If you're just distributing a couple of modules, especially if they don't live in a particular package, you can specify them individually using the py_modules option in the setup script.
In the simplest case, you'll have two files to worry about: a setup script and the single module you're distributing, foo.py in this example:
<root>/ setup.py foo.py
<root>
will refer to the
distribution root directory.) A minimal setup script to describe this
situation would be:
from distutils.core import setup setup(name = "foo", version = "1.0", py_modules = ["foo"])
Since py_modules is a list, you can of course specify multiple modules, eg. if you're distributing modules foo and bar, your setup might look like this:
<root>/ setup.py foo.py bar.py
from distutils.core import setup setup(name = "foobar", version = "1.0", py_modules = ["foo", "bar"])
You can put module source files into another directory, but if you have enough modules to do that, it's probably easier to specify modules by package rather than listing them individually.
If you have more than a couple of modules to distribute, especially if they are in multiple packages, it's probably easier to specify whole packages rather than individual modules. This works even if your modules are not in a package; you can just tell the Distutils to process modules from the root package, and that works the same as any other package (except that you don't have to have an __init__.py file).
The setup script from the last example could also be written as
from distutils.core import setup setup(name = "foobar", version = "1.0", packages = [""])
If those two files are moved into a subdirectory, but remain in the root package, e.g.:
<root>/ setup.py src/ foo.py bar.py
from distutils.core import setup setup(name = "foobar", version = "1.0", package_dir = {"": "src"}, packages = [""])
More typically, though, you will want to distribute multiple modules in the same package (or in sub-packages). For example, if the foo and bar modules belong in package foobar, one way to layout your source tree is
<root>/ setup.py foobar/ __init__.py foo.py bar.py
from distutils.core import setup setup(name = "foobar", version = "1.0", packages = ["foobar"])
If you want to put modules in directories not named for their package, then you need to use the package_dir option again. For example, if the src directory holds modules in the foobar package:
<root>/ setup.py src/ __init__.py foo.py bar.py
from distutils.core import setup setup(name = "foobar", version = "1.0", package_dir = {"foobar" : "src"}, packages = ["foobar"])
Or, you might put modules from your main package right in the distribution root:
<root>/ setup.py __init__.py foo.py bar.py
from distutils.core import setup setup(name = "foobar", version = "1.0", package_dir = {"foobar" : ""}, packages = ["foobar"])
If you have sub-packages, they must be explicitly listed in packages, but any entries in package_dir automatically extend to sub-packages. (In other words, the Distutils does not scan your source tree, trying to figure out which directories correspond to Python packages by looking for __init__.py files.) Thus, if the default layout grows a sub-package:
<root>/ setup.py foobar/ __init__.py foo.py bar.py subfoo/ __init__.py blah.py
from distutils.core import setup setup(name = "foobar", version = "1.0", packages = ["foobar", "foobar.subfoo"])
Extension modules are specified using the ext_modules option. package_dir has no effect on where extension source files are found; it only affects the source for pure Python modules. The simplest case, a single extension module in a single C source file, is:
<root>/ setup.py foo.c
from distutils.core import setup setup(name = "foobar", version = "1.0", ext_modules = [Extension("foo", ["foo.c"])])
If the extension actually belongs in a package, say foopkg, then
With exactly the same source tree layout, this extension can be put in the foopkg package simply by changing the name of the extension:
from distutils.core import setup setup(name = "foobar", version = "1.0", ext_modules = [Extension("foopkg.foo", ["foo.c"])])
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