Skip to main content

Simplify your setup.py

Project description

Simplify your setup.py

Version on pypi Tested with Github Actions Test code codecov Python versions tested (link to github project) Version on conda-forge

Writing a setup.py typically involves lots of boilerplate and copy-pasting from project to project.

This package aims to simplify that and bring some DRY principle to python packaging. Here’s what your (complete, and ready to ship to pypi) setup.py could look like with setupmeta:

from setuptools import setup

setup(
    name="myproject",
    versioning="distance",          # Optional, would activate tag-based versioning
    setup_requires="setupmeta"      # This is where setupmeta comes in
)

And that should be it - setupmeta will take it from there, extracting everything else from the rest of your project (following typical conventions commonly used).

You can use the explain command (see commands) to see what setupmeta deduced from your project, for the above it would look something like this (you can see which file and which line each setting came from, note that a lot of info is typically extracted from your project, if you follow usual conventions):

~/myproject: python setup.py explain

          author: (auto-adjust     ) Your Name
              \_: (myproject.py:7  ) Your Name<your@email.com>
    author_email: (auto-adjust     ) your@email.com
     description: (README.rst:1    ) First line of your README
    entry_points: (entry_points.ini) [console_scripts] ...
install_requires: (requirements.txt) ["click", ...
         license: (auto-fill       ) MIT
long_description: (README.rst      ) Long description would be your inlined README
            name: (explicit        ) myproject
      py_modules: (auto-fill       ) ["myproject"]
  setup_requires: (explicit        ) ["setupmeta"]
         version: (git             ) 1.2.3.post2
      versioning: (explicit        ) distance

See examples for more.

Note: setupmeta’s versioning is based on:

git describe --dirty --tags --long --first-parent --match 'v*.*'

# Then, if above yields nothing, we try the more vague '*.*'

git describe --dirty --tags --long --first-parent --match '*.*'

you will need git version >= 1.8.4 if you wish to use setupmeta’s versioning capabilities.

Goal

The goal of this project is to:

  • Allow to write very short (yet complete) setup.py-s, without boilerplate, and encourage good common packaging practices

  • Point out missing important info (example: version) in setup.py explain

  • Support tag-based versioning (like setuptools_scm, but with super simple configuration/defaults and automated bump capability)

  • Provide useful Commands to see the metadata (explain), version (including support for bumping versions), cleanall, etc

How it works?

  • Everything that you explicitly provide in your original setuptools.setup() call is taken as-is (never changed), and internally labelled as explicit. So if you don’t like something that setupmeta deduces, you can always explicitly state it.

  • name is auto-filled from your setup.py’s __title__ (if there is one, sometimes having a constant is quite handy…)

  • packages and package_dir is auto-filled accordingly if you have a <name>/__init__.py or src/<name>/__init__.py file

  • py_modules is auto-filled if you have a <name>.py file

  • entry_points is auto-filled from file entry_points.ini (bonus: tools like PyCharm have a nice syntax highlighter for those)

  • install_requires is auto-filled if you have a requirements.txt (or pinned.txt) file, pinning is abstracted away by default as per community recommendation, see requirements for more info.

  • tests_require is auto-filled if you have a tests/requirements.txt, or requirements-dev.txt, or dev-requirements.txt, or test-requirements.txt file

  • description will be the 1st line of your README (unless that 1st line is too short, or is just the project’s name), or the 1st line of the first docstring found in the scanned files (see list below)

  • long_description is auto-filled from your README file (looking for README.rst, README.md, then README*, first one found wins). Special tokens can be used (notation aimed at them easily being rst comments):

    • .. [[end long_description]] as end marker, so you don’t have to use the entire file as long description

    • .. [[include <relative-path>]] if you want another file included as well (for example, people like to add HISTORY.txt as well)

    • these tokens must appear either at beginning/end of line, or be after/before at least one space character

  • version can be stated explicitly, or be computed from git tags using versioning=... (see versioning for more info):

    • With versioning="distance", your git tags will be of the form v{major}.{minor}.0, the number of commits since latest version tag will be used to auto-fill the “patch” part of the version:

