Skip to main content

the blessed package to manage your versions by scm tags

Project description

setuptools_scm handles managing your python package versions in scm metadata instead of declaring them as the version argument or in a scm managed file.

It also handles file finders for the supported scm’s.

https://travis-ci.org/pypa/setuptools_scm.svg?branch=master

Setup.py usage

To use setuptools_scm just modify your project’s setup.py file like this:

  1. Add 'setuptools_scm' to the setup_requires parameter

  2. Add the use_scm_version parameter and set it to True

    E.g.:

    from setuptools import setup
    setup(
        ...,
        use_scm_version=True,
        setup_requires=['setuptools_scm'],
        ...,
    )

Programmatic usage

In order to use setuptools_scm for sphinx config, assuming the sphinx conf is one directory deeper than the project’s root, use:

from setuptools_scm import get_version
version = get_version(root='..', relative_to=__file__)

Notable Plugins

setuptools_scm_git_archive provides partial support for obtaining versions from git archives that belong to tagged versions. The only reason for not including it in setuptools-scm itself is git/github not supporting sufficient metadata for untagged/followup commits, which is preventing a consistent UX.

Default versioning scheme

In the standard configuration setuptools_scm takes a look at 3 things:

  1. latest tag (with a version number)

  2. the distance to this tag (e.g. number of revisions since latest tag)

  3. workdir state (e.g. uncommitted changes since latest tag)

and uses roughly the following logic to render the version:

no distance and clean:

{tag}

distance and clean:

{next_version}.dev{distance}+n{revision hash}

no distance and not clean:

{tag}+dYYYMMMDD

distance and not clean:

{next_version}.dev{distance}+n{revision hash}.dYYYMMMDD

The next version is calculated by adding 1 to the last numeric component of the tag.

Semantic Versioning (SemVer)

Due to the default behavior it’s necessary to always include a patch version (the 3 in 1.2.3), or else the automatic guessing will increment the wrong part of the semver (e.g. tag 2.0 results in 2.1.devX instead of 2.0.1.devX). So please make sure to tag accordingly.

Builtin mechanisms for obtaining version numbers

  1. the scm itself (git/hg)

  2. .hg_archival files (mercurial archives)

  3. PKG-INFO

Configuration Parameters

In order to configure the way use_scm_version works you can provide a mapping with options instead of simple boolean value.

The Currently supported configuration keys are:

root:

cwd relative path to use for finding the scm root, defaults to .

version_scheme:

configures how the local version number is constructed. either an entrypoint name or a callable

local_scheme:

configures how the local component of the version is constructed either an entrypoint name or a callable

write_to:

declares a text file or python file which is replaced with a file containing the current version. its ideal or creating a version.py file within the package

write_to_template:

a newstyle format string thats given the current version as the version keyword argument for formatting

relative_to:

a file from which root may be resolved. typically called by a script or module that is not in the root of the repository to direct setuptools_scm to the root of the repository by supplying __file__.

parse:

a function that will be used instead of the discovered scm for parsing the version, use with caution, this is a expert function and you should be closely familiar with the setuptools_scm internals to use it

To use setuptools_scm in other Python code you can use the get_version function:

from setuptools_scm import get_version
my_version = get_version()

It optionally accepts the keys of the use_scm_version parameter as keyword arguments.

Environment Variables

SETUPTOOLS_SCM_PRETEND_VERSION:

when defined and not empty, its used as the primary source for the version number in which case it will be a unparsed string

Extending setuptools_scm

setuptools_scm ships with a few setuptools entrypoints based hooks to extend its default capabilities.

Adding a new SCM

setuptools_scm provides 2 entrypoints for adding new SCMs

setuptools_scm.parse_scm

A function used to parse the metadata of the current workdir using the name of the control directory/file of your SCM as the entrypoint’s name. E.g. for the built-in entrypoint for git the entrypoint is named .git and references 'setuptools_scm.git:parse'.

The return value MUST be a setuptools.version.ScmVersion instance created by the function setuptools_scm.version:meta.

setuptools_scm.files_command

Either a string containing a shell command that prints all SCM managed files in its current working directory or a callable, that given a pathname will return that list.

