Stickytape can be used to convert a Python script and any Python modules
it depends into a single-file Python script. You can tell stickytape
which directories to search using the --add-python-path
argument.
For instance:
stickytape scripts/blah --add-python-path . > /tmp/blah-standalone
Or to output directly to a file:
stickytape scripts/blah --add-python-path . --output-file /tmp/blah-standalone
You can also point stickytape towards a Python binary that it should use sys.path from, for instance the Python binary inside a virtualenv:
stickytape scripts/blah --python-binary _virtualenv/bin/python --output-file /tmp/blah-standalone
Stickytape cannot automatically detect dynamic imports,
but you can use --add-python-module
to explicitly include modules:
stickytape scripts/blah --add-python-module blah.util
As you might expect with a program that munges source files, there are a few caveats:
- Anything that relies on the specific location of files will probably
no longer work. In other words,
__file__
probably isn't all that useful. - Any files that aren't imported won't be included. Static data that might be part of your project, such as other text files or images, won't be included.