2776 lines
125 KiB
Plaintext
2776 lines
125 KiB
Plaintext
==================================================
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Building and Distributing Packages with Setuptools
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==================================================
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``Setuptools`` is a collection of enhancements to the Python ``distutils``
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that allow developers to more easily build and
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distribute Python packages, especially ones that have dependencies on other
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packages.
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Packages built and distributed using ``setuptools`` look to the user like
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ordinary Python packages based on the ``distutils``. Your users don't need to
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install or even know about setuptools in order to use them, and you don't
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have to include the entire setuptools package in your distributions. By
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including just a single `bootstrap module`_ (a 12K .py file), your package will
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automatically download and install ``setuptools`` if the user is building your
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package from source and doesn't have a suitable version already installed.
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.. _bootstrap module: https://bootstrap.pypa.io/ez_setup.py
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Feature Highlights:
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* Automatically find/download/install/upgrade dependencies at build time using
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the `EasyInstall tool <easy_install.html>`_,
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which supports downloading via HTTP, FTP, Subversion, and SourceForge, and
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automatically scans web pages linked from PyPI to find download links. (It's
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the closest thing to CPAN currently available for Python.)
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* Create `Python Eggs <http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/PythonEggs>`_ -
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a single-file importable distribution format
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* Enhanced support for accessing data files hosted in zipped packages.
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* Automatically include all packages in your source tree, without listing them
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individually in setup.py
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* Automatically include all relevant files in your source distributions,
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without needing to create a ``MANIFEST.in`` file, and without having to force
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regeneration of the ``MANIFEST`` file when your source tree changes.
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* Automatically generate wrapper scripts or Windows (console and GUI) .exe
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files for any number of "main" functions in your project. (Note: this is not
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a py2exe replacement; the .exe files rely on the local Python installation.)
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* Transparent Pyrex support, so that your setup.py can list ``.pyx`` files and
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still work even when the end-user doesn't have Pyrex installed (as long as
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you include the Pyrex-generated C in your source distribution)
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* Command aliases - create project-specific, per-user, or site-wide shortcut
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names for commonly used commands and options
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* PyPI upload support - upload your source distributions and eggs to PyPI
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* Deploy your project in "development mode", such that it's available on
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``sys.path``, yet can still be edited directly from its source checkout.
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* Easily extend the distutils with new commands or ``setup()`` arguments, and
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distribute/reuse your extensions for multiple projects, without copying code.
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* Create extensible applications and frameworks that automatically discover
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extensions, using simple "entry points" declared in a project's setup script.
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.. contents:: **Table of Contents**
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.. _ez_setup.py: `bootstrap module`_
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-----------------
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Developer's Guide
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-----------------
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Installing ``setuptools``
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=========================
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Please follow the `EasyInstall Installation Instructions`_ to install the
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current stable version of setuptools. In particular, be sure to read the
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section on `Custom Installation Locations`_ if you are installing anywhere
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other than Python's ``site-packages`` directory.
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.. _EasyInstall Installation Instructions: easy_install.html#installation-instructions
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.. _Custom Installation Locations: easy_install.html#custom-installation-locations
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If you want the current in-development version of setuptools, you should first
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install a stable version, and then run::
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ez_setup.py setuptools==dev
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This will download and install the latest development (i.e. unstable) version
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of setuptools from the Python Subversion sandbox.
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Basic Use
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=========
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For basic use of setuptools, just import things from setuptools instead of
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the distutils. Here's a minimal setup script using setuptools::
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from setuptools import setup, find_packages
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setup(
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name="HelloWorld",
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version="0.1",
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packages=find_packages(),
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)
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As you can see, it doesn't take much to use setuptools in a project.
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Run that script in your project folder, alongside the Python packages
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you have developed.
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Invoke that script to produce eggs, upload to
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PyPI, and automatically include all packages in the directory where the
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setup.py lives. See the `Command Reference`_ section below to see what
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commands you can give to this setup script. For example,
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to produce a source distribution, simply invoke::
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python setup.py sdist
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Of course, before you release your project to PyPI, you'll want to add a bit
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more information to your setup script to help people find or learn about your
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project. And maybe your project will have grown by then to include a few
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dependencies, and perhaps some data files and scripts::
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from setuptools import setup, find_packages
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setup(
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name="HelloWorld",
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version="0.1",
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packages=find_packages(),
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scripts=['say_hello.py'],
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# Project uses reStructuredText, so ensure that the docutils get
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# installed or upgraded on the target machine
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install_requires=['docutils>=0.3'],
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package_data={
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# If any package contains *.txt or *.rst files, include them:
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'': ['*.txt', '*.rst'],
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# And include any *.msg files found in the 'hello' package, too:
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'hello': ['*.msg'],
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},
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# metadata for upload to PyPI
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author="Me",
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author_email="me@example.com",
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description="This is an Example Package",
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license="PSF",
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keywords="hello world example examples",
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url="http://example.com/HelloWorld/", # project home page, if any
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project_urls={
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"Bug Tracker": "https://bugs.example.com/HelloWorld/",
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"Documentation": "https://docs.example.com/HelloWorld/",
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"Source Code": "https://code.example.com/HelloWorld/",
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}
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# could also include long_description, download_url, classifiers, etc.
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)
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In the sections that follow, we'll explain what most of these ``setup()``
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arguments do (except for the metadata ones), and the various ways you might use
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them in your own project(s).
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Specifying Your Project's Version
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---------------------------------
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Setuptools can work well with most versioning schemes; there are, however, a
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few special things to watch out for, in order to ensure that setuptools and
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EasyInstall can always tell what version of your package is newer than another
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version. Knowing these things will also help you correctly specify what
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versions of other projects your project depends on.
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A version consists of an alternating series of release numbers and pre-release
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or post-release tags. A release number is a series of digits punctuated by
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dots, such as ``2.4`` or ``0.5``. Each series of digits is treated
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numerically, so releases ``2.1`` and ``2.1.0`` are different ways to spell the
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same release number, denoting the first subrelease of release 2. But ``2.10``
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is the *tenth* subrelease of release 2, and so is a different and newer release
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from ``2.1`` or ``2.1.0``. Leading zeros within a series of digits are also
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ignored, so ``2.01`` is the same as ``2.1``, and different from ``2.0.1``.
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Following a release number, you can have either a pre-release or post-release
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tag. Pre-release tags make a version be considered *older* than the version
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they are appended to. So, revision ``2.4`` is *newer* than revision ``2.4c1``,
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which in turn is newer than ``2.4b1`` or ``2.4a1``. Postrelease tags make
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a version be considered *newer* than the version they are appended to. So,
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revisions like ``2.4-1`` and ``2.4pl3`` are newer than ``2.4``, but are *older*
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than ``2.4.1`` (which has a higher release number).
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A pre-release tag is a series of letters that are alphabetically before
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"final". Some examples of prerelease tags would include ``alpha``, ``beta``,
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``a``, ``c``, ``dev``, and so on. You do not have to place a dot or dash
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before the prerelease tag if it's immediately after a number, but it's okay to
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do so if you prefer. Thus, ``2.4c1`` and ``2.4.c1`` and ``2.4-c1`` all
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represent release candidate 1 of version ``2.4``, and are treated as identical
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by setuptools.
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In addition, there are three special prerelease tags that are treated as if
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they were the letter ``c``: ``pre``, ``preview``, and ``rc``. So, version
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``2.4rc1``, ``2.4pre1`` and ``2.4preview1`` are all the exact same version as
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``2.4c1``, and are treated as identical by setuptools.
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A post-release tag is either a series of letters that are alphabetically
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greater than or equal to "final", or a dash (``-``). Post-release tags are
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generally used to separate patch numbers, port numbers, build numbers, revision
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numbers, or date stamps from the release number. For example, the version
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``2.4-r1263`` might denote Subversion revision 1263 of a post-release patch of
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version ``2.4``. Or you might use ``2.4-20051127`` to denote a date-stamped
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post-release.
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Notice that after each pre or post-release tag, you are free to place another
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release number, followed again by more pre- or post-release tags. For example,
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``0.6a9.dev-r41475`` could denote Subversion revision 41475 of the in-
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development version of the ninth alpha of release 0.6. Notice that ``dev`` is
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a pre-release tag, so this version is a *lower* version number than ``0.6a9``,
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which would be the actual ninth alpha of release 0.6. But the ``-r41475`` is
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a post-release tag, so this version is *newer* than ``0.6a9.dev``.
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For the most part, setuptools' interpretation of version numbers is intuitive,
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but here are a few tips that will keep you out of trouble in the corner cases:
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* Don't stick adjoining pre-release tags together without a dot or number
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between them. Version ``1.9adev`` is the ``adev`` prerelease of ``1.9``,
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*not* a development pre-release of ``1.9a``. Use ``.dev`` instead, as in
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``1.9a.dev``, or separate the prerelease tags with a number, as in
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``1.9a0dev``. ``1.9a.dev``, ``1.9a0dev``, and even ``1.9.a.dev`` are
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identical versions from setuptools' point of view, so you can use whatever
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scheme you prefer.
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* If you want to be certain that your chosen numbering scheme works the way
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you think it will, you can use the ``pkg_resources.parse_version()`` function
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to compare different version numbers::
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>>> from pkg_resources import parse_version
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>>> parse_version('1.9.a.dev') == parse_version('1.9a0dev')
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True
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>>> parse_version('2.1-rc2') < parse_version('2.1')
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True
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>>> parse_version('0.6a9dev-r41475') < parse_version('0.6a9')
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True
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Once you've decided on a version numbering scheme for your project, you can
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have setuptools automatically tag your in-development releases with various
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pre- or post-release tags. See the following sections for more details:
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* `Tagging and "Daily Build" or "Snapshot" Releases`_
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* `Managing "Continuous Releases" Using Subversion`_
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* The `egg_info`_ command
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New and Changed ``setup()`` Keywords
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====================================
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The following keyword arguments to ``setup()`` are added or changed by
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``setuptools``. All of them are optional; you do not have to supply them
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unless you need the associated ``setuptools`` feature.
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``include_package_data``
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If set to ``True``, this tells ``setuptools`` to automatically include any
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data files it finds inside your package directories that are specified by
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your ``MANIFEST.in`` file. For more information, see the section below on
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`Including Data Files`_.
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``exclude_package_data``
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A dictionary mapping package names to lists of glob patterns that should
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be *excluded* from your package directories. You can use this to trim back
|
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any excess files included by ``include_package_data``. For a complete
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description and examples, see the section below on `Including Data Files`_.
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``package_data``
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A dictionary mapping package names to lists of glob patterns. For a
|
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complete description and examples, see the section below on `Including
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Data Files`_. You do not need to use this option if you are using
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``include_package_data``, unless you need to add e.g. files that are
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generated by your setup script and build process. (And are therefore not
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in source control or are files that you don't want to include in your
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source distribution.)
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``zip_safe``
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A boolean (True or False) flag specifying whether the project can be
|
||
safely installed and run from a zip file. If this argument is not
|
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supplied, the ``bdist_egg`` command will have to analyze all of your
|
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project's contents for possible problems each time it builds an egg.
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``install_requires``
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A string or list of strings specifying what other distributions need to
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be installed when this one is. See the section below on `Declaring
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Dependencies`_ for details and examples of the format of this argument.
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``entry_points``
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A dictionary mapping entry point group names to strings or lists of strings
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defining the entry points. Entry points are used to support dynamic
|
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discovery of services or plugins provided by a project. See `Dynamic
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Discovery of Services and Plugins`_ for details and examples of the format
|
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of this argument. In addition, this keyword is used to support `Automatic
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Script Creation`_.
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``extras_require``
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A dictionary mapping names of "extras" (optional features of your project)
|
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to strings or lists of strings specifying what other distributions must be
|
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installed to support those features. See the section below on `Declaring
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Dependencies`_ for details and examples of the format of this argument.
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``python_requires``
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A string corresponding to a version specifier (as defined in PEP 440) for
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the Python version, used to specify the Requires-Python defined in PEP 345.
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``setup_requires``
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A string or list of strings specifying what other distributions need to
|
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be present in order for the *setup script* to run. ``setuptools`` will
|
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attempt to obtain these (even going so far as to download them using
|
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``EasyInstall``) before processing the rest of the setup script or commands.
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This argument is needed if you are using distutils extensions as part of
|
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your build process; for example, extensions that process setup() arguments
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and turn them into EGG-INFO metadata files.
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|
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(Note: projects listed in ``setup_requires`` will NOT be automatically
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installed on the system where the setup script is being run. They are
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simply downloaded to the ./.eggs directory if they're not locally available
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already. If you want them to be installed, as well as being available
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when the setup script is run, you should add them to ``install_requires``
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**and** ``setup_requires``.)
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``dependency_links``
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A list of strings naming URLs to be searched when satisfying dependencies.
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These links will be used if needed to install packages specified by
|
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``setup_requires`` or ``tests_require``. They will also be written into
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the egg's metadata for use by tools like EasyInstall to use when installing
|
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an ``.egg`` file.
|
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``namespace_packages``
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A list of strings naming the project's "namespace packages". A namespace
|
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package is a package that may be split across multiple project
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distributions. For example, Zope 3's ``zope`` package is a namespace
|
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package, because subpackages like ``zope.interface`` and ``zope.publisher``
|
||
may be distributed separately. The egg runtime system can automatically
|
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merge such subpackages into a single parent package at runtime, as long
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as you declare them in each project that contains any subpackages of the
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namespace package, and as long as the namespace package's ``__init__.py``
|
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does not contain any code other than a namespace declaration. See the
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section below on `Namespace Packages`_ for more information.
