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3. Installation and Configuration
Please read this entire chapter before trying to install Pyro. Not
that it's complex, but just that you've seen the choices you have to make.
Installation
Pyro distributions contain a "distutils" setup.py script
that will install Pyro for you; just enter the following command from a shell prompt:
"python setup.py install " and off you go.
The script will ask if you want to install the Pyro script tools, and where to put them.
If you want to do an automated (unattended) install, edit the setup.cfg file,
following the directions in that file.
It will not install the documentation and the examples, only the core Pyro library and the scripts.
But I will explain what exactly is in the Pyro distribution. It has a few subdirectories:
Pyro/
- This is the actual Pyro package. If you do not use the supplied
setup.py
install script (see above) you have to install it by hand.
Install this directory somewhere in your Python search path. On most systems (also Windows),
the lib/site-packages directory is a nice place. The exact location might
vary according to your specific Python installation.
- Alternatively, keep it where it is and manually add the Pyro root directory
to your Python search path (e.g. in the environment variable
PYTHONPATH ).
bin/
- This directory contains the command-line utilities. Move the contents of this directory somewhere in your shell search path.
- Alternatively, keep it where it is and manually add it to your shell search
path.
docs/ and examples/
- Put those wherever you like. In docs you can find the Pyro manual, and in examples there are some Pyro examples.
Configuration
The default settings will do nicely in most cases. But sooner or later you will have to change some parameters of Pyro.
Pyro's configuration is accessed through Pyro.config . This object has several configuration items:
Configuration item | Type | Description | Default value
|
---|
PYRO_CONFIG_FILE
| string
| The Pyro configuration file that is used. See below.
| Special, see below |
PYRO_STORAGE
| string
| Location where Pyro stores data like log files. Read the notice at the end!
| Current directory |
PYRO_LOGFILE
| string
| Name of the logfile. If it's not an absolute path, it's relative to $PYRO_STORAGE .
| Pyro_log |
PYRO_USER_LOGFILE
| string
| Name of the user logfile. If it's not an absolute path, it's relative to $PYRO_STORAGE .
| Pyro_userlog |
PYRO_TRACELEVEL
| number
| The tracing level of Pyro, 0-3. 0=nothing, 1=only errors, 2=warnings too, 3=full: errors, warnings and notes.
| 0 |
PYRO_USER_TRACELEVEL
| number
| The user tracing level, 0-3. 0=nothing, 1=only errors, 2=warnings too, 3=full: errors, warnings and notes.
| 0 |
PYRO_BINARY_PICKLE
| boolean
| Wether the default marshaling is done in binary format (faster and less memory usage) or in human-readable ASCII.
| 1 |
PYRO_XML_PICKLE
| boolean
order of a magnitude slower, and requires more bandwith.
You need to have installed Gnosis_Utils (at least
version 1.0.2).
| 0 |
PYRO_COMPRESSION
| boolean
| Wether the protocol should compress the data to save bandwidth (at the cost of CPU time).
The zlib module is used for compression. If you don't have zlib , Pyro still works, but without compression.
| 0 |
PYRO_CHECKSUM
| boolean
| Wether the protocol should perform a checksum over the message data. This costs a little bit extra CPU time, but you
will be quite sure that your communication is without errors.
The zlib.adler32 function is used for checksumming. If you don't have zlib , Pyro still works, but without checksumming.
The overhead of checksumming is very small, with regular messages less than 0.1%, but
increasing with big messages (15% for 5 Mb or so).
Note: the checksum is by no means secure. If you want secure transmissions,
you'll have to use SSL or build your own encryption/secure hashing functions on top of Pyro.
| 0 |
PYRO_MAXCONNECTIONS
| number
| The maximum number of simultaneous connections to one Pyro server. Note that a custom connection validator may or may not take this in account. The default validator does check for this limit.
| 200 |
PYRO_MULTITHREADED
| boolean
| Wether Pyro servers should be multithreaded or not.
| 1 (if supported) |
PYRO_MOBILE_CODE
| boolean
| Wether Pyro should automatically download Python code from clients if
it isn't available on the server.
| 0 |
PYRO_DNS_URI
| boolean
| Wether symbolic DNS host names should be used in URIs instead of fixed IP addresses.
