Some stdlib modules have officially documented and supported behaviour when executed via -m. These should be referenced from the Setup & Usage documentation at http://docs.python.org/dev/using/index.html Current candidates: python -m unittest python -m timeit
Found it: #11260. I've left it open, since the original suggestion in that issue is related to actually documenting the -m behaviour of the smptd module - it was just the issue *discussion* that ended up covering the more general question of how such command line interfaces should be documented. The current issue is specifically about providing a central index in the setup and usage documentation to those modules which *already* have officially documented and supported behaviour when executed with -m.
I’d propose to add one file per script / module-as-script, except maybe for -m site and -m sysconfig which are more about debugging an installation than really using a feature provided by the stdlib.
I think for these it's reasonable to just have an index page that references out to the individual module docs. Most of them are closely related to using the module in your own code and/or there's general background info in the module docs that you're likely to need in order to understand what the tool is for. The main thing I'm after at this point is for Setup & Usage to act as a central index for using Python from the command line, rather than it necessarily containing all the details directly. Rather than trying too hard to categorise them, I'd be inclined to start with a simple alphabetical list (module name linking to the relevant section in the module docs, adding it if it doesn't already exist). Something like: compileall - Precompiling Python source modules to bytecode pickle - Display the contents of pickles saved as files pickletools - Analyse the contents of pickles saved as files site - Display details of Python's configuration sysconfig - Display additional details of Python's configuration test - Execute Python's own regression test suite timeit - Microbenchmarking for small Python snippets unittest - Find and execute unit tests Maybe we'll decide to do something more long term, but I think this is a good way to start.