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|
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``test_suite``
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A string naming a ``unittest.TestCase`` subclass (or a package or module
|
||
containing one or more of them, or a method of such a subclass), or naming
|
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a function that can be called with no arguments and returns a
|
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``unittest.TestSuite``. If the named suite is a module, and the module
|
||
has an ``additional_tests()`` function, it is called and the results are
|
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added to the tests to be run. If the named suite is a package, any
|
||
submodules and subpackages are recursively added to the overall test suite.
|
||
|
||
Specifying this argument enables use of the `test`_ command to run the
|
||
specified test suite, e.g. via ``setup.py test``. See the section on the
|
||
`test`_ command below for more details.
|
||
|
||
``tests_require``
|
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If your project's tests need one or more additional packages besides those
|
||
needed to install it, you can use this option to specify them. It should
|
||
be a string or list of strings specifying what other distributions need to
|
||
be present for the package's tests to run. When you run the ``test``
|
||
command, ``setuptools`` will attempt to obtain these (even going
|
||
so far as to download them using ``EasyInstall``). Note that these
|
||
required projects will *not* be installed on the system where the tests
|
||
are run, but only downloaded to the project's setup directory if they're
|
||
not already installed locally.
|
||
|
||
.. _test_loader:
|
||
|
||
``test_loader``
|
||
If you would like to use a different way of finding tests to run than what
|
||
setuptools normally uses, you can specify a module name and class name in
|
||
this argument. The named class must be instantiable with no arguments, and
|
||
its instances must support the ``loadTestsFromNames()`` method as defined
|
||
in the Python ``unittest`` module's ``TestLoader`` class. Setuptools will
|
||
pass only one test "name" in the `names` argument: the value supplied for
|
||
the ``test_suite`` argument. The loader you specify may interpret this
|
||
string in any way it likes, as there are no restrictions on what may be
|
||
contained in a ``test_suite`` string.
|
||
|
||
The module name and class name must be separated by a ``:``. The default
|
||
value of this argument is ``"setuptools.command.test:ScanningLoader"``. If
|
||
you want to use the default ``unittest`` behavior, you can specify
|
||
``"unittest:TestLoader"`` as your ``test_loader`` argument instead. This
|
||
will prevent automatic scanning of submodules and subpackages.
|
||
|
||
The module and class you specify here may be contained in another package,
|
||
as long as you use the ``tests_require`` option to ensure that the package
|
||
containing the loader class is available when the ``test`` command is run.
|
||
|
||
``eager_resources``
|
||
A list of strings naming resources that should be extracted together, if
|
||
any of them is needed, or if any C extensions included in the project are
|
||
imported. This argument is only useful if the project will be installed as
|
||
a zipfile, and there is a need to have all of the listed resources be
|
||
extracted to the filesystem *as a unit*. Resources listed here
|
||
should be '/'-separated paths, relative to the source root, so to list a
|
||
resource ``foo.png`` in package ``bar.baz``, you would include the string
|
||
``bar/baz/foo.png`` in this argument.
|
||
|
||
If you only need to obtain resources one at a time, or you don't have any C
|
||
extensions that access other files in the project (such as data files or
|
||
shared libraries), you probably do NOT need this argument and shouldn't
|
||
mess with it. For more details on how this argument works, see the section
|
||
below on `Automatic Resource Extraction`_.
|
||
|
||
``use_2to3``
|
||
Convert the source code from Python 2 to Python 3 with 2to3 during the
|
||
build process. See :doc:`python3` for more details.
|
||
|
||
``convert_2to3_doctests``
|
||
List of doctest source files that need to be converted with 2to3.
|
||
See :doc:`python3` for more details.
|
||
|
||
``use_2to3_fixers``
|
||
A list of modules to search for additional fixers to be used during
|
||
the 2to3 conversion. See :doc:`python3` for more details.
|
||
|
||
``project_urls``
|
||
An arbitrary map of URL names to hyperlinks, allowing more extensible
|
||
documentation of where various resources can be found than the simple
|
||
``url`` and ``download_url`` options provide.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Using ``find_packages()``
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
|
||
For simple projects, it's usually easy enough to manually add packages to
|
||
the ``packages`` argument of ``setup()``. However, for very large projects
|
||
(Twisted, PEAK, Zope, Chandler, etc.), it can be a big burden to keep the
|
||
package list updated. That's what ``setuptools.find_packages()`` is for.
|
||
|
||
``find_packages()`` takes a source directory and two lists of package name
|
||
patterns to exclude and include. If omitted, the source directory defaults to
|
||
the same
|
||
directory as the setup script. Some projects use a ``src`` or ``lib``
|
||
directory as the root of their source tree, and those projects would of course
|
||
use ``"src"`` or ``"lib"`` as the first argument to ``find_packages()``. (And
|
||
such projects also need something like ``package_dir={'':'src'}`` in their
|
||
``setup()`` arguments, but that's just a normal distutils thing.)
|
||
|
||
Anyway, ``find_packages()`` walks the target directory, filtering by inclusion
|
||
patterns, and finds Python packages (any directory). Packages are only
|
||
recognized if they include an ``__init__.py`` file. Finally, exclusion
|
||
patterns are applied to remove matching packages.
|
||
|
||
Inclusion and exclusion patterns are package names, optionally including
|
||
wildcards. For
|
||
example, ``find_packages(exclude=["*.tests"])`` will exclude all packages whose
|
||
last name part is ``tests``. Or, ``find_packages(exclude=["*.tests",
|
||
"*.tests.*"])`` will also exclude any subpackages of packages named ``tests``,
|
||
but it still won't exclude a top-level ``tests`` package or the children
|
||
thereof. In fact, if you really want no ``tests`` packages at all, you'll need
|
||
something like this::
|
||
|
||
find_packages(exclude=["*.tests", "*.tests.*", "tests.*", "tests"])
|
||
|
||
in order to cover all the bases. Really, the exclusion patterns are intended
|
||
to cover simpler use cases than this, like excluding a single, specified
|
||
package and its subpackages.
|
||
|
||
Regardless of the parameters, the ``find_packages()``
|
||
function returns a list of package names suitable for use as the ``packages``
|
||
argument to ``setup()``, and so is usually the easiest way to set that
|
||
argument in your setup script. Especially since it frees you from having to
|
||
remember to modify your setup script whenever your project grows additional
|
||
top-level packages or subpackages.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Automatic Script Creation
|
||
=========================
|
||
|
||
Packaging and installing scripts can be a bit awkward with the distutils. For
|
||
one thing, there's no easy way to have a script's filename match local
|
||
conventions on both Windows and POSIX platforms. For another, you often have
|
||
to create a separate file just for the "main" script, when your actual "main"
|
||
is a function in a module somewhere. And even in Python 2.4, using the ``-m``
|
||
option only works for actual ``.py`` files that aren't installed in a package.
|
||
|
||
``setuptools`` fixes all of these problems by automatically generating scripts
|
||
for you with the correct extension, and on Windows it will even create an
|
||
``.exe`` file so that users don't have to change their ``PATHEXT`` settings.
|
||
The way to use this feature is to define "entry points" in your setup script
|
||
that indicate what function the generated script should import and run. For
|
||
example, to create two console scripts called ``foo`` and ``bar``, and a GUI
|
||
script called ``baz``, you might do something like this::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
# other arguments here...
|
||
entry_points={
|
||
'console_scripts': [
|
||
'foo = my_package.some_module:main_func',
|
||
'bar = other_module:some_func',
|
||
],
|
||
'gui_scripts': [
|
||
'baz = my_package_gui:start_func',
|
||
]
|
||
}
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
When this project is installed on non-Windows platforms (using "setup.py
|
||
install", "setup.py develop", or by using EasyInstall), a set of ``foo``,
|
||
``bar``, and ``baz`` scripts will be installed that import ``main_func`` and
|
||
``some_func`` from the specified modules. The functions you specify are called
|
||
with no arguments, and their return value is passed to ``sys.exit()``, so you
|
||
can return an errorlevel or message to print to stderr.
|
||
|
||
On Windows, a set of ``foo.exe``, ``bar.exe``, and ``baz.exe`` launchers are
|
||
created, alongside a set of ``foo.py``, ``bar.py``, and ``baz.pyw`` files. The
|
||
``.exe`` wrappers find and execute the right version of Python to run the
|
||
``.py`` or ``.pyw`` file.
|
||
|
||
You may define as many "console script" and "gui script" entry points as you
|
||
like, and each one can optionally specify "extras" that it depends on, that
|
||
will be added to ``sys.path`` when the script is run. For more information on
|
||
"extras", see the section below on `Declaring Extras`_. For more information
|
||
on "entry points" in general, see the section below on `Dynamic Discovery of
|
||
Services and Plugins`_.
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Eggsecutable" Scripts
|
||
----------------------
|
||
|
||
Occasionally, there are situations where it's desirable to make an ``.egg``
|
||
file directly executable. You can do this by including an entry point such
|
||
as the following::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
# other arguments here...
|
||
entry_points={
|
||
'setuptools.installation': [
|
||
'eggsecutable = my_package.some_module:main_func',
|
||
]
|
||
}
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
Any eggs built from the above setup script will include a short executable
|
||
prelude that imports and calls ``main_func()`` from ``my_package.some_module``.
|
||
The prelude can be run on Unix-like platforms (including Mac and Linux) by
|
||
invoking the egg with ``/bin/sh``, or by enabling execute permissions on the
|
||
``.egg`` file. For the executable prelude to run, the appropriate version of
|
||
Python must be available via the ``PATH`` environment variable, under its
|
||
"long" name. That is, if the egg is built for Python 2.3, there must be a
|
||
``python2.3`` executable present in a directory on ``PATH``.
|
||
|
||
This feature is primarily intended to support ez_setup the installation of
|
||
setuptools itself on non-Windows platforms, but may also be useful for other
|
||
projects as well.
|
||
|
||
IMPORTANT NOTE: Eggs with an "eggsecutable" header cannot be renamed, or
|
||
invoked via symlinks. They *must* be invoked using their original filename, in
|
||
order to ensure that, once running, ``pkg_resources`` will know what project
|
||
and version is in use. The header script will check this and exit with an
|
||
error if the ``.egg`` file has been renamed or is invoked via a symlink that
|
||
changes its base name.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Declaring Dependencies
|
||
======================
|
||
|
||
``setuptools`` supports automatically installing dependencies when a package is
|
||
installed, and including information about dependencies in Python Eggs (so that
|
||
package management tools like EasyInstall can use the information).
|
||
|
||
``setuptools`` and ``pkg_resources`` use a common syntax for specifying a
|
||
project's required dependencies. This syntax consists of a project's PyPI
|
||
name, optionally followed by a comma-separated list of "extras" in square
|
||
brackets, optionally followed by a comma-separated list of version
|
||
specifiers. A version specifier is one of the operators ``<``, ``>``, ``<=``,
|
||
``>=``, ``==`` or ``!=``, followed by a version identifier. Tokens may be
|
||
separated by whitespace, but any whitespace or nonstandard characters within a
|
||
project name or version identifier must be replaced with ``-``.
|
||
|
||
Version specifiers for a given project are internally sorted into ascending
|
||
version order, and used to establish what ranges of versions are acceptable.
|
||
Adjacent redundant conditions are also consolidated (e.g. ``">1, >2"`` becomes
|
||
``">2"``, and ``"<2,<3"`` becomes ``"<2"``). ``"!="`` versions are excised from
|
||
the ranges they fall within. A project's version is then checked for
|
||
membership in the resulting ranges. (Note that providing conflicting conditions
|
||
for the same version (e.g. "<2,>=2" or "==2,!=2") is meaningless and may
|
||
therefore produce bizarre results.)
|
||
|
||
Here are some example requirement specifiers::
|
||
|
||
docutils >= 0.3
|
||
|
||
# comment lines and \ continuations are allowed in requirement strings
|
||
BazSpam ==1.1, ==1.2, ==1.3, ==1.4, ==1.5, \
|
||
==1.6, ==1.7 # and so are line-end comments
|
||
|
||
PEAK[FastCGI, reST]>=0.5a4
|
||
|
||
setuptools==0.5a7
|
||
|
||
The simplest way to include requirement specifiers is to use the
|
||
``install_requires`` argument to ``setup()``. It takes a string or list of
|
||
strings containing requirement specifiers. If you include more than one
|
||
requirement in a string, each requirement must begin on a new line.
|
||
|
||
This has three effects:
|
||
|
||
1. When your project is installed, either by using EasyInstall, ``setup.py
|
||
install``, or ``setup.py develop``, all of the dependencies not already
|
||
installed will be located (via PyPI), downloaded, built (if necessary),
|
||
and installed.
|
||
|
||
2. Any scripts in your project will be installed with wrappers that verify
|
||
the availability of the specified dependencies at runtime, and ensure that
|
||
the correct versions are added to ``sys.path`` (e.g. if multiple versions
|
||
have been installed).
|
||
|
||
3. Python Egg distributions will include a metadata file listing the
|
||
dependencies.
|
||
|
||
Note, by the way, that if you declare your dependencies in ``setup.py``, you do
|
||
*not* need to use the ``require()`` function in your scripts or modules, as
|
||
long as you either install the project or use ``setup.py develop`` to do
|
||
development work on it. (See `"Development Mode"`_ below for more details on
|
||
using ``setup.py develop``.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Dependencies that aren't in PyPI
|
||
--------------------------------
|
||
|
||
If your project depends on packages that aren't registered in PyPI, you may
|
||
still be able to depend on them, as long as they are available for download
|
||
as:
|
||
|
||
- an egg, in the standard distutils ``sdist`` format,
|
||
- a single ``.py`` file, or
|
||
- a VCS repository (Subversion, Mercurial, or Git).
|
||
|
||
You just need to add some URLs to the ``dependency_links`` argument to
|
||
``setup()``.
|
||
|
||
The URLs must be either:
|
||
|
||
1. direct download URLs,
|
||
2. the URLs of web pages that contain direct download links, or
|
||
3. the repository's URL
|
||
|
||
In general, it's better to link to web pages, because it is usually less
|
||
complex to update a web page than to release a new version of your project.
|
||
You can also use a SourceForge ``showfiles.php`` link in the case where a
|
||
package you depend on is distributed via SourceForge.
|
||
|
||
If you depend on a package that's distributed as a single ``.py`` file, you
|
||
must include an ``"#egg=project-version"`` suffix to the URL, to give a project
|
||
name and version number. (Be sure to escape any dashes in the name or version
|
||
by replacing them with underscores.) EasyInstall will recognize this suffix
|
||
and automatically create a trivial ``setup.py`` to wrap the single ``.py`` file
|
||
as an egg.
|
||
|
||
In the case of a VCS checkout, you should also append ``#egg=project-version``
|
||
in order to identify for what package that checkout should be used. You can
|
||
append ``@REV`` to the URL's path (before the fragment) to specify a revision.
|
||
Additionally, you can also force the VCS being used by prepending the URL with
|
||
a certain prefix. Currently available are:
|
||
|
||
- ``svn+URL`` for Subversion,
|
||
- ``git+URL`` for Git, and
|
||
- ``hg+URL`` for Mercurial
|
||
|
||
A more complete example would be:
|
||
|
||
``vcs+proto://host/path@revision#egg=project-version``
|
||
|
||
Be careful with the version. It should match the one inside the project files.
|
||
If you want to disregard the version, you have to omit it both in the
|
||
``requires`` and in the URL's fragment.
|
||
|
||
This will do a checkout (or a clone, in Git and Mercurial parlance) to a
|
||
temporary folder and run ``setup.py bdist_egg``.
|
||
|
||
The ``dependency_links`` option takes the form of a list of URL strings. For
|
||
example, the below will cause EasyInstall to search the specified page for
|
||
eggs or source distributions, if the package's dependencies aren't already
|
||
installed::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
...
|
||
dependency_links=[
|
||
"http://peak.telecommunity.com/snapshots/"
|
||
],
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _Declaring Extras:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Declaring "Extras" (optional features with their own dependencies)
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Sometimes a project has "recommended" dependencies, that are not required for
|
||
all uses of the project. For example, a project might offer optional PDF
|
||
output if ReportLab is installed, and reStructuredText support if docutils is
|
||
installed. These optional features are called "extras", and setuptools allows
|
||
you to define their requirements as well. In this way, other projects that
|
||
require these optional features can force the additional requirements to be
|
||
installed, by naming the desired extras in their ``install_requires``.
|
||
|
||
For example, let's say that Project A offers optional PDF and reST support::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
name="Project-A",
|
||
...
|
||
extras_require={
|
||
'PDF': ["ReportLab>=1.2", "RXP"],
|
||
'reST': ["docutils>=0.3"],
|
||
}
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
As you can see, the ``extras_require`` argument takes a dictionary mapping
|
||
names of "extra" features, to strings or lists of strings describing those
|
||
features' requirements. These requirements will *not* be automatically
|
||
installed unless another package depends on them (directly or indirectly) by
|
||
including the desired "extras" in square brackets after the associated project
|
||
name. (Or if the extras were listed in a requirement spec on the EasyInstall
|
||
command line.)
|
||
|
||
Extras can be used by a project's `entry points`_ to specify dynamic
|
||
dependencies. For example, if Project A includes a "rst2pdf" script, it might
|
||
declare it like this, so that the "PDF" requirements are only resolved if the
|
||
"rst2pdf" script is run::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
name="Project-A",
|
||
...
|
||
entry_points={
|
||
'console_scripts': [
|
||
'rst2pdf = project_a.tools.pdfgen [PDF]',
|
||
'rst2html = project_a.tools.htmlgen',
|
||
# more script entry points ...
|
||
],
|
||
}
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
Projects can also use another project's extras when specifying dependencies.
|
||
For example, if project B needs "project A" with PDF support installed, it
|
||
might declare the dependency like this::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
name="Project-B",
|
||
install_requires=["Project-A[PDF]"],
|
||
...
