment variable.
Set to 2 by the -X perf_jit command-line option and
the PYTHON_PERF_JIT_SUPPORT environment variable.
Default: -1.
See also
See Python support for the perf map compatible profilers for more information.
Added in version 3.12.
Directory of the Python standard library.
Default: NULL.
Added in version 3.11.
If equals to zero, ignore the environment variables.
Set to 0 by the -E environment variable.
Default: 1 in Python config and 0 in isolated config.
If non-zero, stdout and stderr will be redirected to the system
log.
Only available on macOS 10.12 and later, and on iOS.
Default: 0 (don’t use the system log) on macOS; 1 on iOS (use the
system log).
Added in version 3.14.
If non-zero, add the user site directory to sys.path.
Set to 0 by the -s and -I command line options.
Set to 0 by the PYTHONNOUSERSITE environment variable.
Default: 1 in Python mode, 0 in isolated mode.
Verbose mode. If greater than 0, print a message each time a module is
imported, showing the place (filename or built-in module) from which
it is loaded.
If greater than or equal to 2, print a message for each file that is
checked for when searching for a module. Also provides information on
module cleanup at exit.
Incremented by the -v command line option.
Set by the PYTHONVERBOSE environment variable value.
Default: 0.
Options of the warnings module to build warnings filters, lowest
to highest priority: sys.warnoptions.
The warnings module adds sys.warnoptions in the reverse
order: the last PyConfig.warnoptions item becomes the first
item of warnings.filters which is checked first (highest
priority).
The -W command line options adds its value to
warnoptions, it can be used multiple times.
The PYTHONWARNINGS environment variable can also be used to add
warning options. Multiple options can be specified, separated by commas
(,).
Default: empty list.
If equal to 0, Python won’t try to write .pyc files on the import of
source modules.
Set to 0 by the -B command line option and the
PYTHONDONTWRITEBYTECODE environment variable.
sys.dont_write_bytecode is initialized to the inverted value of
write_bytecode.
Default: 1.
Values of the -X command line options: sys._xoptions.
Default: empty list.
If non-zero, write performance statistics at Python exit.
Need a special build with the Py_STATS macro:
see --enable-pystats.
Default: 0.
If parse_argv is non-zero, argv
arguments are parsed the same way the regular Python parses command line
arguments, and Python arguments are stripped from
argv.
The xoptions options are parsed to set other options: see
the -X command line option.
Changed in version 3.9: The show_alloc_count field has been removed.
Initializing the interpreter from a populated configuration struct is handled
by calling Py_InitializeFromConfig().
The caller is responsible to handle exceptions (error or exit) using
PyStatus_Exception() and Py_ExitStatusException().
If PyImport_FrozenModules(), PyImport_AppendInittab() or
PyImport_ExtendInittab() are used, they must be set or called after
Python preinitialization and before the Python initialization. If Python is
initialized multiple times, PyImport_AppendInittab() or
PyImport_ExtendInittab() must be called before each Python
initialization.
The current configuration (PyConfig type) is stored in
PyInterpreterState.config.
Example setting the program name:
void init_python(void)
{
PyStatus status;
PyConfig config;
PyConfig_InitPythonConfig(&config);
/* Set the program name. Implicitly preinitialize Python. */
status = PyConfig_SetString(&config, &config.program_name,
L"/path/to/my_program");
if (PyStatus_Exception(status)) {
goto exception;
}
status = Py_InitializeFromConfig(&config);
if (PyStatus_Exception(status)) {
goto exception;
}
PyConfig_Clear(&config);
return;
exception:
PyConfig_Clear(&config);
Py_ExitStatusException(status);
}
More complete example modifying the default configuration, read the configuration, and then override some parameters. Note that since 3.11, many parameters are not calculated until initialization, and so values cannot be read from the configuration structure. Any values set before initialize is called will be left unchanged by initialization:
PyStatus init_python(const char *program_name)
{
PyStatus status;
PyConfig config;
PyConfig_InitPythonConfig(&config);
/* Set the program name before reading the configuration
(decode byte string from the locale encoding).
