How to include only needed modules in pyinstaller?
For this you need to create a separate environment, because currently you are reading all the modules you have installed on your computer. To create environment run commands
1 - if you don't have one, create a requirements.txt
file that holds all packages that you are using, you could create one with:
pip freeze > requirements.txt
2 - create env folder:
python -m venv projectName
3 - activate the environment:
source projectName/bin/activate
4 - install them:
pip install -r requirements.txt
alternatively if you know you are using only wxpython you could just pip install wxpython
5 - then finally you can run pyinstaller
on your main script with the --path
arg as explained in this answer:
pyinstaller --paths projectName/lib/python3.7/site-packages script.py
I ended up using cx_Freeze
in the end. It seems to work much better than py2exe
or pyinstaller
. I wrote setup.py
file that looks like this:
import os
import shutil
import sys
from cx_Freeze import setup, Executable
os.environ['TCL_LIBRARY'] = r'C:\bin\Python37-32\tcl\tcl8.6'
os.environ['TK_LIBRARY'] = r'C:\bin\Python37-32\tcl\tk8.6'
__version__ = '1.0.0'
base = None
if sys.platform == 'win32':
base = 'Win32GUI'
include_files = ['am.png']
includes = ['tkinter']
excludes = ['matplotlib', 'sqlite3']
packages = ['numpy', 'pandas', 'xlsxwriter']
setup(
name='TestApp',
description='Test App',
version=__version__,
executables=[Executable('test.py', base=base)],
options = {'build_exe': {
'packages': packages,
'includes': includes,
'include_files': include_files,
'include_msvcr': True,
'excludes': excludes,
}},
)
path = os.path.abspath(os.path.join(os.path.realpath(__file__), os.pardir))
build_path = os.path.join(path, 'build', 'exe.win32-3.7')
shutil.copy(r'C:\bin\Python37-32\DLLs\tcl86t.dll', build_path)
shutil.copy(r'C:\bin\Python37-32\DLLs\tk86t.dll', build_path)
Any then one can either run python setup.py build_exe
to generate an executable or python setup.py bdist_msi
to generate an installer.
I don't think it can figure that out for you. If there are any specific modules taking a while to load, use the --exclude-module
flag to list all the modules you want to exclude.
edit: this answer may have some more helpful info