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
This will cause ReportLab to be installed along with project A, if project B is
|
||
installed -- even if project A was already installed. In this way, a project
|
||
can encapsulate groups of optional "downstream dependencies" under a feature
|
||
name, so that packages that depend on it don't have to know what the downstream
|
||
dependencies are. If a later version of Project A builds in PDF support and
|
||
no longer needs ReportLab, or if it ends up needing other dependencies besides
|
||
ReportLab in order to provide PDF support, Project B's setup information does
|
||
not need to change, but the right packages will still be installed if needed.
|
||
|
||
Note, by the way, that if a project ends up not needing any other packages to
|
||
support a feature, it should keep an empty requirements list for that feature
|
||
in its ``extras_require`` argument, so that packages depending on that feature
|
||
don't break (due to an invalid feature name). For example, if Project A above
|
||
builds in PDF support and no longer needs ReportLab, it could change its
|
||
setup to this::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
name="Project-A",
|
||
...
|
||
extras_require={
|
||
'PDF': [],
|
||
'reST': ["docutils>=0.3"],
|
||
}
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
so that Package B doesn't have to remove the ``[PDF]`` from its requirement
|
||
specifier.
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _Platform Specific Dependencies:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Declaring platform specific dependencies
|
||
----------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Sometimes a project might require a dependency to run on a specific platform.
|
||
This could to a package that back ports a module so that it can be used in
|
||
older python versions. Or it could be a package that is required to run on a
|
||
specific operating system. This will allow a project to work on multiple
|
||
different platforms without installing dependencies that are not required for
|
||
a platform that is installing the project.
|
||
|
||
For example, here is a project that uses the ``enum`` module and ``pywin32``::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
name="Project",
|
||
...
|
||
install_requires=[
|
||
'enum34;python_version<"3.4"',
|
||
'pywin32 >= 1.0;platform_system=="Windows"'
|
||
]
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
Since the ``enum`` module was added in Python 3.4, it should only be installed
|
||
if the python version is earlier. Since ``pywin32`` will only be used on
|
||
windows, it should only be installed when the operating system is Windows.
|
||
Specifying version requirements for the dependencies is supported as normal.
|
||
|
||
The environmental markers that may be used for testing platform types are
|
||
detailed in `PEP 508`_.
|
||
|
||
.. _PEP 508: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0508/
|
||
|
||
Including Data Files
|
||
====================
|
||
|
||
The distutils have traditionally allowed installation of "data files", which
|
||
are placed in a platform-specific location. However, the most common use case
|
||
for data files distributed with a package is for use *by* the package, usually
|
||
by including the data files in the package directory.
|
||
|
||
Setuptools offers three ways to specify data files to be included in your
|
||
packages. First, you can simply use the ``include_package_data`` keyword,
|
||
e.g.::
|
||
|
||
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
|
||
setup(
|
||
...
|
||
include_package_data=True
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
This tells setuptools to install any data files it finds in your packages.
|
||
The data files must be specified via the distutils' ``MANIFEST.in`` file.
|
||
(They can also be tracked by a revision control system, using an appropriate
|
||
plugin. See the section below on `Adding Support for Revision Control
|
||
Systems`_ for information on how to write such plugins.)
|
||
|
||
If you want finer-grained control over what files are included (for example,
|
||
if you have documentation files in your package directories and want to exclude
|
||
them from installation), then you can also use the ``package_data`` keyword,
|
||
e.g.::
|
||
|
||
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
|
||
setup(
|
||
...
|
||
package_data={
|
||
# If any package contains *.txt or *.rst files, include them:
|
||
'': ['*.txt', '*.rst'],
|
||
# And include any *.msg files found in the 'hello' package, too:
|
||
'hello': ['*.msg'],
|
||
}
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
The ``package_data`` argument is a dictionary that maps from package names to
|
||
lists of glob patterns. The globs may include subdirectory names, if the data
|
||
files are contained in a subdirectory of the package. For example, if the
|
||
package tree looks like this::
|
||
|
||
setup.py
|
||
src/
|
||
mypkg/
|
||
__init__.py
|
||
mypkg.txt
|
||
data/
|
||
somefile.dat
|
||
otherdata.dat
|
||
|
||
The setuptools setup file might look like this::
|
||
|
||
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
|
||
setup(
|
||
...
|
||
packages=find_packages('src'), # include all packages under src
|
||
package_dir={'':'src'}, # tell distutils packages are under src
|
||
|
||
package_data={
|
||
# If any package contains *.txt files, include them:
|
||
'': ['*.txt'],
|
||
# And include any *.dat files found in the 'data' subdirectory
|
||
# of the 'mypkg' package, also:
|
||
'mypkg': ['data/*.dat'],
|
||
}
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
Notice that if you list patterns in ``package_data`` under the empty string,
|
||
these patterns are used to find files in every package, even ones that also
|
||
have their own patterns listed. Thus, in the above example, the ``mypkg.txt``
|
||
file gets included even though it's not listed in the patterns for ``mypkg``.
|
||
|
||
Also notice that if you use paths, you *must* use a forward slash (``/``) as
|
||
the path separator, even if you are on Windows. Setuptools automatically
|
||
converts slashes to appropriate platform-specific separators at build time.
|
||
|
||
If datafiles are contained in a subdirectory of a package that isn't a package
|
||
itself (no ``__init__.py``), then the subdirectory names (or ``*``) are required
|
||
in the ``package_data`` argument (as shown above with ``'data/*.dat'``).
|
||
|
||
When building an ``sdist``, the datafiles are also drawn from the
|
||
``package_name.egg-info/SOURCES.txt`` file, so make sure that this is removed if
|
||
the ``setup.py`` ``package_data`` list is updated before calling ``setup.py``.
|
||
|
||
(Note: although the ``package_data`` argument was previously only available in
|
||
``setuptools``, it was also added to the Python ``distutils`` package as of
|
||
Python 2.4; there is `some documentation for the feature`__ available on the
|
||
python.org website. If using the setuptools-specific ``include_package_data``
|
||
argument, files specified by ``package_data`` will *not* be automatically
|
||
added to the manifest unless they are listed in the MANIFEST.in file.)
|
||
|
||
__ http://docs.python.org/dist/node11.html
|
||
|
||
Sometimes, the ``include_package_data`` or ``package_data`` options alone
|
||
aren't sufficient to precisely define what files you want included. For
|
||
example, you may want to include package README files in your revision control
|
||
system and source distributions, but exclude them from being installed. So,
|
||
setuptools offers an ``exclude_package_data`` option as well, that allows you
|
||
to do things like this::
|
||
|
||
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
|
||
setup(
|
||
...
|
||
packages=find_packages('src'), # include all packages under src
|
||
package_dir={'':'src'}, # tell distutils packages are under src
|
||
|
||
include_package_data=True, # include everything in source control
|
||
|
||
# ...but exclude README.txt from all packages
|
||
exclude_package_data={'': ['README.txt']},
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
The ``exclude_package_data`` option is a dictionary mapping package names to
|
||
lists of wildcard patterns, just like the ``package_data`` option. And, just
|
||
as with that option, a key of ``''`` will apply the given pattern(s) to all
|
||
packages. However, any files that match these patterns will be *excluded*
|
||
from installation, even if they were listed in ``package_data`` or were
|
||
included as a result of using ``include_package_data``.
|
||
|
||
In summary, the three options allow you to:
|
||
|
||
``include_package_data``
|
||
Accept all data files and directories matched by ``MANIFEST.in``.
|
||
|
||
``package_data``
|
||
Specify additional patterns to match files that may or may
|
||
not be matched by ``MANIFEST.in`` or found in source control.
|
||
|
||
``exclude_package_data``
|
||
Specify patterns for data files and directories that should *not* be
|
||
included when a package is installed, even if they would otherwise have
|
||
been included due to the use of the preceding options.
|
||
|
||
NOTE: Due to the way the distutils build process works, a data file that you
|
||
include in your project and then stop including may be "orphaned" in your
|
||
project's build directories, requiring you to run ``setup.py clean --all`` to
|
||
fully remove them. This may also be important for your users and contributors
|
||
if they track intermediate revisions of your project using Subversion; be sure
|
||
to let them know when you make changes that remove files from inclusion so they
|
||
can run ``setup.py clean --all``.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Accessing Data Files at Runtime
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Typically, existing programs manipulate a package's ``__file__`` attribute in
|
||
order to find the location of data files. However, this manipulation isn't
|
||
compatible with PEP 302-based import hooks, including importing from zip files
|
||
and Python Eggs. It is strongly recommended that, if you are using data files,
|
||
you should use the :ref:`ResourceManager API` of ``pkg_resources`` to access
|
||
them. The ``pkg_resources`` module is distributed as part of setuptools, so if
|
||
you're using setuptools to distribute your package, there is no reason not to
|
||
use its resource management API. See also `Accessing Package Resources`_ for
|
||
a quick example of converting code that uses ``__file__`` to use
|
||
``pkg_resources`` instead.
|
||
|
||
.. _Accessing Package Resources: http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/PythonEggs#accessing-package-resources
|
||
|
||
|
||
Non-Package Data Files
|
||
----------------------
|
||
|
||
The ``distutils`` normally install general "data files" to a platform-specific
|
||
location (e.g. ``/usr/share``). This feature intended to be used for things
|
||
like documentation, example configuration files, and the like. ``setuptools``
|
||
does not install these data files in a separate location, however. They are
|
||
bundled inside the egg file or directory, alongside the Python modules and
|
||
packages. The data files can also be accessed using the :ref:`ResourceManager
|
||
API`, by specifying a ``Requirement`` instead of a package name::
|
||
|
||
from pkg_resources import Requirement, resource_filename
|
||
filename = resource_filename(Requirement.parse("MyProject"),"sample.conf")
|
||
|
||
The above code will obtain the filename of the "sample.conf" file in the data
|
||
root of the "MyProject" distribution.
|
||
|
||
Note, by the way, that this encapsulation of data files means that you can't
|
||
actually install data files to some arbitrary location on a user's machine;
|
||
this is a feature, not a bug. You can always include a script in your
|
||
distribution that extracts and copies your the documentation or data files to
|
||
a user-specified location, at their discretion. If you put related data files
|
||
in a single directory, you can use ``resource_filename()`` with the directory
|
||
name to get a filesystem directory that then can be copied with the ``shutil``
|
||
module. (Even if your package is installed as a zipfile, calling
|
||
``resource_filename()`` on a directory will return an actual filesystem
|
||
directory, whose contents will be that entire subtree of your distribution.)
|
||
|
||
(Of course, if you're writing a new package, you can just as easily place your
|
||
data files or directories inside one of your packages, rather than using the
|
||
distutils' approach. However, if you're updating an existing application, it
|
||
may be simpler not to change the way it currently specifies these data files.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Automatic Resource Extraction
|
||
-----------------------------
|
||
|
||
If you are using tools that expect your resources to be "real" files, or your
|
||
project includes non-extension native libraries or other files that your C
|
||
extensions expect to be able to access, you may need to list those files in
|
||
the ``eager_resources`` argument to ``setup()``, so that the files will be
|
||
extracted together, whenever a C extension in the project is imported.
|
||
|
||
This is especially important if your project includes shared libraries *other*
|
||
than distutils-built C extensions, and those shared libraries use file
|
||
extensions other than ``.dll``, ``.so``, or ``.dylib``, which are the
|
||
extensions that setuptools 0.6a8 and higher automatically detects as shared
|
||
libraries and adds to the ``native_libs.txt`` file for you. Any shared
|
||
libraries whose names do not end with one of those extensions should be listed
|
||
as ``eager_resources``, because they need to be present in the filesystem when
|
||
he C extensions that link to them are used.
|
||
|
||
The ``pkg_resources`` runtime for compressed packages will automatically
|
||
extract *all* C extensions and ``eager_resources`` at the same time, whenever
|
||
*any* C extension or eager resource is requested via the ``resource_filename()``
|
||
API. (C extensions are imported using ``resource_filename()`` internally.)
|
||
This ensures that C extensions will see all of the "real" files that they
|
||
expect to see.
|
||
|
||
Note also that you can list directory resource names in ``eager_resources`` as
|
||
well, in which case the directory's contents (including subdirectories) will be
|
||
extracted whenever any C extension or eager resource is requested.
|
||
|
||
Please note that if you're not sure whether you need to use this argument, you
|
||
don't! It's really intended to support projects with lots of non-Python
|
||
dependencies and as a last resort for crufty projects that can't otherwise
|
||
handle being compressed. If your package is pure Python, Python plus data
|
||
files, or Python plus C, you really don't need this. You've got to be using
|
||
either C or an external program that needs "real" files in your project before
|
||
there's any possibility of ``eager_resources`` being relevant to your project.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Extensible Applications and Frameworks
|
||
======================================
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _Entry Points:
|
||
|
||
Dynamic Discovery of Services and Plugins
|
||
-----------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
``setuptools`` supports creating libraries that "plug in" to extensible
|
||
applications and frameworks, by letting you register "entry points" in your
|
||
project that can be imported by the application or framework.
|
||
|
||
For example, suppose that a blogging tool wants to support plugins
|
||
that provide translation for various file types to the blog's output format.
|
||
The framework might define an "entry point group" called ``blogtool.parsers``,
|
||
and then allow plugins to register entry points for the file extensions they
|
||
support.
