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Metadata-Version: 2.1 Name: dill Version: 0.3.7 Summary: serialize all of Python Home-page: https://github.com/uqfoundation/dill Download-URL: https://pypi.org/project/dill/#files Author: Mike McKerns Author-email: mmckerns@uqfoundation.org Maintainer: Mike McKerns Maintainer-email: mmckerns@uqfoundation.org License: BSD-3-Clause Project-URL: Documentation, http://dill.rtfd.io Project-URL: Source Code, https://github.com/uqfoundation/dill Project-URL: Bug Tracker, https://github.com/uqfoundation/dill/issues Platform: Linux Platform: Windows Platform: Mac Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers Classifier: Intended Audience :: Science/Research Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11 Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: PyPy Classifier: Topic :: Scientific/Engineering Classifier: Topic :: Software Development Requires-Python: >=3.7 License-File: LICENSE Provides-Extra: graph Requires-Dist: objgraph (>=1.7.2) ; extra == 'graph' Provides-Extra: readline ----------------------------- dill: serialize all of Python ----------------------------- About Dill ========== ``dill`` extends Python's ``pickle`` module for serializing and de-serializing Python objects to the majority of the built-in Python types. Serialization is the process of converting an object to a byte stream, and the inverse of which is converting a byte stream back to a Python object hierarchy. ``dill`` provides the user the same interface as the ``pickle`` module, and also includes some additional features. In addition to pickling Python objects, ``dill`` provides the ability to save the state of an interpreter session in a single command. Hence, it would be feasible to save an interpreter session, close the interpreter, ship the pickled file to another computer, open a new interpreter, unpickle the session and thus continue from the 'saved' state of the original interpreter session. ``dill`` can be used to store Python objects to a file, but the primary usage is to send Python objects across the network as a byte stream. ``dill`` is quite flexible, and allows arbitrary user defined classes and functions to be serialized. Thus ``dill`` is not intended to be secure against erroneously or maliciously constructed data. It is left to the user to decide whether the data they unpickle is from a trustworthy source. ``dill`` is part of ``pathos``, a Python framework for heterogeneous computing. ``dill`` is in active development, so any user feedback, bug reports, comments, or suggestions are highly appreciated. A list of issues is located at https://github.com/uqfoundation/dill/issues, with a legacy list maintained at https://uqfoundation.github.io/project/pathos/query. Major Features ============== ``dill`` can pickle the following standard types: - none, type, bool, int, float, complex, bytes, str, - tuple, list, dict, file, buffer, builtin, - Python classes, namedtuples, dataclasses, metaclasses, - instances of classes, - set, frozenset, array, functions, exceptions ``dill`` can also pickle more 'exotic' standard types: - functions with yields, nested functions, lambdas, - cell, method, unboundmethod, module, code, methodwrapper, - methoddescriptor, getsetdescriptor, memberdescriptor, wrapperdescriptor, - dictproxy, slice, notimplemented, ellipsis, quit ``dill`` cannot yet pickle these standard types: - frame, generator, traceback ``dill`` also provides the capability to: - save and load Python interpreter sessions - save and extract the source code from functions and classes - interactively diagnose pickling errors Current Release =============== The latest released version of ``dill`` is available from: https://pypi.org/project/dill ``dill`` is distributed under a 3-clause BSD license. Development Version =================== You can get the latest development version with all the shiny new features at: https://github.com/uqfoundation If you have a new contribution, please submit a pull request. Installation ============ ``dill`` can be installed with ``pip``:: $ pip install dill To optionally include the ``objgraph`` diagnostic tool in the install:: $ pip install dill[graph] For windows users, to optionally install session history tools:: $ pip install dill[readline] Requirements ============ ``dill`` requires: - ``python`` (or ``pypy``), **>=3.7** - ``setuptools``, **>=42** Optional requirements: - ``objgraph``, **>=1.7.2** - ``pyreadline``, **>=1.7.1** (on windows) Basic Usage =========== ``dill`` is a drop-in