Also use then name of your SCM control directory as name of the entrypoint.

Version number construction

setuptools_scm.version_scheme

Configures how the version number is constructed given a setuptools.version.ScmVersion instance and should return a string representing the version.

Available implementations:

guess-next-dev:

automatically guesses the next development version (default)

post-release:

generates post release versions (adds postN)

setuptools_scm.local_scheme

Configures how the local part of a version is rendered given a setuptools.version.ScmVersion instance and should return a string representing the local version.

Available implementations:

node-and-date:

adds the node on dev versions and the date on dirty workdir (default)

dirty-tag:

adds +dirty if the current workdir has changes

Importing in setup.py

To support usage in setup.py passing a callable into use_scm_version is supported.

Within that callable, setuptools_scm is available for import. The callable must return the configuration.

def myversion():
    from setuptools_scm.version import dirty_tag
    def clean_scheme(version):
        if not version.dirty:
            return '+clean'
        else:
            return dirty_tag(version)

    return {'local_scheme': clean_scheme}

Code of Conduct

Everyone interacting in the setuptools_scm project’s codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms, and mailing lists is expected to follow the PyPA Code of Conduct.

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1.tar.gz (22.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distributions

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py3.5.egg (24.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Egg

setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py3.4.egg (24.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Egg

setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py3.3.egg (24.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Egg

setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py2.py3-none-any.whl (16.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2Python 3

setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py2.7.egg (23.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Egg

setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py2.6.egg (23.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Egg

File details

Details for the file setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1.tar.gz.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 aad140e3212a419fbbbc64ad870fb8439a88d791e4e6908f4151e451d918cd14
MD5 16e805ae8842fce2c366a1ee51f2fe32
BLAKE2b-256 ff3afea865d3efe787779e96bbb51d975adeb44c23e02452ac53332a370fb952

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py3.5.egg.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py3.5.egg
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 9ccabc6b2be5bcc47d666e9b866dee2e13c6d63dbb51f5910cff5c80e3ed5b08
MD5 c2e4dd6be9e5b4c690c691a9fbaf3a4b
BLAKE2b-256 a2992176898c1fbaf6a99466f2b09a5b477e3c3545e1635a5f2436b71d34d54a

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py3.4.egg.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py3.4.egg
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 c6195d22510696b2d97623b1c27c5dc4b1f4769e143db4f9826597076403f34e
MD5 319c7920c015626716a39086dc8000e3
BLAKE2b-256 9f08b45cc57a49179ad876a48d2d5a5305bab3737aebc3d1d393bcaaed0f3070

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py3.3.egg.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py3.3.egg
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 13b936a2674fedf9287fc4d09db4edf64be4f0c62d901b6b6fc5ad868e03516b
MD5 81aed0f2d57d54b36a6f06bc09d87e8c
BLAKE2b-256 96f566ade59beb88078557e5e586afe9d6fe89d5d76c66b6765359e56f56ee47

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 6881bf45462fb5ff3e91ca80c56d9bd72b55747a4c72a2fdaa539ba0ccdc8ea2
MD5 f33a5f9475494752f4a8a49241e6e774
BLAKE2b-256 d0c20000f9f0b8cbc92bf04689689c86a7ac7793f04d94e4120b6cd662f1e40c

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py2.7.egg.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py2.7.egg
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 70f0d51fb4398fb26ed4a7fa07123237cd2d57ae806831cebff0800c45dc862c
MD5 0d5e491c0971720581fdc2206b8e6537
BLAKE2b-256 8927eaa638b314b6f22077cbff3e7b5da06f982d48411e640fe5d5206dcae0d5

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py2.6.egg.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for setuptools_scm-1.14.0rc1-py2.6.egg
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 d9287701ba0fc3f1e53d1337a4a7a5e897b28d6aa17df63bf1462d8c78a9a53e
MD5 abc396c8ded7992d02e0292aa5760df7
BLAKE2b-256 3134f53cd061427899d36728c14e6c189064197061ee276eaf10a4ea80f5b446

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page