|
||
|
||
This would allow people to create distributions that contain one or more
|
||
parsers for different file types, and then the blogging tool would be able to
|
||
find the parsers at runtime by looking up an entry point for the file
|
||
extension (or mime type, or however it wants to).
|
||
|
||
Note that if the blogging tool includes parsers for certain file formats, it
|
||
can register these as entry points in its own setup script, which means it
|
||
doesn't have to special-case its built-in formats. They can just be treated
|
||
the same as any other plugin's entry points would be.
|
||
|
||
If you're creating a project that plugs in to an existing application or
|
||
framework, you'll need to know what entry points or entry point groups are
|
||
defined by that application or framework. Then, you can register entry points
|
||
in your setup script. Here are a few examples of ways you might register an
|
||
``.rst`` file parser entry point in the ``blogtool.parsers`` entry point group,
|
||
for our hypothetical blogging tool::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
# ...
|
||
entry_points={'blogtool.parsers': '.rst = some_module:SomeClass'}
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
# ...
|
||
entry_points={'blogtool.parsers': ['.rst = some_module:a_func']}
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
# ...
|
||
entry_points="""
|
||
[blogtool.parsers]
|
||
.rst = some.nested.module:SomeClass.some_classmethod [reST]
|
||
""",
|
||
extras_require=dict(reST="Docutils>=0.3.5")
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
The ``entry_points`` argument to ``setup()`` accepts either a string with
|
||
``.ini``-style sections, or a dictionary mapping entry point group names to
|
||
either strings or lists of strings containing entry point specifiers. An
|
||
entry point specifier consists of a name and value, separated by an ``=``
|
||
sign. The value consists of a dotted module name, optionally followed by a
|
||
``:`` and a dotted identifier naming an object within the module. It can
|
||
also include a bracketed list of "extras" that are required for the entry
|
||
point to be used. When the invoking application or framework requests loading
|
||
of an entry point, any requirements implied by the associated extras will be
|
||
passed to ``pkg_resources.require()``, so that an appropriate error message
|
||
can be displayed if the needed package(s) are missing. (Of course, the
|
||
invoking app or framework can ignore such errors if it wants to make an entry
|
||
point optional if a requirement isn't installed.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Defining Additional Metadata
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
|
||
Some extensible applications and frameworks may need to define their own kinds
|
||
of metadata to include in eggs, which they can then access using the
|
||
``pkg_resources`` metadata APIs. Ordinarily, this is done by having plugin
|
||
developers include additional files in their ``ProjectName.egg-info``
|
||
directory. However, since it can be tedious to create such files by hand, you
|
||
may want to create a distutils extension that will create the necessary files
|
||
from arguments to ``setup()``, in much the same way that ``setuptools`` does
|
||
for many of the ``setup()`` arguments it adds. See the section below on
|
||
`Creating distutils Extensions`_ for more details, especially the subsection on
|
||
`Adding new EGG-INFO Files`_.
|
||
|
||
|
||
"Development Mode"
|
||
==================
|
||
|
||
Under normal circumstances, the ``distutils`` assume that you are going to
|
||
build a distribution of your project, not use it in its "raw" or "unbuilt"
|
||
form. If you were to use the ``distutils`` that way, you would have to rebuild
|
||
and reinstall your project every time you made a change to it during
|
||
development.
|
||
|
||
Another problem that sometimes comes up with the ``distutils`` is that you may
|
||
need to do development on two related projects at the same time. You may need
|
||
to put both projects' packages in the same directory to run them, but need to
|
||
keep them separate for revision control purposes. How can you do this?
|
||
|
||
Setuptools allows you to deploy your projects for use in a common directory or
|
||
staging area, but without copying any files. Thus, you can edit each project's
|
||
code in its checkout directory, and only need to run build commands when you
|
||
change a project's C extensions or similarly compiled files. You can even
|
||
deploy a project into another project's checkout directory, if that's your
|
||
preferred way of working (as opposed to using a common independent staging area
|
||
or the site-packages directory).
|
||
|
||
To do this, use the ``setup.py develop`` command. It works very similarly to
|
||
``setup.py install`` or the EasyInstall tool, except that it doesn't actually
|
||
install anything. Instead, it creates a special ``.egg-link`` file in the
|
||
deployment directory, that links to your project's source code. And, if your
|
||
deployment directory is Python's ``site-packages`` directory, it will also
|
||
update the ``easy-install.pth`` file to include your project's source code,
|
||
thereby making it available on ``sys.path`` for all programs using that Python
|
||
installation.
|
||
|
||
If you have enabled the ``use_2to3`` flag, then of course the ``.egg-link``
|
||
will not link directly to your source code when run under Python 3, since
|
||
that source code would be made for Python 2 and not work under Python 3.
|
||
Instead the ``setup.py develop`` will build Python 3 code under the ``build``
|
||
directory, and link there. This means that after doing code changes you will
|
||
have to run ``setup.py build`` before these changes are picked up by your
|
||
Python 3 installation.
|
||
|
||
In addition, the ``develop`` command creates wrapper scripts in the target
|
||
script directory that will run your in-development scripts after ensuring that
|
||
all your ``install_requires`` packages are available on ``sys.path``.
|
||
|
||
You can deploy the same project to multiple staging areas, e.g. if you have
|
||
multiple projects on the same machine that are sharing the same project you're
|
||
doing development work.
|
||
|
||
When you're done with a given development task, you can remove the project
|
||
source from a staging area using ``setup.py develop --uninstall``, specifying
|
||
the desired staging area if it's not the default.
|
||
|
||
There are several options to control the precise behavior of the ``develop``
|
||
command; see the section on the `develop`_ command below for more details.
|
||
|
||
Note that you can also apply setuptools commands to non-setuptools projects,
|
||
using commands like this::
|
||
|
||
python -c "import setuptools; execfile('setup.py')" develop
|
||
|
||
That is, you can simply list the normal setup commands and options following
|
||
the quoted part.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Distributing a ``setuptools``-based project
|
||
===========================================
|
||
|
||
Using ``setuptools``... Without bundling it!
|
||
---------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
.. warning:: **ez_setup** is deprecated in favor of PIP with **PEP-518** support.
|
||
|
||
Your users might not have ``setuptools`` installed on their machines, or even
|
||
if they do, it might not be the right version. Fixing this is easy; just
|
||
download `ez_setup.py`_, and put it in the same directory as your ``setup.py``
|
||
script. (Be sure to add it to your revision control system, too.) Then add
|
||
these two lines to the very top of your setup script, before the script imports
|
||
anything from setuptools:
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: python
|
||
|
||
import ez_setup
|
||
ez_setup.use_setuptools()
|
||
|
||
That's it. The ``ez_setup`` module will automatically download a matching
|
||
version of ``setuptools`` from PyPI, if it isn't present on the target system.
|
||
Whenever you install an updated version of setuptools, you should also update
|
||
your projects' ``ez_setup.py`` files, so that a matching version gets installed
|
||
on the target machine(s).
|
||
|
||
By the way, setuptools supports the new PyPI "upload" command, so you can use
|
||
``setup.py sdist upload`` or ``setup.py bdist_egg upload`` to upload your
|
||
source or egg distributions respectively. Your project's current version must
|
||
be registered with PyPI first, of course; you can use ``setup.py register`` to
|
||
do that. Or you can do it all in one step, e.g. ``setup.py register sdist
|
||
bdist_egg upload`` will register the package, build source and egg
|
||
distributions, and then upload them both to PyPI, where they'll be easily
|
||
found by other projects that depend on them.
|
||
|
||
(By the way, if you need to distribute a specific version of ``setuptools``,
|
||
you can specify the exact version and base download URL as parameters to the
|
||
``use_setuptools()`` function. See the function's docstring for details.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
What Your Users Should Know
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
|
||
In general, a setuptools-based project looks just like any distutils-based
|
||
project -- as long as your users have an internet connection and are installing
|
||
to ``site-packages``, that is. But for some users, these conditions don't
|
||
apply, and they may become frustrated if this is their first encounter with
|
||
a setuptools-based project. To keep these users happy, you should review the
|
||
following topics in your project's installation instructions, if they are
|
||
relevant to your project and your target audience isn't already familiar with
|
||
setuptools and ``easy_install``.
|
||
|
||
Network Access
|
||
If your project is using ``ez_setup``, you should inform users of the
|
||
need to either have network access, or to preinstall the correct version of
|
||
setuptools using the `EasyInstall installation instructions`_. Those
|
||
instructions also have tips for dealing with firewalls as well as how to
|
||
manually download and install setuptools.
|
||
|
||
Custom Installation Locations
|
||
You should inform your users that if they are installing your project to
|
||
somewhere other than the main ``site-packages`` directory, they should
|
||
first install setuptools using the instructions for `Custom Installation
|
||
Locations`_, before installing your project.
|
||
|
||
Your Project's Dependencies
|
||
If your project depends on other projects that may need to be downloaded
|
||
from PyPI or elsewhere, you should list them in your installation
|
||
instructions, or tell users how to find out what they are. While most
|
||
users will not need this information, any users who don't have unrestricted
|
||
internet access may have to find, download, and install the other projects
|
||
manually. (Note, however, that they must still install those projects
|
||
using ``easy_install``, or your project will not know they are installed,
|
||
and your setup script will try to download them again.)
|
||
|
||
If you want to be especially friendly to users with limited network access,
|
||
you may wish to build eggs for your project and its dependencies, making
|
||
them all available for download from your site, or at least create a page
|
||
with links to all of the needed eggs. In this way, users with limited
|
||
network access can manually download all the eggs to a single directory,
|
||
then use the ``-f`` option of ``easy_install`` to specify the directory
|
||
to find eggs in. Users who have full network access can just use ``-f``
|
||
with the URL of your download page, and ``easy_install`` will find all the
|
||
needed eggs using your links directly. This is also useful when your
|
||
target audience isn't able to compile packages (e.g. most Windows users)
|
||
and your package or some of its dependencies include C code.
|
||
|
||
Revision Control System Users and Co-Developers
|
||
Users and co-developers who are tracking your in-development code using
|
||
a revision control system should probably read this manual's sections
|
||
regarding such development. Alternately, you may wish to create a
|
||
quick-reference guide containing the tips from this manual that apply to
|
||
your particular situation. For example, if you recommend that people use
|
||
``setup.py develop`` when tracking your in-development code, you should let
|
||
them know that this needs to be run after every update or commit.
|
||
|
||
Similarly, if you remove modules or data files from your project, you
|
||
should remind them to run ``setup.py clean --all`` and delete any obsolete
|
||
``.pyc`` or ``.pyo``. (This tip applies to the distutils in general, not
|
||
just setuptools, but not everybody knows about them; be kind to your users
|
||
by spelling out your project's best practices rather than leaving them
|
||
guessing.)
|
||
|
||
Creating System Packages
|
||
Some users want to manage all Python packages using a single package
|
||
manager, and sometimes that package manager isn't ``easy_install``!
|
||
Setuptools currently supports ``bdist_rpm``, ``bdist_wininst``, and
|
||
``bdist_dumb`` formats for system packaging. If a user has a locally-
|
||
installed "bdist" packaging tool that internally uses the distutils
|
||
``install`` command, it should be able to work with ``setuptools``. Some
|
||
examples of "bdist" formats that this should work with include the
|
||
``bdist_nsi`` and ``bdist_msi`` formats for Windows.
|
||
|
||
However, packaging tools that build binary distributions by running
|
||
``setup.py install`` on the command line or as a subprocess will require
|
||
modification to work with setuptools. They should use the
|
||
``--single-version-externally-managed`` option to the ``install`` command,
|
||
combined with the standard ``--root`` or ``--record`` options.
|
||
See the `install command`_ documentation below for more details. The
|
||
``bdist_deb`` command is an example of a command that currently requires
|
||
this kind of patching to work with setuptools.
|
||
|
||
If you or your users have a problem building a usable system package for
|
||
your project, please report the problem via the mailing list so that
|
||
either the "bdist" tool in question or setuptools can be modified to
|
||
resolve the issue.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Setting the ``zip_safe`` flag
|
||
-----------------------------
|
||
|
||
For some use cases (such as bundling as part of a larger application), Python
|
||
packages may be run directly from a zip file.
|
||
Not all packages, however, are capable of running in compressed form, because
|
||
they may expect to be able to access either source code or data files as
|
||
normal operating system files. So, ``setuptools`` can install your project
|
||
as a zipfile or a directory, and its default choice is determined by the
|
||
project's ``zip_safe`` flag.
|
||
|
||
You can pass a True or False value for the ``zip_safe`` argument to the
|
||
``setup()`` function, or you can omit it. If you omit it, the ``bdist_egg``
|
||
command will analyze your project's contents to see if it can detect any
|
||
conditions that would prevent it from working in a zipfile. It will output
|
||
notices to the console about any such conditions that it finds.
|
||
|
||
Currently, this analysis is extremely conservative: it will consider the
|
||
project unsafe if it contains any C extensions or datafiles whatsoever. This
|
||
does *not* mean that the project can't or won't work as a zipfile! It just
|
||
means that the ``bdist_egg`` authors aren't yet comfortable asserting that
|
||
the project *will* work. If the project contains no C or data files, and does
|
||
no ``__file__`` or ``__path__`` introspection or source code manipulation, then
|
||
there is an extremely solid chance the project will work when installed as a
|
||
zipfile. (And if the project uses ``pkg_resources`` for all its data file
|
||
access, then C extensions and other data files shouldn't be a problem at all.
|
||
See the `Accessing Data Files at Runtime`_ section above for more information.)
|
||
|
||
However, if ``bdist_egg`` can't be *sure* that your package will work, but
|
||
you've checked over all the warnings it issued, and you are either satisfied it
|
||
*will* work (or if you want to try it for yourself), then you should set
|
||
``zip_safe`` to ``True`` in your ``setup()`` call. If it turns out that it
|
||
doesn't work, you can always change it to ``False``, which will force
|
||
``setuptools`` to install your project as a directory rather than as a zipfile.
|
||
|
||
Of course, the end-user can still override either decision, if they are using
|
||
EasyInstall to install your package. And, if you want to override for testing
|
||
purposes, you can just run ``setup.py easy_install --zip-ok .`` or ``setup.py
|
||
easy_install --always-unzip .`` in your project directory. to install the
|
||
package as a zipfile or directory, respectively.
|
||
|
||
In the future, as we gain more experience with different packages and become
|
||
more satisfied with the robustness of the ``pkg_resources`` runtime, the
|
||
"zip safety" analysis may become less conservative. However, we strongly
|
||
recommend that you determine for yourself whether your project functions
|
||
correctly when installed as a zipfile, correct any problems if you can, and
|
||
then make an explicit declaration of ``True`` or ``False`` for the ``zip_safe``
|
||
flag, so that it will not be necessary for ``bdist_egg`` or ``EasyInstall`` to
|
||
try to guess whether your project can work as a zipfile.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Namespace Packages
|
||
------------------
|
||
|
||
Sometimes, a large package is more useful if distributed as a collection of
|
||
smaller eggs. However, Python does not normally allow the contents of a
|
||
package to be retrieved from more than one location. "Namespace packages"
|
||
are a solution for this problem. When you declare a package to be a namespace
|
||
package, it means that the package has no meaningful contents in its
|
||
``__init__.py``, and that it is merely a container for modules and subpackages.
