sys
– system specific functions¶
This module implements a subset of the corresponding CPython
module,
as described below. For more information, refer to the original
CPython documentation: sys
.
Functions¶
-
sys.
exit
(retval=0, /)¶ Terminate current program with a given exit code. Underlyingly, this function raise as
SystemExit
exception. If an argument is given, its value given as an argument toSystemExit
.
-
sys.
atexit
(func)¶ Register func to be called upon termination. func must be a callable that takes no arguments, or
None
to disable the call. Theatexit
function will return the previous value set by this function, which is initiallyNone
.Difference to CPython
This function is a MicroPython extension intended to provide similar functionality to the
atexit
module in CPython.
-
sys.
print_exception
(exc, file=sys.stdout, /)¶ Print exception with a traceback to a file-like object file (or
sys.stdout
by default).Difference to CPython
This is simplified version of a function which appears in the
traceback
module in CPython. Unliketraceback.print_exception()
, this function takes just exception value instead of exception type, exception value, and traceback object; file argument should be positional; further arguments are not supported. CPython-compatibletraceback
module can be found inmicropython-lib
.
Constants¶
-
sys.
argv
¶ A mutable list of arguments the current program was started with.
-
sys.
byteorder
¶ The byte order of the system (
"little"
or"big"
).
-
sys.
implementation
¶ Object with information about the current Python implementation. For MicroPython, it has following attributes:
name - string “micropython”
version - tuple (major, minor, micro), e.g. (1, 7, 0)
This object is the recommended way to distinguish MicroPython from other Python implementations (note that it still may not exist in the very minimal ports).
Difference to CPython
CPython mandates more attributes for this object, but the actual useful bare minimum is implemented in MicroPython.
-
sys.
maxsize
¶ Maximum value which a native integer type can hold on the current platform, or maximum value representable by MicroPython integer type, if it’s smaller than platform max value (that is the case for MicroPython ports without long int support).
This attribute is useful for detecting “bitness” of a platform (32-bit vs 64-bit, etc.). It’s recommended to not compare this attribute to some value directly, but instead count number of bits in it:
bits = 0 v = sys.maxsize while v: bits += 1 v >>= 1 if bits > 32: # 64-bit (or more) platform ... else: # 32-bit (or less) platform # Note that on 32-bit platform, value of bits may be less than 32 # (e.g. 31) due to peculiarities described above, so use "> 16", # "> 32", "> 64" style of comparisons.
-
sys.
modules
¶ Dictionary of loaded modules. On some ports, it may not include builtin modules.
-
sys.
path
¶ A mutable list of directories to search for imported modules.
-
sys.
platform
¶ The platform that MicroPython is running on. For OS/RTOS ports, this is usually an identifier of the OS, e.g.
"linux"
. For baremetal ports it is an identifier of a board, e.g."pyboard"
for the original MicroPython reference board. It thus can be used to distinguish one board from another. If you need to check whether your program runs on MicroPython (vs other Python implementation), usesys.implementation
instead.
-
sys.
version
¶ Python language version that this implementation conforms to, as a string.
-
sys.
version_info
¶ Python language version that this implementation conforms to, as a tuple of ints.
Difference to CPython
Only the first three version numbers (major, minor, micro) are supported and they can be referenced only by index, not by name.