This is a fork of cdrx/docker-pyinstaller, with the following changes:
- change Ubuntu base images from 12.04/14.04/16.04 to 18.04/20.04
- change PyInstaller version from 3.6 to 4.0 for Python 3
- change to latest Python 3.7.X and 2.7.X releases (as of October 4th, 2020)
- change OpenSSL from 1.0.2 to 1.1.1
- change
winetricks win7towinetricks win10 - change
WINE_VERSION=winehq-stagingtoWINE_VERSION=winehq-stable - other minor modifications
engineervix/pyinstaller-linux and engineervix/pyinstaller-windows are a pair of Docker containers to ease compiling Python applications to binaries / exe files.
Current PyInstaller version used: 4.0 (for Python 3) and 3.6 (for Python 2).
engineervix/pyinstaller-linux and engineervix/pyinstaller-windows both have two tags, :python2 and :python3 which you can use depending on the requirements of your project. :latest points to :python3
The :python2 tags run Python 2.7.
The :python3 tag runs Python 3.7.
There are two containers, one for Linux and one for Windows builds. The Windows builder runs Wine inside Ubuntu to emulate Windows in Docker.
To build your application, you need to mount your source code into the /src/ volume.
The source code directory should have your .spec file that PyInstaller generates. If you don't have one, you'll need to run PyInstaller once locally to generate it.
If the src folder has a requirements.txt file, the packages will be installed into the environment before PyInstaller runs.
For example, in the folder that has your source code, .spec file and requirements.txt:
docker run -v "$(pwd):/src/" engineervix/pyinstaller-windows
will build your PyInstaller project into dist/windows/. The .exe file will have the same name as your .spec file.
docker run -v "$(pwd):/src/" engineervix/pyinstaller-linux
will build your PyInstaller project into dist/linux/. The binary will have the same name as your .spec file.
You'll need to supply a custom command to Docker to install system pacakges. Something like:
docker run -v "$(pwd):/src/" --entrypoint /bin/sh engineervix/pyinstaller-linux -c "apt-get update -y && apt-get install -y wget && /entrypoint.sh"
Replace wget with the dependencies / package(s) you need to install.
docker run -v "$(pwd):/src/" engineervix/pyinstaller-linux "pyinstaller your-script.py"
will generate a spec file for your-script.py in your current working directory. See the PyInstaller docs for more information.
Add pyinstaller=X.Y.Z to your requirements.txt (where X.Y.Z represents the version).
Yes, by supplying the PYPI_URL and PYPI_INDEX_URL environment variables that point to your PyPi mirror.
None
MIT