|
||
|
||
The ``pkg_resources`` runtime will then automatically ensure that the contents
|
||
of namespace packages that are spread over multiple eggs or directories are
|
||
combined into a single "virtual" package.
|
||
|
||
The ``namespace_packages`` argument to ``setup()`` lets you declare your
|
||
project's namespace packages, so that they will be included in your project's
|
||
metadata. The argument should list the namespace packages that the egg
|
||
participates in. For example, the ZopeInterface project might do this::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
# ...
|
||
namespace_packages=['zope']
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
because it contains a ``zope.interface`` package that lives in the ``zope``
|
||
namespace package. Similarly, a project for a standalone ``zope.publisher``
|
||
would also declare the ``zope`` namespace package. When these projects are
|
||
installed and used, Python will see them both as part of a "virtual" ``zope``
|
||
package, even though they will be installed in different locations.
|
||
|
||
Namespace packages don't have to be top-level packages. For example, Zope 3's
|
||
``zope.app`` package is a namespace package, and in the future PEAK's
|
||
``peak.util`` package will be too.
|
||
|
||
Note, by the way, that your project's source tree must include the namespace
|
||
packages' ``__init__.py`` files (and the ``__init__.py`` of any parent
|
||
packages), in a normal Python package layout. These ``__init__.py`` files
|
||
*must* contain the line::
|
||
|
||
__import__('pkg_resources').declare_namespace(__name__)
|
||
|
||
This code ensures that the namespace package machinery is operating and that
|
||
the current package is registered as a namespace package.
|
||
|
||
You must NOT include any other code and data in a namespace package's
|
||
``__init__.py``. Even though it may appear to work during development, or when
|
||
projects are installed as ``.egg`` files, it will not work when the projects
|
||
are installed using "system" packaging tools -- in such cases the
|
||
``__init__.py`` files will not be installed, let alone executed.
|
||
|
||
You must include the ``declare_namespace()`` line in the ``__init__.py`` of
|
||
*every* project that has contents for the namespace package in question, in
|
||
order to ensure that the namespace will be declared regardless of which
|
||
project's copy of ``__init__.py`` is loaded first. If the first loaded
|
||
``__init__.py`` doesn't declare it, it will never *be* declared, because no
|
||
other copies will ever be loaded!
|
||
|
||
|
||
TRANSITIONAL NOTE
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
Setuptools automatically calls ``declare_namespace()`` for you at runtime,
|
||
but future versions may *not*. This is because the automatic declaration
|
||
feature has some negative side effects, such as needing to import all namespace
|
||
packages during the initialization of the ``pkg_resources`` runtime, and also
|
||
the need for ``pkg_resources`` to be explicitly imported before any namespace
|
||
packages work at all. In some future releases, you'll be responsible
|
||
for including your own declaration lines, and the automatic declaration feature
|
||
will be dropped to get rid of the negative side effects.
|
||
|
||
During the remainder of the current development cycle, therefore, setuptools
|
||
will warn you about missing ``declare_namespace()`` calls in your
|
||
``__init__.py`` files, and you should correct these as soon as possible
|
||
before the compatibility support is removed.
|
||
Namespace packages without declaration lines will not work
|
||
correctly once a user has upgraded to a later version, so it's important that
|
||
you make this change now in order to avoid having your code break in the field.
|
||
Our apologies for the inconvenience, and thank you for your patience.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Tagging and "Daily Build" or "Snapshot" Releases
|
||
------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
When a set of related projects are under development, it may be important to
|
||
track finer-grained version increments than you would normally use for e.g.
|
||
"stable" releases. While stable releases might be measured in dotted numbers
|
||
with alpha/beta/etc. status codes, development versions of a project often
|
||
need to be tracked by revision or build number or even build date. This is
|
||
especially true when projects in development need to refer to one another, and
|
||
therefore may literally need an up-to-the-minute version of something!
|
||
|
||
To support these scenarios, ``setuptools`` allows you to "tag" your source and
|
||
egg distributions by adding one or more of the following to the project's
|
||
"official" version identifier:
|
||
|
||
* A manually-specified pre-release tag, such as "build" or "dev", or a
|
||
manually-specified post-release tag, such as a build or revision number
|
||
(``--tag-build=STRING, -bSTRING``)
|
||
|
||
* An 8-character representation of the build date (``--tag-date, -d``), as
|
||
a postrelease tag
|
||
|
||
You can add these tags by adding ``egg_info`` and the desired options to
|
||
the command line ahead of the ``sdist`` or ``bdist`` commands that you want
|
||
to generate a daily build or snapshot for. See the section below on the
|
||
`egg_info`_ command for more details.
|
||
|
||
(Also, before you release your project, be sure to see the section above on
|
||
`Specifying Your Project's Version`_ for more information about how pre- and
|
||
post-release tags affect how setuptools and EasyInstall interpret version
|
||
numbers. This is important in order to make sure that dependency processing
|
||
tools will know which versions of your project are newer than others.)
|
||
|
||
Finally, if you are creating builds frequently, and either building them in a
|
||
downloadable location or are copying them to a distribution server, you should
|
||
probably also check out the `rotate`_ command, which lets you automatically
|
||
delete all but the N most-recently-modified distributions matching a glob
|
||
pattern. So, you can use a command line like::
|
||
|
||
setup.py egg_info -rbDEV bdist_egg rotate -m.egg -k3
|
||
|
||
to build an egg whose version info includes 'DEV-rNNNN' (where NNNN is the
|
||
most recent Subversion revision that affected the source tree), and then
|
||
delete any egg files from the distribution directory except for the three
|
||
that were built most recently.
|
||
|
||
If you have to manage automated builds for multiple packages, each with
|
||
different tagging and rotation policies, you may also want to check out the
|
||
`alias`_ command, which would let each package define an alias like ``daily``
|
||
that would perform the necessary tag, build, and rotate commands. Then, a
|
||
simpler script or cron job could just run ``setup.py daily`` in each project
|
||
directory. (And, you could also define sitewide or per-user default versions
|
||
of the ``daily`` alias, so that projects that didn't define their own would
|
||
use the appropriate defaults.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Generating Source Distributions
|
||
-------------------------------
|
||
|
||
``setuptools`` enhances the distutils' default algorithm for source file
|
||
selection with pluggable endpoints for looking up files to include. If you are
|
||
using a revision control system, and your source distributions only need to
|
||
include files that you're tracking in revision control, use a corresponding
|
||
plugin instead of writing a ``MANIFEST.in`` file. See the section below on
|
||
`Adding Support for Revision Control Systems`_ for information on plugins.
|
||
|
||
If you need to include automatically generated files, or files that are kept in
|
||
an unsupported revision control system, you'll need to create a ``MANIFEST.in``
|
||
file to specify any files that the default file location algorithm doesn't
|
||
catch. See the distutils documentation for more information on the format of
|
||
the ``MANIFEST.in`` file.
|
||
|
||
But, be sure to ignore any part of the distutils documentation that deals with
|
||
``MANIFEST`` or how it's generated from ``MANIFEST.in``; setuptools shields you
|
||
from these issues and doesn't work the same way in any case. Unlike the
|
||
distutils, setuptools regenerates the source distribution manifest file
|
||
every time you build a source distribution, and it builds it inside the
|
||
project's ``.egg-info`` directory, out of the way of your main project
|
||
directory. You therefore need not worry about whether it is up-to-date or not.
|
||
|
||
Indeed, because setuptools' approach to determining the contents of a source
|
||
distribution is so much simpler, its ``sdist`` command omits nearly all of
|
||
the options that the distutils' more complex ``sdist`` process requires. For
|
||
all practical purposes, you'll probably use only the ``--formats`` option, if
|
||
you use any option at all.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Making your package available for EasyInstall
|
||
---------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
If you use the ``register`` command (``setup.py register``) to register your
|
||
package with PyPI, that's most of the battle right there. (See the
|
||
`docs for the register command`_ for more details.)
|
||
|
||
.. _docs for the register command: http://docs.python.org/dist/package-index.html
|
||
|
||
If you also use the `upload`_ command to upload actual distributions of your
|
||
package, that's even better, because EasyInstall will be able to find and
|
||
download them directly from your project's PyPI page.
|
||
|
||
However, there may be reasons why you don't want to upload distributions to
|
||
PyPI, and just want your existing distributions (or perhaps a Subversion
|
||
checkout) to be used instead.
|
||
|
||
So here's what you need to do before running the ``register`` command. There
|
||
are three ``setup()`` arguments that affect EasyInstall:
|
||
|
||
``url`` and ``download_url``
|
||
These become links on your project's PyPI page. EasyInstall will examine
|
||
them to see if they link to a package ("primary links"), or whether they are
|
||
HTML pages. If they're HTML pages, EasyInstall scans all HREF's on the
|
||
page for primary links
|
||
|
||
``long_description``
|
||
EasyInstall will check any URLs contained in this argument to see if they
|
||
are primary links.
|
||
|
||
A URL is considered a "primary link" if it is a link to a .tar.gz, .tgz, .zip,
|
||
.egg, .egg.zip, .tar.bz2, or .exe file, or if it has an ``#egg=project`` or
|
||
``#egg=project-version`` fragment identifier attached to it. EasyInstall
|
||
attempts to determine a project name and optional version number from the text
|
||
of a primary link *without* downloading it. When it has found all the primary
|
||
links, EasyInstall will select the best match based on requested version,
|
||
platform compatibility, and other criteria.
|
||
|
||
So, if your ``url`` or ``download_url`` point either directly to a downloadable
|
||
source distribution, or to HTML page(s) that have direct links to such, then
|
||
EasyInstall will be able to locate downloads automatically. If you want to
|
||
make Subversion checkouts available, then you should create links with either
|
||
``#egg=project`` or ``#egg=project-version`` added to the URL. You should
|
||
replace ``project`` and ``version`` with the values they would have in an egg
|
||
filename. (Be sure to actually generate an egg and then use the initial part
|
||
of the filename, rather than trying to guess what the escaped form of the
|
||
project name and version number will be.)
|
||
|
||
Note that Subversion checkout links are of lower precedence than other kinds
|
||
of distributions, so EasyInstall will not select a Subversion checkout for
|
||
downloading unless it has a version included in the ``#egg=`` suffix, and
|
||
it's a higher version than EasyInstall has seen in any other links for your
|
||
project.
|
||
|
||
As a result, it's a common practice to use mark checkout URLs with a version of
|
||
"dev" (i.e., ``#egg=projectname-dev``), so that users can do something like
|
||
this::
|
||
|
||
easy_install --editable projectname==dev
|
||
|
||
in order to check out the in-development version of ``projectname``.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Making "Official" (Non-Snapshot) Releases
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
When you make an official release, creating source or binary distributions,
|
||
you will need to override the tag settings from ``setup.cfg``, so that you
|
||
don't end up registering versions like ``foobar-0.7a1.dev-r34832``. This is
|
||
easy to do if you are developing on the trunk and using tags or branches for
|
||
your releases - just make the change to ``setup.cfg`` after branching or
|
||
tagging the release, so the trunk will still produce development snapshots.
|
||
|
||
Alternately, if you are not branching for releases, you can override the
|
||
default version options on the command line, using something like::
|
||
|
||
python setup.py egg_info -Db "" sdist bdist_egg register upload
|
||
|
||
The first part of this command (``egg_info -Db ""``) will override the
|
||
configured tag information, before creating source and binary eggs, registering
|
||
the project with PyPI, and uploading the files. Thus, these commands will use
|
||
the plain version from your ``setup.py``, without adding the build designation
|
||
string.
|
||
|
||
Of course, if you will be doing this a lot, you may wish to create a personal
|
||
alias for this operation, e.g.::
|
||
|
||
python setup.py alias -u release egg_info -Db ""
|
||
|
||
You can then use it like this::
|
||
|
||
python setup.py release sdist bdist_egg register upload
|
||
|
||
Or of course you can create more elaborate aliases that do all of the above.
|
||
See the sections below on the `egg_info`_ and `alias`_ commands for more ideas.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Distributing Extensions compiled with Pyrex
|
||
-------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
``setuptools`` includes transparent support for building Pyrex extensions, as
|
||
long as you define your extensions using ``setuptools.Extension``, *not*
|
||
``distutils.Extension``. You must also not import anything from Pyrex in
|
||
your setup script.
|
||
|
||
If you follow these rules, you can safely list ``.pyx`` files as the source
|
||
of your ``Extension`` objects in the setup script. ``setuptools`` will detect
|
||
at build time whether Pyrex is installed or not. If it is, then ``setuptools``
|
||
will use it. If not, then ``setuptools`` will silently change the
|
||
``Extension`` objects to refer to the ``.c`` counterparts of the ``.pyx``
|
||
files, so that the normal distutils C compilation process will occur.
|
||
|
||
Of course, for this to work, your source distributions must include the C
|
||
code generated by Pyrex, as well as your original ``.pyx`` files. This means
|
||
that you will probably want to include current ``.c`` files in your revision
|
||
control system, rebuilding them whenever you check changes in for the ``.pyx``
|
||
source files. This will ensure that people tracking your project in a revision
|
||
control system will be able to build it even if they don't have Pyrex
|
||
installed, and that your source releases will be similarly usable with or
|
||
without Pyrex.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------
|
||
Command Reference
|
||
-----------------
|
||
|
||
.. _alias:
|
||
|
||
``alias`` - Define shortcuts for commonly used commands
|
||
=======================================================
|
||
|
||
Sometimes, you need to use the same commands over and over, but you can't
|
||
necessarily set them as defaults. For example, if you produce both development
|
||
snapshot releases and "stable" releases of a project, you may want to put
|
||
the distributions in different places, or use different ``egg_info`` tagging
|
||
options, etc. In these cases, it doesn't make sense to set the options in
|
||
a distutils configuration file, because the values of the options changed based
|
||
on what you're trying to do.
|
||
|
||
Setuptools therefore allows you to define "aliases" - shortcut names for
|
||
an arbitrary string of commands and options, using ``setup.py alias aliasname
|
||
expansion``, where aliasname is the name of the new alias, and the remainder of
|
||
the command line supplies its expansion. For example, this command defines
|
||
a sitewide alias called "daily", that sets various ``egg_info`` tagging
|
||
options::
|
||
|
||
setup.py alias --global-config daily egg_info --tag-build=development
|
||
|
||
Once the alias is defined, it can then be used with other setup commands,
|
||
e.g.::
|
||
|
||
setup.py daily bdist_egg # generate a daily-build .egg file
|
||
setup.py daily sdist # generate a daily-build source distro
|
||
setup.py daily sdist bdist_egg # generate both
|
||
|
||
The above commands are interpreted as if the word ``daily`` were replaced with
|
||
``egg_info --tag-build=development``.
