I am trying to analyze some messy code, that happens to use global variables quite heavily within functions (I am trying to refactor the code so that functions only use local va
Inspect the bytecode.
from dis import dis
dis(f)
Result:
2 0 LOAD_FAST 0 (x)
3 LOAD_CONST 1 (1)
6 BINARY_ADD
7 STORE_FAST 0 (x)
3 10 LOAD_FAST 0 (x)
13 LOAD_GLOBAL 0 (y)
16 BINARY_ADD
17 STORE_FAST 1 (z)
4 20 LOAD_FAST 1 (z)
23 RETURN_VALUE
The global variables will have a LOAD_GLOBAL opcode instead of LOAD_FAST. (If the function changes any global variables, there will be STORE_GLOBAL opcodes as well.)
With a little work, you could even write a function that scans the bytecode of a function and returns a list of the global variables it uses. In fact:
from dis import HAVE_ARGUMENT, opmap
def getglobals(func):
GLOBAL_OPS = opmap["LOAD_GLOBAL"], opmap["STORE_GLOBAL"]
EXTENDED_ARG = opmap["EXTENDED_ARG"]
func = getattr(func, "im_func", func)
code = func.func_code
names = code.co_names
op = (ord(c) for c in code.co_code)
globs = set()
extarg = 0
for c in op:
if c in GLOBAL_OPS:
globs.add(names[next(op) + next(op) * 256 + extarg])
elif c == EXTENDED_ARG:
extarg = (next(op) + next(op) * 256) * 65536
continue
elif c >= HAVE_ARGUMENT:
next(op)
next(op)
extarg = 0
return sorted(globs)
print getglobals(f) # ['y']