| 0 |
PYRO_BC_RETRIES
| number
| How often a broadcast will be retried if no answer has been received. Currently only used by the Name Server locator.
| 2 |
PYRO_BC_TIMEOUT
| number
| How long Pyro will wait (in seconds) for an answer to a broadcast request. Currently only used by the Name Server locator.
| 2 |
PYRO_PORT
| number
| The base socket number of the range of socket numbers that the Pyro daemon can use to listen for incoming requests (Pyro method calls).
| 7766 |
PYRO_PORT_RANGE
| number
| The size of the socket port range. Pyro will try connections in the range PYRO_PORT to PYRO_PORT+PYRO_PORT_RANGE.
| 100 |
PYRO_NS_DEFAULTGROUP
| string
| The default group name in which names are located. This must be an absolute name (starting with the root character).
| :Default
| PYRO_NS_URIFILE
| string
| The file where the Name Server will write its URI. If it's not an absolute path, it's relative to $PYRO_STORAGE .
| Pyro_NS_URI
| PYRO_NS_BC_PORT
| number
| The socket number on which the Name Server will listen for broadcast requests (usually to find the location).
| 9091 |
PYRO_NS_PORT
| number
| The socket number on which the Name Server will listen for incoming requests (Pyro method calls, in fact).
| 9090 |
PYRO_NS_HOSTNAME
| string
| The hostname that is tried to find the NameServer on, when the broadcast lookup mechanism fails.
| empty |
PYROSSL_CERTDIR
| string
| The directory where openssl certificates are stored.
| 'certs' in the PYRO_STORAGE location. |
PYROSSL_CA_CERT
| string
| Certificate of the Certificate Authority. Used to check if client and server certificates are valid (that they are signed by the given CA)
| ca.pem |
PYROSSL_SERVER_CERT
| string
| Certificate for server side
| server.pem |
PYROSSL_CLIENT_CERT
| string
| Certificate for client side
| client.pem |
There are several ways to change the default settings:
- Change the settings in your code, at runtime. You can change all settings before starting Pyro, and most settings can be changed dynamically during execution too.
Note that you cannot use this to change
Pyro.config.PYRO_STORAGE ! See below!
... Pyro.config.PYRO_PORT = 7000
... Pyro.config.PYRO_TRACELEVEL = 3
- Define environment variables that override the default settings.
Every configuration item has an equivalent environment variable. If you define this, you can override the default setting for that item. For instance, it might be convenient to have your Pyro programs generate log files and put them in a designated log directory:
...$ export PYRO_LOGFILE=/var/log/PYRO/logfile
...$ export PYRO_TRACELEVEL=3
(This is for bash - syntax is different for other shells or Windows.)
- Configuration files
You can use a configuration file that can contain some small configuration changes or a fully new configuration for all items.
Pyro checks if the environment variable PYRO_CONFIG_FILE is set. If it isn't set, or set to an empty string, Pyro checks for a Pyro.conf file in the current directory.
If it exists, Pyro uses it as a configuration file. If it doesn't exist, Pyro uses the default built-in configuration.
If the environment variable is set, Pyro uses the value as the name for the configuration file. If the configuration file can't be read, a PyroError exception occurs.
The format of the configuration file is very simple. It is a text file, and each line can be empty, a comment, or a configuration item setting.
A comment starts with '#'. A config item setting is of the format 'ITEM=VALUE'. If Pyro finds an unknown config item, a KeyError exception occurs.
Note that PYRO_CONFIG_FILE is useless inside a configuration file. After initialization, it is set to the absolute path of the configuration file that was used (or the empty string, if no configuration file was used).
Note that setting PYRO_CONFIG_FILE from within your code is useless too because Pyro is already initialized at that point.
Environment variables override configuration file settings. Configuration file settings override the built-in default settings.
PYRO_STORAGE is used at initialization time, that is, as soon as a part of the Pyro package is imported in your program.
You can only change PYRO_STORAGE beforehand by either setting the
environment variable or making an entry in the configuration file. Changing Pyro.config.PYRO_STORAGE
in your program leads to unexpected results, because the initilization has already been done
using the old value. So don't do this, and use one of the two other ways.
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