|
||
|
||
Note that setuptools will expand each alias *at most once* in a given command
|
||
line. This serves two purposes. First, if you accidentally create an alias
|
||
loop, it will have no effect; you'll instead get an error message about an
|
||
unknown command. Second, it allows you to define an alias for a command, that
|
||
uses that command. For example, this (project-local) alias::
|
||
|
||
setup.py alias bdist_egg bdist_egg rotate -k1 -m.egg
|
||
|
||
redefines the ``bdist_egg`` command so that it always runs the ``rotate``
|
||
command afterwards to delete all but the newest egg file. It doesn't loop
|
||
indefinitely on ``bdist_egg`` because the alias is only expanded once when
|
||
used.
|
||
|
||
You can remove a defined alias with the ``--remove`` (or ``-r``) option, e.g.::
|
||
|
||
setup.py alias --global-config --remove daily
|
||
|
||
would delete the "daily" alias we defined above.
|
||
|
||
Aliases can be defined on a project-specific, per-user, or sitewide basis. The
|
||
default is to define or remove a project-specific alias, but you can use any of
|
||
the `configuration file options`_ (listed under the `saveopts`_ command, below)
|
||
to determine which distutils configuration file an aliases will be added to
|
||
(or removed from).
|
||
|
||
Note that if you omit the "expansion" argument to the ``alias`` command,
|
||
you'll get output showing that alias' current definition (and what
|
||
configuration file it's defined in). If you omit the alias name as well,
|
||
you'll get a listing of all current aliases along with their configuration
|
||
file locations.
|
||
|
||
|
||
``bdist_egg`` - Create a Python Egg for the project
|
||
===================================================
|
||
|
||
This command generates a Python Egg (``.egg`` file) for the project. Python
|
||
Eggs are the preferred binary distribution format for EasyInstall, because they
|
||
are cross-platform (for "pure" packages), directly importable, and contain
|
||
project metadata including scripts and information about the project's
|
||
dependencies. They can be simply downloaded and added to ``sys.path``
|
||
directly, or they can be placed in a directory on ``sys.path`` and then
|
||
automatically discovered by the egg runtime system.
|
||
|
||
This command runs the `egg_info`_ command (if it hasn't already run) to update
|
||
the project's metadata (``.egg-info``) directory. If you have added any extra
|
||
metadata files to the ``.egg-info`` directory, those files will be included in
|
||
the new egg file's metadata directory, for use by the egg runtime system or by
|
||
any applications or frameworks that use that metadata.
|
||
|
||
You won't usually need to specify any special options for this command; just
|
||
use ``bdist_egg`` and you're done. But there are a few options that may
|
||
be occasionally useful:
|
||
|
||
``--dist-dir=DIR, -d DIR``
|
||
Set the directory where the ``.egg`` file will be placed. If you don't
|
||
supply this, then the ``--dist-dir`` setting of the ``bdist`` command
|
||
will be used, which is usually a directory named ``dist`` in the project
|
||
directory.
|
||
|
||
``--plat-name=PLATFORM, -p PLATFORM``
|
||
Set the platform name string that will be embedded in the egg's filename
|
||
(assuming the egg contains C extensions). This can be used to override
|
||
the distutils default platform name with something more meaningful. Keep
|
||
in mind, however, that the egg runtime system expects to see eggs with
|
||
distutils platform names, so it may ignore or reject eggs with non-standard
|
||
platform names. Similarly, the EasyInstall program may ignore them when
|
||
searching web pages for download links. However, if you are
|
||
cross-compiling or doing some other unusual things, you might find a use
|
||
for this option.
|
||
|
||
``--exclude-source-files``
|
||
Don't include any modules' ``.py`` files in the egg, just compiled Python,
|
||
C, and data files. (Note that this doesn't affect any ``.py`` files in the
|
||
EGG-INFO directory or its subdirectories, since for example there may be
|
||
scripts with a ``.py`` extension which must still be retained.) We don't
|
||
recommend that you use this option except for packages that are being
|
||
bundled for proprietary end-user applications, or for "embedded" scenarios
|
||
where space is at an absolute premium. On the other hand, if your package
|
||
is going to be installed and used in compressed form, you might as well
|
||
exclude the source because Python's ``traceback`` module doesn't currently
|
||
understand how to display zipped source code anyway, or how to deal with
|
||
files that are in a different place from where their code was compiled.
|
||
|
||
There are also some options you will probably never need, but which are there
|
||
because they were copied from similar ``bdist`` commands used as an example for
|
||
creating this one. They may be useful for testing and debugging, however,
|
||
which is why we kept them:
|
||
|
||
``--keep-temp, -k``
|
||
Keep the contents of the ``--bdist-dir`` tree around after creating the
|
||
``.egg`` file.
|
||
|
||
``--bdist-dir=DIR, -b DIR``
|
||
Set the temporary directory for creating the distribution. The entire
|
||
contents of this directory are zipped to create the ``.egg`` file, after
|
||
running various installation commands to copy the package's modules, data,
|
||
and extensions here.
|
||
|
||
``--skip-build``
|
||
Skip doing any "build" commands; just go straight to the
|
||
install-and-compress phases.
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _develop:
|
||
|
||
``develop`` - Deploy the project source in "Development Mode"
|
||
=============================================================
|
||
|
||
This command allows you to deploy your project's source for use in one or more
|
||
"staging areas" where it will be available for importing. This deployment is
|
||
done in such a way that changes to the project source are immediately available
|
||
in the staging area(s), without needing to run a build or install step after
|
||
each change.
|
||
|
||
The ``develop`` command works by creating an ``.egg-link`` file (named for the
|
||
project) in the given staging area. If the staging area is Python's
|
||
``site-packages`` directory, it also updates an ``easy-install.pth`` file so
|
||
that the project is on ``sys.path`` by default for all programs run using that
|
||
Python installation.
|
||
|
||
The ``develop`` command also installs wrapper scripts in the staging area (or
|
||
a separate directory, as specified) that will ensure the project's dependencies
|
||
are available on ``sys.path`` before running the project's source scripts.
|
||
And, it ensures that any missing project dependencies are available in the
|
||
staging area, by downloading and installing them if necessary.
|
||
|
||
Last, but not least, the ``develop`` command invokes the ``build_ext -i``
|
||
command to ensure any C extensions in the project have been built and are
|
||
up-to-date, and the ``egg_info`` command to ensure the project's metadata is
|
||
updated (so that the runtime and wrappers know what the project's dependencies
|
||
are). If you make any changes to the project's setup script or C extensions,
|
||
you should rerun the ``develop`` command against all relevant staging areas to
|
||
keep the project's scripts, metadata and extensions up-to-date. Most other
|
||
kinds of changes to your project should not require any build operations or
|
||
rerunning ``develop``, but keep in mind that even minor changes to the setup
|
||
script (e.g. changing an entry point definition) require you to re-run the
|
||
``develop`` or ``test`` commands to keep the distribution updated.
|
||
|
||
Here are some of the options that the ``develop`` command accepts. Note that
|
||
they affect the project's dependencies as well as the project itself, so if you
|
||
have dependencies that need to be installed and you use ``--exclude-scripts``
|
||
(for example), the dependencies' scripts will not be installed either! For
|
||
this reason, you may want to use EasyInstall to install the project's
|
||
dependencies before using the ``develop`` command, if you need finer control
|
||
over the installation options for dependencies.
|
||
|
||
``--uninstall, -u``
|
||
Un-deploy the current project. You may use the ``--install-dir`` or ``-d``
|
||
option to designate the staging area. The created ``.egg-link`` file will
|
||
be removed, if present and it is still pointing to the project directory.
|
||
The project directory will be removed from ``easy-install.pth`` if the
|
||
staging area is Python's ``site-packages`` directory.
|
||
|
||
Note that this option currently does *not* uninstall script wrappers! You
|
||
must uninstall them yourself, or overwrite them by using EasyInstall to
|
||
activate a different version of the package. You can also avoid installing
|
||
script wrappers in the first place, if you use the ``--exclude-scripts``
|
||
(aka ``-x``) option when you run ``develop`` to deploy the project.
|
||
|
||
``--multi-version, -m``
|
||
"Multi-version" mode. Specifying this option prevents ``develop`` from
|
||
adding an ``easy-install.pth`` entry for the project(s) being deployed, and
|
||
if an entry for any version of a project already exists, the entry will be
|
||
removed upon successful deployment. In multi-version mode, no specific
|
||
version of the package is available for importing, unless you use
|
||
``pkg_resources.require()`` to put it on ``sys.path``, or you are running
|
||
a wrapper script generated by ``setuptools`` or EasyInstall. (In which
|
||
case the wrapper script calls ``require()`` for you.)
|
||
|
||
Note that if you install to a directory other than ``site-packages``,
|
||
this option is automatically in effect, because ``.pth`` files can only be
|
||
used in ``site-packages`` (at least in Python 2.3 and 2.4). So, if you use
|
||
the ``--install-dir`` or ``-d`` option (or they are set via configuration
|
||
file(s)) your project and its dependencies will be deployed in multi-
|
||
version mode.
|
||
|
||
``--install-dir=DIR, -d DIR``
|
||
Set the installation directory (staging area). If this option is not
|
||
directly specified on the command line or in a distutils configuration
|
||
file, the distutils default installation location is used. Normally, this
|
||
will be the ``site-packages`` directory, but if you are using distutils
|
||
configuration files, setting things like ``prefix`` or ``install_lib``,
|
||
then those settings are taken into account when computing the default
|
||
staging area.
|
||
|
||
``--script-dir=DIR, -s DIR``
|
||
Set the script installation directory. If you don't supply this option
|
||
(via the command line or a configuration file), but you *have* supplied
|
||
an ``--install-dir`` (via command line or config file), then this option
|
||
defaults to the same directory, so that the scripts will be able to find
|
||
their associated package installation. Otherwise, this setting defaults
|
||
to the location where the distutils would normally install scripts, taking
|
||
any distutils configuration file settings into account.
|
||
|
||
``--exclude-scripts, -x``
|
||
Don't deploy script wrappers. This is useful if you don't want to disturb
|
||
existing versions of the scripts in the staging area.
|
||
|
||
``--always-copy, -a``
|
||
Copy all needed distributions to the staging area, even if they
|
||
are already present in another directory on ``sys.path``. By default, if
|
||
a requirement can be met using a distribution that is already available in
|
||
a directory on ``sys.path``, it will not be copied to the staging area.
|
||
|
||
``--egg-path=DIR``
|
||
Force the generated ``.egg-link`` file to use a specified relative path
|
||
to the source directory. This can be useful in circumstances where your
|
||
installation directory is being shared by code running under multiple
|
||
platforms (e.g. Mac and Windows) which have different absolute locations
|
||
for the code under development, but the same *relative* locations with
|
||
respect to the installation directory. If you use this option when
|
||
installing, you must supply the same relative path when uninstalling.
|
||
|
||
In addition to the above options, the ``develop`` command also accepts all of
|
||
the same options accepted by ``easy_install``. If you've configured any
|
||
``easy_install`` settings in your ``setup.cfg`` (or other distutils config
|
||
files), the ``develop`` command will use them as defaults, unless you override
|
||
them in a ``[develop]`` section or on the command line.
|
||
|
||
|
||
``easy_install`` - Find and install packages
|
||
============================================
|
||
|
||
This command runs the `EasyInstall tool
|
||
<easy_install.html>`_ for you. It is exactly
|
||
equivalent to running the ``easy_install`` command. All command line arguments
|
||
following this command are consumed and not processed further by the distutils,
|
||
so this must be the last command listed on the command line. Please see
|
||
the EasyInstall documentation for the options reference and usage examples.
|
||
Normally, there is no reason to use this command via the command line, as you
|
||
can just use ``easy_install`` directly. It's only listed here so that you know
|
||
it's a distutils command, which means that you can:
|
||
|
||
* create command aliases that use it,
|
||
* create distutils extensions that invoke it as a subcommand, and
|
||
* configure options for it in your ``setup.cfg`` or other distutils config
|
||
files.
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _egg_info:
|
||
|
||
``egg_info`` - Create egg metadata and set build tags
|
||
=====================================================
|
||
|
||
This command performs two operations: it updates a project's ``.egg-info``
|
||
metadata directory (used by the ``bdist_egg``, ``develop``, and ``test``
|
||
commands), and it allows you to temporarily change a project's version string,
|
||
to support "daily builds" or "snapshot" releases. It is run automatically by
|
||
the ``sdist``, ``bdist_egg``, ``develop``, ``register``, and ``test`` commands
|
||
in order to update the project's metadata, but you can also specify it
|
||
explicitly in order to temporarily change the project's version string while
|
||
executing other commands. (It also generates the``.egg-info/SOURCES.txt``
|
||
manifest file, which is used when you are building source distributions.)
|
||
|
||
In addition to writing the core egg metadata defined by ``setuptools`` and
|
||
required by ``pkg_resources``, this command can be extended to write other
|
||
metadata files as well, by defining entry points in the ``egg_info.writers``
|
||
group. See the section on `Adding new EGG-INFO Files`_ below for more details.
|
||
Note that using additional metadata writers may require you to include a
|
||
``setup_requires`` argument to ``setup()`` in order to ensure that the desired
|
||
writers are available on ``sys.path``.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Release Tagging Options
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
|
||
The following options can be used to modify the project's version string for
|
||
all remaining commands on the setup command line. The options are processed
|
||
in the order shown, so if you use more than one, the requested tags will be
|
||
added in the following order:
|
||
|
||
``--tag-build=NAME, -b NAME``
|
||
Append NAME to the project's version string. Due to the way setuptools
|
||
processes "pre-release" version suffixes beginning with the letters "a"
|
||
through "e" (like "alpha", "beta", and "candidate"), you will usually want
|
||
to use a tag like ".build" or ".dev", as this will cause the version number
|
||
to be considered *lower* than the project's default version. (If you
|
||
want to make the version number *higher* than the default version, you can
|
||
always leave off --tag-build and then use one or both of the following
|
||
options.)
|
||
|
||
If you have a default build tag set in your ``setup.cfg``, you can suppress
|
||
it on the command line using ``-b ""`` or ``--tag-build=""`` as an argument
|
||
to the ``egg_info`` command.
|
||
|
||
``--tag-date, -d``
|
||
Add a date stamp of the form "-YYYYMMDD" (e.g. "-20050528") to the
|
||
project's version number.
|
||
|
||
``--no-date, -D``
|
||
Don't include a date stamp in the version number. This option is included
|
||
so you can override a default setting in ``setup.cfg``.
|
||
|
||
|
||
(Note: Because these options modify the version number used for source and
|
||
binary distributions of your project, you should first make sure that you know
|
||
how the resulting version numbers will be interpreted by automated tools
|
||
like EasyInstall. See the section above on `Specifying Your Project's
|
||
Version`_ for an explanation of pre- and post-release tags, as well as tips on
|
||
how to choose and verify a versioning scheme for your your project.)