replacement for ``pickle``. Existing code can be updated to allow complete pickling using:: >>> import dill as pickle or:: >>> from dill import dumps, loads ``dumps`` converts the object to a unique byte string, and ``loads`` performs the inverse operation:: >>> squared = lambda x: x**2 >>> loads(dumps(squared))(3) 9 There are a number of options to control serialization which are provided as keyword arguments to several ``dill`` functions: * with *protocol*, the pickle protocol level can be set. This uses the same value as the ``pickle`` module, *DEFAULT_PROTOCOL*. * with *byref=True*, ``dill`` to behave a lot more like pickle with certain objects (like modules) pickled by reference as opposed to attempting to pickle the object itself. * with *recurse=True*, objects referred to in the global dictionary are recursively traced and pickled, instead of the default behavior of attempting to store the entire global dictionary. * with *fmode*, the contents of the file can be pickled along with the file handle, which is useful if the object is being sent over the wire to a remote system which does not have the original file on disk. Options are *HANDLE_FMODE* for just the handle, *CONTENTS_FMODE* for the file content and *FILE_FMODE* for content and handle. * with *ignore=False*, objects reconstructed with types defined in the top-level script environment use the existing type in the environment rather than a possibly different reconstructed type. The default serialization can also be set globally in *dill.settings*. Thus, we can modify how ``dill`` handles references to the global dictionary locally or globally:: >>> import dill.settings >>> dumps(absolute) == dumps(absolute, recurse=True) False >>> dill.settings['recurse'] = True >>> dumps(absolute) == dumps(absolute, recurse=True) True ``dill`` also includes source code inspection, as an alternate to pickling:: >>> import dill.source >>> print(dill.source.getsource(squared)) squared = lambda x:x**2 To aid in debugging pickling issues, use *dill.detect* which provides tools like pickle tracing:: >>> import dill.detect >>> with dill.detect.trace(): >>> dumps(squared) ┬ F1: <function <lambda> at 0x7fe074f8c280> ├┬ F2: <function _create_function at 0x7fe074c49c10> │└ # F2 [34 B] ├┬ Co: <code object <lambda> at 0x7fe07501eb30, file "<stdin>", line 1> │├┬ F2: <function _create_code at 0x7fe074c49ca0> ││└ # F2 [19 B] │└ # Co [87 B] ├┬ D1: <dict object at 0x7fe0750d4680> │└ # D1 [22 B] ├┬ D2: <dict object at 0x7fe074c5a1c0> │└ # D2 [2 B] ├┬ D2: <dict object at 0x7fe074f903c0> │├┬ D2: <dict object at 0x7fe074f8ebc0> ││└ # D2 [2 B] │└ # D2 [23 B] └ # F1 [180 B] With trace, we see how ``dill`` stored the lambda (``F1``) by first storing ``_create_function``, the underlying code object (``Co``) and ``_create_code`` (which is used to handle code objects), then we handle the reference to the global dict (``D2``) plus other dictionaries (``D1`` and ``D2``) that save the lambda object's state. A ``#`` marks when the object is actually stored. More Information ================ Probably the best way to get started is to look at the documentation at http://dill.rtfd.io. Also see ``dill.tests`` for a set of scripts that demonstrate how ``dill`` can serialize different Python objects. You can run the test suite with ``python -m dill.tests``. The contents of any pickle file can be examined with ``undill``. As ``dill`` conforms to the ``pickle`` interface, the examples and documentation found at http://docs.python.org/library/pickle.html also apply to ``dill`` if one will ``import dill as pickle``. The source code is also generally well documented, so further questions may be resolved by inspecting the code itself. Please feel free to submit a ticket on github, or ask a question on stackoverflow (**@Mike McKerns**). If you would like to share how you use ``dill`` in your work, please send an email (to **mmckerns at uqfoundation dot org**). Citation ======== If you use ``dill`` to do research that leads to publication, we ask that you acknowledge use of ``dill`` by citing the following in your publication:: M.M. McKerns, L. Strand, T. Sullivan, A. Fang, M.A.G. Aivazis, "Building a framework for predictive science", Proceedings of the 10th Python in Science Conference, 2011; http://arxiv.org/pdf/1202.1056 Michael McKerns and Michael Aivazis, "pathos: a framework for heterogeneous computing", 2010- ; https://uqfoundation.github.io/project/pathos Please see https://uqfoundation.github.io/project/pathos or http://arxiv.org/pdf/1202.1056 for further information.