      • tag “v1.0.0”, no commits since tag -> version is “1.0.0”

      • tag “v1.0.0”, 5 commits since tag -> version is “1.0.5”

      • if checkout is dirty, a marker is added -> version would be “1.0.5.post5.dirty”

    • With versioning="post", your git tags will be of the form v{major}.{minor}.{patch}, a “post” addendum will be present if there are commits since latest version tag:

      • tag “v1.0.0”, no commits since tag -> version is “1.0.0”

      • tag “v1.0.0”, 5 commits since tag -> version is “1.0.0.post5”

      • if checkout is dirty, a marker is added -> version would be “1.0.0.post5.dirty”

    • With versioning="build-id", your git tags will be of the form v{major}.{minor}.0, the number of commits since latest version tag will be used to auto-fill the “patch” part of the version:

      • tag “v1.0.0”, no commits since tag, BUILD_ID=12 -> version is “1.0.0+h12.g123”

      • tag “v1.0.0”, no commits since tag, BUILD_ID not defined -> version is “1.0.0+hlocal.g123”

      • tag “v1.0.0”, 5 commits since tag, BUILD_ID=12 -> version is “1.0.5+h12.g456”

      • tag “v1.0.0”, 5 commits since tag, BUILD_ID not defined -> version is “1.0.5+hlocal.g456”

      • if checkout is dirty, a marker is added -> version would be “1.0.5+hlocal.g456.dirty”

    • Use the bump command (see commands) to easily bump (ie: increment major, minor or patch + apply git tag)

    • Version format can be customized, see versioning for more info

  • version, versioning, url, download_url, bugtrack_url, license, keywords, author, contact, maintainer, and platforms will be auto-filled from:

    • Lines of the form __key__ = "value" in your modules (simple constants only, expressions are ignored - the modules are not imported but scanned using regexes)

    • Lines of the form key: value in your docstring

    • Files are examined in this order (first find wins):

      • setup.py

      • <package>.py (mccabe for example)

      • <package>/__about__.py (cryptography for example)

      • <package>/__version__.py (requests for example)

      • <package>/__init__.py (changes, arrow for example)

      • src/ is also examined (for those who like to have their packages under src)

    • URLs can be simplified:

      • if url points to your general github repo (like: https://github.com/codrsquad), the name of your project is auto-appended to it

      • relative urls are auto-filled by prefixing them with url

      • urls may use {name} and/or {version} markers, it will be expanded appropriately

    • author, maintainer and contact names and emails can be combined into one line (setupmeta will figure out the email part and auto-fill it properly)

      • i.e.: author: Bob D bob@example.com will yield the proper author and author_email settings

This should hopefully work nicely for the vast majority of python projects out there. If you need advanced stuff, you can still leverage setupmeta for all the usual stuff above, and go explicit wherever needed.

Download files

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

Source Distribution

setupmeta-3.6.0.tar.gz (89.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

setupmeta-3.6.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl (41.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2 Python 3

File details

Details for the file setupmeta-3.6.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: setupmeta-3.6.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 89.1 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.2 CPython/3.11.6

File hashes

Hashes for setupmeta-3.6.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 2989bd850bde578f7e3dd8878ce5488194d863e0fbbe76b18bc345a6e29fae8b
MD5 548b8b5228b50874c45896e133b2f1bb
BLAKE2b-256 f68e5edc92b4f7eb385c585f54897c2ba640c7570cbf9106f3802f3ab876a7f5

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file setupmeta-3.6.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: setupmeta-3.6.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 41.2 kB
  • Tags: Python 2, Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? Yes
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.2 CPython/3.11.6

File hashes

Hashes for setupmeta-3.6.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 90605a79dc91a35a27ea815e3d3313ffd1f796e66a9261784cca5e05c2377371
MD5 517280a5d326299aa392a04a5645dcea
BLAKE2b-256 1f6100530ef4bbb9683afeffab5f863843b1332728a14248c1cc9beebb6636b2

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

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