|
||
|
||
For advanced uses, there is one other option that can be set, to change the
|
||
location of the project's ``.egg-info`` directory. Commands that need to find
|
||
the project's source directory or metadata should get it from this setting:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Other ``egg_info`` Options
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
|
||
``--egg-base=SOURCEDIR, -e SOURCEDIR``
|
||
Specify the directory that should contain the .egg-info directory. This
|
||
should normally be the root of your project's source tree (which is not
|
||
necessarily the same as your project directory; some projects use a ``src``
|
||
or ``lib`` subdirectory as the source root). You should not normally need
|
||
to specify this directory, as it is normally determined from the
|
||
``package_dir`` argument to the ``setup()`` function, if any. If there is
|
||
no ``package_dir`` set, this option defaults to the current directory.
|
||
|
||
|
||
``egg_info`` Examples
|
||
---------------------
|
||
|
||
Creating a dated "nightly build" snapshot egg::
|
||
|
||
python setup.py egg_info --tag-date --tag-build=DEV bdist_egg
|
||
|
||
Creating and uploading a release with no version tags, even if some default
|
||
tags are specified in ``setup.cfg``::
|
||
|
||
python setup.py egg_info -RDb "" sdist bdist_egg register upload
|
||
|
||
(Notice that ``egg_info`` must always appear on the command line *before* any
|
||
commands that you want the version changes to apply to.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _install command:
|
||
|
||
``install`` - Run ``easy_install`` or old-style installation
|
||
============================================================
|
||
|
||
The setuptools ``install`` command is basically a shortcut to run the
|
||
``easy_install`` command on the current project. However, for convenience
|
||
in creating "system packages" of setuptools-based projects, you can also
|
||
use this option:
|
||
|
||
``--single-version-externally-managed``
|
||
This boolean option tells the ``install`` command to perform an "old style"
|
||
installation, with the addition of an ``.egg-info`` directory so that the
|
||
installed project will still have its metadata available and operate
|
||
normally. If you use this option, you *must* also specify the ``--root``
|
||
or ``--record`` options (or both), because otherwise you will have no way
|
||
to identify and remove the installed files.
|
||
|
||
This option is automatically in effect when ``install`` is invoked by another
|
||
distutils command, so that commands like ``bdist_wininst`` and ``bdist_rpm``
|
||
will create system packages of eggs. It is also automatically in effect if
|
||
you specify the ``--root`` option.
|
||
|
||
|
||
``install_egg_info`` - Install an ``.egg-info`` directory in ``site-packages``
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
|
||
Setuptools runs this command as part of ``install`` operations that use the
|
||
``--single-version-externally-managed`` options. You should not invoke it
|
||
directly; it is documented here for completeness and so that distutils
|
||
extensions such as system package builders can make use of it. This command
|
||
has only one option:
|
||
|
||
``--install-dir=DIR, -d DIR``
|
||
The parent directory where the ``.egg-info`` directory will be placed.
|
||
Defaults to the same as the ``--install-dir`` option specified for the
|
||
``install_lib`` command, which is usually the system ``site-packages``
|
||
directory.
|
||
|
||
This command assumes that the ``egg_info`` command has been given valid options
|
||
via the command line or ``setup.cfg``, as it will invoke the ``egg_info``
|
||
command and use its options to locate the project's source ``.egg-info``
|
||
directory.
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _rotate:
|
||
|
||
``rotate`` - Delete outdated distribution files
|
||
===============================================
|
||
|
||
As you develop new versions of your project, your distribution (``dist``)
|
||
directory will gradually fill up with older source and/or binary distribution
|
||
files. The ``rotate`` command lets you automatically clean these up, keeping
|
||
only the N most-recently modified files matching a given pattern.
|
||
|
||
``--match=PATTERNLIST, -m PATTERNLIST``
|
||
Comma-separated list of glob patterns to match. This option is *required*.
|
||
The project name and ``-*`` is prepended to the supplied patterns, in order
|
||
to match only distributions belonging to the current project (in case you
|
||
have a shared distribution directory for multiple projects). Typically,
|
||
you will use a glob pattern like ``.zip`` or ``.egg`` to match files of
|
||
the specified type. Note that each supplied pattern is treated as a
|
||
distinct group of files for purposes of selecting files to delete.
|
||
|
||
``--keep=COUNT, -k COUNT``
|
||
Number of matching distributions to keep. For each group of files
|
||
identified by a pattern specified with the ``--match`` option, delete all
|
||
but the COUNT most-recently-modified files in that group. This option is
|
||
*required*.
|
||
|
||
``--dist-dir=DIR, -d DIR``
|
||
Directory where the distributions are. This defaults to the value of the
|
||
``bdist`` command's ``--dist-dir`` option, which will usually be the
|
||
project's ``dist`` subdirectory.
|
||
|
||
**Example 1**: Delete all .tar.gz files from the distribution directory, except
|
||
for the 3 most recently modified ones::
|
||
|
||
setup.py rotate --match=.tar.gz --keep=3
|
||
|
||
**Example 2**: Delete all Python 2.3 or Python 2.4 eggs from the distribution
|
||
directory, except the most recently modified one for each Python version::
|
||
|
||
setup.py rotate --match=-py2.3*.egg,-py2.4*.egg --keep=1
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _saveopts:
|
||
|
||
``saveopts`` - Save used options to a configuration file
|
||
========================================================
|
||
|
||
Finding and editing ``distutils`` configuration files can be a pain, especially
|
||
since you also have to translate the configuration options from command-line
|
||
form to the proper configuration file format. You can avoid these hassles by
|
||
using the ``saveopts`` command. Just add it to the command line to save the
|
||
options you used. For example, this command builds the project using
|
||
the ``mingw32`` C compiler, then saves the --compiler setting as the default
|
||
for future builds (even those run implicitly by the ``install`` command)::
|
||
|
||
setup.py build --compiler=mingw32 saveopts
|
||
|
||
The ``saveopts`` command saves all options for every command specified on the
|
||
command line to the project's local ``setup.cfg`` file, unless you use one of
|
||
the `configuration file options`_ to change where the options are saved. For
|
||
example, this command does the same as above, but saves the compiler setting
|
||
to the site-wide (global) distutils configuration::
|
||
|
||
setup.py build --compiler=mingw32 saveopts -g
|
||
|
||
Note that it doesn't matter where you place the ``saveopts`` command on the
|
||
command line; it will still save all the options specified for all commands.
|
||
For example, this is another valid way to spell the last example::
|
||
|
||
setup.py saveopts -g build --compiler=mingw32
|
||
|
||
Note, however, that all of the commands specified are always run, regardless of
|
||
where ``saveopts`` is placed on the command line.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Configuration File Options
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
|
||
Normally, settings such as options and aliases are saved to the project's
|
||
local ``setup.cfg`` file. But you can override this and save them to the
|
||
global or per-user configuration files, or to a manually-specified filename.
|
||
|
||
``--global-config, -g``
|
||
Save settings to the global ``distutils.cfg`` file inside the ``distutils``
|
||
package directory. You must have write access to that directory to use
|
||
this option. You also can't combine this option with ``-u`` or ``-f``.
|
||
|
||
``--user-config, -u``
|
||
Save settings to the current user's ``~/.pydistutils.cfg`` (POSIX) or
|
||
``$HOME/pydistutils.cfg`` (Windows) file. You can't combine this option
|
||
with ``-g`` or ``-f``.
|
||
|
||
``--filename=FILENAME, -f FILENAME``
|
||
Save settings to the specified configuration file to use. You can't
|
||
combine this option with ``-g`` or ``-u``. Note that if you specify a
|
||
non-standard filename, the ``distutils`` and ``setuptools`` will not
|
||
use the file's contents. This option is mainly included for use in
|
||
testing.
|
||
|
||
These options are used by other ``setuptools`` commands that modify
|
||
configuration files, such as the `alias`_ and `setopt`_ commands.
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _setopt:
|
||
|
||
``setopt`` - Set a distutils or setuptools option in a config file
|
||
==================================================================
|
||
|
||
This command is mainly for use by scripts, but it can also be used as a quick
|
||
and dirty way to change a distutils configuration option without having to
|
||
remember what file the options are in and then open an editor.
|
||
|
||
**Example 1**. Set the default C compiler to ``mingw32`` (using long option
|
||
names)::
|
||
|
||
setup.py setopt --command=build --option=compiler --set-value=mingw32
|
||
|
||
**Example 2**. Remove any setting for the distutils default package
|
||
installation directory (short option names)::
|
||
|
||
setup.py setopt -c install -o install_lib -r
|
||
|
||
|
||
Options for the ``setopt`` command:
|
||
|
||
``--command=COMMAND, -c COMMAND``
|
||
Command to set the option for. This option is required.
|
||
|
||
``--option=OPTION, -o OPTION``
|
||
The name of the option to set. This option is required.
|
||
|
||
``--set-value=VALUE, -s VALUE``
|
||
The value to set the option to. Not needed if ``-r`` or ``--remove`` is
|
||
set.
|
||
|
||
``--remove, -r``
|
||
Remove (unset) the option, instead of setting it.
|
||
|
||
In addition to the above options, you may use any of the `configuration file
|
||
options`_ (listed under the `saveopts`_ command, above) to determine which
|
||
distutils configuration file the option will be added to (or removed from).
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _test:
|
||
|
||
``test`` - Build package and run a unittest suite
|
||
=================================================
|
||
|
||
When doing test-driven development, or running automated builds that need
|
||
testing before they are deployed for downloading or use, it's often useful
|
||
to be able to run a project's unit tests without actually deploying the project
|
||
anywhere, even using the ``develop`` command. The ``test`` command runs a
|
||
project's unit tests without actually deploying it, by temporarily putting the
|
||
project's source on ``sys.path``, after first running ``build_ext -i`` and
|
||
``egg_info`` to ensure that any C extensions and project metadata are
|
||
up-to-date.
|
||
|
||
To use this command, your project's tests must be wrapped in a ``unittest``
|
||
test suite by either a function, a ``TestCase`` class or method, or a module
|
||
or package containing ``TestCase`` classes. If the named suite is a module,
|
||
and the module has an ``additional_tests()`` function, it is called and the
|
||
result (which must be a ``unittest.TestSuite``) is added to the tests to be
|
||
run. If the named suite is a package, any submodules and subpackages are
|
||
recursively added to the overall test suite. (Note: if your project specifies
|
||
a ``test_loader``, the rules for processing the chosen ``test_suite`` may
|
||
differ; see the `test_loader`_ documentation for more details.)
|
||
|
||
Note that many test systems including ``doctest`` support wrapping their
|
||
non-``unittest`` tests in ``TestSuite`` objects. So, if you are using a test
|
||
package that does not support this, we suggest you encourage its developers to
|
||
implement test suite support, as this is a convenient and standard way to
|
||
aggregate a collection of tests to be run under a common test harness.
|
||
|
||
By default, tests will be run in the "verbose" mode of the ``unittest``
|
||
package's text test runner, but you can get the "quiet" mode (just dots) if
|
||
you supply the ``-q`` or ``--quiet`` option, either as a global option to
|
||
the setup script (e.g. ``setup.py -q test``) or as an option for the ``test``
|
||
command itself (e.g. ``setup.py test -q``). There is one other option
|
||
available:
|
||
|
||
``--test-suite=NAME, -s NAME``
|
||
Specify the test suite (or module, class, or method) to be run
|
||
(e.g. ``some_module.test_suite``). The default for this option can be
|
||
set by giving a ``test_suite`` argument to the ``setup()`` function, e.g.::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
# ...
|
||
test_suite="my_package.tests.test_all"
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
If you did not set a ``test_suite`` in your ``setup()`` call, and do not
|
||
provide a ``--test-suite`` option, an error will occur.
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. _upload:
|
||
|
||
``upload`` - Upload source and/or egg distributions to PyPI
|
||
===========================================================
|
||
|
||
The ``upload`` command is implemented and `documented
|
||
<https://docs.python.org/3.1/distutils/uploading.html>`_
|
||
in distutils.
|
||
|
||
Setuptools augments the ``upload`` command with support
|
||
for `keyring <https://pypi.org/project/keyring/>`_,
|
||
allowing the password to be stored in a secure
|
||
location and not in plaintext in the .pypirc file. To use
|
||
keyring, first install keyring and set the password for
|
||
the relevant repository, e.g.::
|
||
|
||
python -m keyring set <repository> <username>
|
||
Password for '<username>' in '<repository>': ********
|
||
|
||
Then, in .pypirc, set the repository configuration as normal,
|
||
but omit the password. Thereafter, uploads will use the
|
||
password from the keyring.
|
||
|
||
New in 20.1: Added keyring support.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------------------------------
|
||
Configuring setup() using setup.cfg files
|
||
-----------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
.. note:: New in 30.3.0 (8 Dec 2016).
|
||
|
||
.. important::
|
||
A ``setup.py`` file containing a ``setup()`` function call is still
|
||
required even if your configuration resides in ``setup.cfg``.
|
||
|
||
``Setuptools`` allows using configuration files (usually :file:`setup.cfg`)
|
||
to define a package’s metadata and other options that are normally supplied
|
||
to the ``setup()`` function.
|
||
|
||
This approach not only allows automation scenarios but also reduces
|
||
boilerplate code in some cases.
|
||
|
||
.. note::
|
||
|
||
This implementation has limited compatibility with the distutils2-like
|
||
``setup.cfg`` sections used by the ``pbr`` and ``d2to1`` packages.
|
||
|
||
Namely: only metadata-related keys from ``metadata`` section are supported
|
||
(except for ``description-file``); keys from ``files``, ``entry_points``
|
||
and ``backwards_compat`` are not supported.