Implicitly preinitialize Python. */
status = PyConfig_SetBytesString(&config, &config.program_name,
program_name);
if (PyStatus_Exception(status)) {
goto done;
}
/* Read all configuration at once */
status = PyConfig_Read(&config);
if (PyStatus_Exception(status)) {
goto done;
}
/* Specify sys.path explicitly */
/* If you want to modify the default set of paths, finish
initialization first and then use PySys_GetAttrString("path") */
config.module_search_paths_set = 1;
status = PyWideStringList_Append(&config.module_search_paths,
L"/path/to/stdlib");
if (PyStatus_Exception(status)) {
goto done;
}
status = PyWideStringList_Append(&config.module_search_paths,
L"/path/to/more/modules");
if (PyStatus_Exception(status)) {
goto done;
}
/* Override executable computed by PyConfig_Read() */
status = PyConfig_SetString(&config, &config.executable,
L"/path/to/my_executable");
if (PyStatus_Exception(status)) {
goto done;
}
status = Py_InitializeFromConfig(&config);
done:
PyConfig_Clear(&config);
return status;
}
PyPreConfig_InitIsolatedConfig() and
PyConfig_InitIsolatedConfig() functions create a configuration to
isolate Python from the system. For example, to embed Python into an
application.
This configuration ignores global configuration variables, environment
variables, command line arguments (PyConfig.argv is not parsed)
and user site directory. The C standard streams (ex: stdout) and the
LC_CTYPE locale are left unchanged. Signal handlers are not installed.
Configuration files are still used with this configuration to determine
paths that are unspecified. Ensure PyConfig.home is specified
to avoid computing the default path configuration.
PyPreConfig_InitPythonConfig() and PyConfig_InitPythonConfig()
functions create a configuration to build a customized Python which behaves as
the regular Python.
Environments variables and command line arguments are used to configure Python, whereas global configuration variables are ignored.
This function enables C locale coercion (PEP 538)
and Python UTF-8 Mode
(PEP 540) depending on the LC_CTYPE locale, PYTHONUTF8 and
PYTHONCOERCECLOCALE environment variables.
PyConfig contains multiple fields for the path configuration:
Path configuration inputs:
current working directory: to get absolute paths
PATH environment variable to get the program full path
(from PyConfig.program_name)
__PYVENV_LAUNCHER__ environment variable
(Windows only) Application paths in the registry under “SoftwarePythonPythonCoreX.YPythonPath” of HKEY_CURRENT_USER and HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE (where X.Y is the Python version).
Path configuration output fields:
If at least one “output field” is not set, Python calculates the path
configuration to fill unset fields. If
module_search_paths_set is equal to 0,
module_search_paths is overridden and
module_search_paths_set is set to 1.
It is possible to completely ignore the function calculating the default
path configuration by setting explicitly all path configuration output
fields listed above. A string is considered as set even if it is non-empty.
module_search_paths is considered as set if
module_search_paths_set is set to 1. In this case,
module_search_paths will be used without modification.
Set pathconfig_warnings to 0 to suppress warnings when
calculating the path configuration (Unix only, Windows does not log any warning).
If base_prefix or base_exec_prefix
fields are not set, they inherit their value from prefix
and exec_prefix respectively.
Py_RunMain() and Py_Main() modify sys.path:
If run_filename is set and is a directory which contains a
__main__.py script, prepend run_filename to
sys.path.
If isolated is zero:
If run_module is set, prepend the current directory
to sys.path. Do nothing if the current directory cannot be read.
If run_filename is set, prepend the directory of the
filename to sys.path.
Otherwise, prepend an empty string to sys.path.
If site_import is non-zero, sys.path can be
modified by the site module. If
user_site_directory is non-zero and the user’s
site-package directory exists, the site module appends the user’s
site-package directory to sys.path.
The following configuration files are used by the path configuration:
pyvenv.cfg
._pth file (ex: python._pth)
pybuilddir.txt (Unix only)
If a ._pth file is present:
Set isolated to 1.
Set use_environment to 0.
Set site_import to 0.
Set user_site_directory to 0 (since 3.15).
Set safe_path to 1.
If home is not set and a pyvenv.cfg file is present in
the same directory as executable, or its parent,
prefix and exec_prefix are set that
location. When this happens, base_prefix and
base_exec_prefix still keep their value, pointing to the
base installation. See Virtual Environments for more
information.
The __PYVENV_LAUNCHER__ environment variable is used to set
PyConfig.base_executable.
Changed in version 3.14: prefix, and exec_prefix, are now
set to the pyvenv.cfg directory. This was previously done by site,
therefore affected by -S.
Changed in version 3.15: user_site_directory is now set to 0 when a
._pth file is present.
Get the original command line arguments, before Python modified them.
See also PyConfig.orig_argv member.
In some embedding use cases, it may be desirable to separate interpreter initialization from the execution of the main module.
This separation can be achieved by setting PyConfig.run_command to the empty
string during initialization (to prevent the interpreter from dropping into the
interactive prompt), and then subsequently executing the desired main module
code using __main__.__dict__ as the global namespace.