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: ini
|
||
|
||
[metadata]
|
||
name = my_package
|
||
version = attr: src.VERSION
|
||
description = My package description
|
||
long_description = file: README.rst, CHANGELOG.rst, LICENSE.rst
|
||
keywords = one, two
|
||
license = BSD 3-Clause License
|
||
classifiers =
|
||
Framework :: Django
|
||
Programming Language :: Python :: 3
|
||
Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
|
||
|
||
[options]
|
||
zip_safe = False
|
||
include_package_data = True
|
||
packages = find:
|
||
scripts =
|
||
bin/first.py
|
||
bin/second.py
|
||
|
||
[options.package_data]
|
||
* = *.txt, *.rst
|
||
hello = *.msg
|
||
|
||
[options.extras_require]
|
||
pdf = ReportLab>=1.2; RXP
|
||
rest = docutils>=0.3; pack ==1.1, ==1.3
|
||
|
||
[options.packages.find]
|
||
exclude =
|
||
src.subpackage1
|
||
src.subpackage2
|
||
|
||
|
||
Metadata and options are set in the config sections of the same name.
|
||
|
||
* Keys are the same as the keyword arguments one provides to the ``setup()``
|
||
function.
|
||
|
||
* Complex values can be written comma-separated or placed one per line
|
||
in *dangling* config values. The following are equivalent:
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: ini
|
||
|
||
[metadata]
|
||
keywords = one, two
|
||
|
||
[metadata]
|
||
keywords =
|
||
one
|
||
two
|
||
|
||
* In some cases, complex values can be provided in dedicated subsections for
|
||
clarity.
|
||
|
||
* Some keys allow ``file:``, ``attr:``, and ``find:`` directives in order to
|
||
cover common usecases.
|
||
|
||
* Unknown keys are ignored.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Specifying values
|
||
=================
|
||
|
||
Some values are treated as simple strings, some allow more logic.
|
||
|
||
Type names used below:
|
||
|
||
* ``str`` - simple string
|
||
* ``list-comma`` - dangling list or string of comma-separated values
|
||
* ``list-semi`` - dangling list or string of semicolon-separated values
|
||
* ``bool`` - ``True`` is 1, yes, true
|
||
* ``dict`` - list-comma where keys are separated from values by ``=``
|
||
* ``section`` - values are read from a dedicated (sub)section
|
||
|
||
|
||
Special directives:
|
||
|
||
* ``attr:`` - Value is read from a module attribute. ``attr:`` supports
|
||
callables and iterables; unsupported types are cast using ``str()``.
|
||
* ``file:`` - Value is read from a list of files and then concatenated
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. note::
|
||
The ``file:`` directive is sandboxed and won't reach anything outside
|
||
the directory containing ``setup.py``.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Metadata
|
||
--------
|
||
|
||
.. note::
|
||
The aliases given below are supported for compatibility reasons,
|
||
but their use is not advised.
|
||
|
||
============================== ================= =====
|
||
Key Aliases Type
|
||
============================== ================= =====
|
||
name str
|
||
version attr:, str
|
||
url home-page str
|
||
download_url download-url str
|
||
project_urls dict
|
||
author str
|
||
author_email author-email str
|
||
maintainer str
|
||
maintainer_email maintainer-email str
|
||
classifiers classifier file:, list-comma
|
||
license file:, str
|
||
description summary file:, str
|
||
long_description long-description file:, str
|
||
long_description_content_type str
|
||
keywords list-comma
|
||
platforms platform list-comma
|
||
provides list-comma
|
||
requires list-comma
|
||
obsoletes list-comma
|
||
============================== ================= =====
|
||
|
||
|
||
Options
|
||
-------
|
||
|
||
======================= =====
|
||
Key Type
|
||
======================= =====
|
||
zip_safe bool
|
||
setup_requires list-semi
|
||
install_requires list-semi
|
||
extras_require section
|
||
python_requires str
|
||
entry_points file:, section
|
||
use_2to3 bool
|
||
use_2to3_fixers list-comma
|
||
use_2to3_exclude_fixers list-comma
|
||
convert_2to3_doctests list-comma
|
||
scripts list-comma
|
||
eager_resources list-comma
|
||
dependency_links list-comma
|
||
tests_require list-semi
|
||
include_package_data bool
|
||
packages find:, list-comma
|
||
package_dir dict
|
||
package_data section
|
||
exclude_package_data section
|
||
namespace_packages list-comma
|
||
py_modules list-comma
|
||
======================= =====
|
||
|
||
.. note::
|
||
|
||
**packages** - The ``find:`` directive can be further configured
|
||
in a dedicated subsection ``options.packages.find``. This subsection
|
||
accepts the same keys as the `setuptools.find` function:
|
||
``where``, ``include``, and ``exclude``.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Configuration API
|
||
=================
|
||
|
||
Some automation tools may wish to access data from a configuration file.
|
||
|
||
``Setuptools`` exposes a ``read_configuration()`` function for
|
||
parsing ``metadata`` and ``options`` sections into a dictionary.
|
||
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: python
|
||
|
||
from setuptools.config import read_configuration
|
||
|
||
conf_dict = read_configuration('/home/user/dev/package/setup.cfg')
|
||
|
||
|
||
By default, ``read_configuration()`` will read only the file provided
|
||
in the first argument. To include values from other configuration files
|
||
which could be in various places, set the ``find_others`` keyword argument
|
||
to ``True``.
|
||
|
||
If you have only a configuration file but not the whole package, you can still
|
||
try to get data out of it with the help of the ``ignore_option_errors`` keyword
|
||
argument. When it is set to ``True``, all options with errors possibly produced
|
||
by directives, such as ``attr:`` and others, will be silently ignored.
|
||
As a consequence, the resulting dictionary will include no such options.
|
||
|
||
|
||
--------------------------------
|
||
Extending and Reusing Setuptools
|
||
--------------------------------
|
||
|
||
Creating ``distutils`` Extensions
|
||
=================================
|
||
|
||
It can be hard to add new commands or setup arguments to the distutils. But
|
||
the ``setuptools`` package makes it a bit easier, by allowing you to distribute
|
||
a distutils extension as a separate project, and then have projects that need
|
||
the extension just refer to it in their ``setup_requires`` argument.
|
||
|
||
With ``setuptools``, your distutils extension projects can hook in new
|
||
commands and ``setup()`` arguments just by defining "entry points". These
|
||
are mappings from command or argument names to a specification of where to
|
||
import a handler from. (See the section on `Dynamic Discovery of Services and
|
||
Plugins`_ above for some more background on entry points.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
Adding Commands
|
||
---------------
|
||
|
||
You can add new ``setup`` commands by defining entry points in the
|
||
``distutils.commands`` group. For example, if you wanted to add a ``foo``
|
||
command, you might add something like this to your distutils extension
|
||
project's setup script::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
# ...
|
||
entry_points={
|
||
"distutils.commands": [
|
||
"foo = mypackage.some_module:foo",
|
||
],
|
||
},
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
(Assuming, of course, that the ``foo`` class in ``mypackage.some_module`` is
|
||
a ``setuptools.Command`` subclass.)
|
||
|
||
Once a project containing such entry points has been activated on ``sys.path``,
|
||
(e.g. by running "install" or "develop" with a site-packages installation
|
||
directory) the command(s) will be available to any ``setuptools``-based setup
|
||
scripts. It is not necessary to use the ``--command-packages`` option or
|
||
to monkeypatch the ``distutils.command`` package to install your commands;
|
||
``setuptools`` automatically adds a wrapper to the distutils to search for
|
||
entry points in the active distributions on ``sys.path``. In fact, this is
|
||
how setuptools' own commands are installed: the setuptools project's setup
|
||
script defines entry points for them!
|
||
|
||
|
||
Adding ``setup()`` Arguments
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
|
||
Sometimes, your commands may need additional arguments to the ``setup()``
|
||
call. You can enable this by defining entry points in the
|
||
``distutils.setup_keywords`` group. For example, if you wanted a ``setup()``
|
||
argument called ``bar_baz``, you might add something like this to your
|
||
distutils extension project's setup script::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
# ...
|
||
entry_points={
|
||
"distutils.commands": [
|
||
"foo = mypackage.some_module:foo",
|
||
],
|
||
"distutils.setup_keywords": [
|
||
"bar_baz = mypackage.some_module:validate_bar_baz",
|
||
],
|
||
},
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
The idea here is that the entry point defines a function that will be called
|
||
to validate the ``setup()`` argument, if it's supplied. The ``Distribution``
|
||
object will have the initial value of the attribute set to ``None``, and the
|
||
validation function will only be called if the ``setup()`` call sets it to
|
||
a non-None value. Here's an example validation function::
|
||
|
||
def assert_bool(dist, attr, value):
|
||
"""Verify that value is True, False, 0, or 1"""
|
||
if bool(value) != value:
|
||
raise DistutilsSetupError(
|
||
"%r must be a boolean value (got %r)" % (attr,value)
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
Your function should accept three arguments: the ``Distribution`` object,
|
||
the attribute name, and the attribute value. It should raise a
|
||
``DistutilsSetupError`` (from the ``distutils.errors`` module) if the argument
|
||
is invalid. Remember, your function will only be called with non-None values,
|
||
and the default value of arguments defined this way is always None. So, your
|
||
commands should always be prepared for the possibility that the attribute will
|
||
be ``None`` when they access it later.
|
||
|
||
If more than one active distribution defines an entry point for the same
|
||
``setup()`` argument, *all* of them will be called. This allows multiple
|
||
distutils extensions to define a common argument, as long as they agree on
|
||
what values of that argument are valid.
|
||
|
||
Also note that as with commands, it is not necessary to subclass or monkeypatch
|
||
the distutils ``Distribution`` class in order to add your arguments; it is
|
||
sufficient to define the entry points in your extension, as long as any setup
|
||
script using your extension lists your project in its ``setup_requires``
|
||
argument.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Adding new EGG-INFO Files
|
||
-------------------------
|
||
|
||
Some extensible applications or frameworks may want to allow third parties to
|
||
develop plugins with application or framework-specific metadata included in
|
||
the plugins' EGG-INFO directory, for easy access via the ``pkg_resources``
|
||
metadata API. The easiest way to allow this is to create a distutils extension
|
||
to be used from the plugin projects' setup scripts (via ``setup_requires``)
|
||
that defines a new setup keyword, and then uses that data to write an EGG-INFO
|
||
file when the ``egg_info`` command is run.
|
||
|
||
The ``egg_info`` command looks for extension points in an ``egg_info.writers``
|
||
group, and calls them to write the files. Here's a simple example of a
|
||
distutils extension defining a setup argument ``foo_bar``, which is a list of
|
||
lines that will be written to ``foo_bar.txt`` in the EGG-INFO directory of any
|
||
project that uses the argument::
|
||
|
||
setup(
|
||
# ...
|
||
entry_points={
|
||
"distutils.setup_keywords": [
|
||
"foo_bar = setuptools.dist:assert_string_list",
|
||
],
|
||
"egg_info.writers": [
|
||
"foo_bar.txt = setuptools.command.egg_info:write_arg",
|
||
],
|
||
},
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
This simple example makes use of two utility functions defined by setuptools
|
||
for its own use: a routine to validate that a setup keyword is a sequence of
|
||
strings, and another one that looks up a setup argument and writes it to
|
||
a file. Here's what the writer utility looks like::
|
||
|
||
def write_arg(cmd, basename, filename):
|
||
argname = os.path.splitext(basename)[0]
|
||
value = getattr(cmd.distribution, argname, None)
|
||
if value is not None:
|
||
value = '\n'.join(value) + '\n'
|
||
cmd.write_or_delete_file(argname, filename, value)
|
||
|
||
As you can see, ``egg_info.writers`` entry points must be a function taking
|
||
three arguments: a ``egg_info`` command instance, the basename of the file to
|
||
write (e.g. ``foo_bar.txt``), and the actual full filename that should be
|
||
written to.
|
||
|
||
In general, writer functions should honor the command object's ``dry_run``
|
||
setting when writing files, and use the ``distutils.log`` object to do any
|
||
console output. The easiest way to conform to this requirement is to use
|
||
the ``cmd`` object's ``write_file()``, ``delete_file()``, and
|
||
``write_or_delete_file()`` methods exclusively for your file operations. See
|
||
those methods' docstrings for more details.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Adding Support for Revision Control Systems
|
||
-------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
||
If the files you want to include in the source distribution are tracked using
|
||
Git, Mercurial or SVN, you can use the following packages to achieve that:
|
||
|
||
- Git and Mercurial: `setuptools_scm <https://pypi.org/project/setuptools_scm/>`_
|
||
- SVN: `setuptools_svn <https://pypi.org/project/setuptools_svn/>`_
|
||
|
||
If you would like to create a plugin for ``setuptools`` to find files tracked
|
||
by another revision control system, you can do so by adding an entry point to
|
||
the ``setuptools.file_finders`` group. The entry point should be a function
|
||
accepting a single directory name, and should yield all the filenames within
|
||
that directory (and any subdirectories thereof) that are under revision
|
||
control.
|
||
|
||
For example, if you were going to create a plugin for a revision control system
|
||
called "foobar", you would write a function something like this:
|
||
|
||
.. code-block:: python
|
||
|
||
def find_files_for_foobar(dirname):
|
||
# loop to yield paths that start with `dirname`
|
||
|
||
And you would register it in a setup script using something like this::
|
||
|
||
entry_points={
|
||
"setuptools.file_finders": [
|
||
"foobar = my_foobar_module:find_files_for_foobar",
|
||
]
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
Then, anyone who wants to use your plugin can simply install it, and their
|
||
local setuptools installation will be able to find the necessary files.
|
||
|
||
It is not necessary to distribute source control plugins with projects that
|
||
simply use the other source control system, or to specify the plugins in
|
||
``setup_requires``. When you create a source distribution with the ``sdist``
|
||
command, setuptools automatically records what files were found in the
|
||
``SOURCES.txt`` file. That way, recipients of source distributions don't need
|
||
to have revision control at all. However, if someone is working on a package
|
||
by checking out with that system, they will need the same plugin(s) that the
|
||
original author is using.
|
||
|
||
A few important points for writing revision control file finders:
|
||
|
||
* Your finder function MUST return relative paths, created by appending to the
|
||
passed-in directory name. Absolute paths are NOT allowed, nor are relative
|
||
paths that reference a parent directory of the passed-in directory.
|
||
|
||
* Your finder function MUST accept an empty string as the directory name,
|
||
meaning the current directory. You MUST NOT convert this to a dot; just
|
||
yield relative paths. So, yielding a subdirectory named ``some/dir`` under
|
||
the current directory should NOT be rendered as ``./some/dir`` or
|
||
``/somewhere/some/dir``, but *always* as simply ``some/dir``
|
||
|
||
* Your finder function SHOULD NOT raise any errors, and SHOULD deal gracefully
|
||
with the absence of needed programs (i.e., ones belonging to the revision
|
||
control system itself. It *may*, however, use ``distutils.log.warn()`` to
|
||
inform the user of the missing program(s).
|
||
|
||
|
||
Subclassing ``Command``
|
||
-----------------------
|
||
|
||
Sorry, this section isn't written yet, and neither is a lot of what's below
|
||
this point.
|
||
|
||
XXX
|
||
|
||
|
||
Reusing ``setuptools`` Code
|
||
===========================
|
||
|
||
``ez_setup``
|
||
------------
|
||
|
||
XXX
|
||
|
||
|
||
``setuptools.archive_util``
|
||
---------------------------
|
||
|
||
XXX
|
||
|
||
|
||
``setuptools.sandbox``
|
||
----------------------
|
||
|
||
XXX
|
||
|
||
|
||
``setuptools.package_index``
|
||
----------------------------
|
||
|
||
XXX
|
||
|
||
|
||
Mailing List and Bug Tracker
|
||
============================
|
||
|
||
Please use the `distutils-sig mailing list`_ for questions and discussion about
|
||
setuptools, and the `setuptools bug tracker`_ ONLY for issues you have
|
||
confirmed via the list are actual bugs, and which you have reduced to a minimal
|
||
set of steps to reproduce.
|
||
|
||
.. _distutils-sig mailing list: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/distutils-sig/
|
||
.. _setuptools bug tracker: https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/
|