2009-06-04 05:13:08 -04:00
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PEP: 386
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Title: Changing the version comparison module in Distutils
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Tarek Ziadé <tarek@ziade.org>
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Status: Draft
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Type: Standards Track
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 4-June-2009
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Abstract
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========
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This PEP proposes the inclusion of a new version comparison system in
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Distutils.
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Motivation
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==========
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Distutils will soon extend the metadata standard, by including the
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`install_requires` field from Setuptools [#requires]_ among other changes.
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These changes are a work in progress in PEP 345 [#pep345]_, but validating
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the current PEP is mandatory to continue the work.
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The `install_requires` field will allow a package to define a dependency on
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another package and optionally restrict this dependency to a set of
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compatible versions.
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That's why Distutils needs to provide a robust standard and reference
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implementation to compare versions numbers.
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2009-06-04 05:29:12 -04:00
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This will also provide to the community a convention for their package
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versioning needs.
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2009-06-04 05:13:08 -04:00
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2009-06-04 05:29:12 -04:00
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Current status
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==============
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2009-06-04 05:13:08 -04:00
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In Python there are no real restriction yet on how a project should manage
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its versions, and how they should be incremented. They are no standard
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either, even if they are a few conventions widely used, like having a major
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and a minor revision (1.1, 1.2, etc.).
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Developers are free to put in the `version` meta-data of their package any
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string they want, and push a new release at PyPI. This version will appear
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as the `latest` for end users.
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Some project are also using dates as their major version numbers, or a custom
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versioning standard that is sometimes quite exotic.
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The problem with this freedom is that the package will be harder to re-package
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for OS packagers, that need to have stricter conventions. The worst case is
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when a packager is unable to easily compare the versions he needs to package.
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2009-06-04 05:29:12 -04:00
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For people that want to go further and use a tool to manage their version
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numbers, the two major ones are:
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- The current Distutils system [#distutils]_
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- Setuptools [#setuptools]_
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Distutils
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---------
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Distutils currently provides a `StrictVersion` and a `LooseVersion` class
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that can be used to manage versions.
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2009-08-31 16:33:59 -04:00
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The `LooseVersion` class is quite lax. From Distutils doc::
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Version numbering for anarchists and software realists.
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Implements the standard interface for version number classes as
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described above. A version number consists of a series of numbers,
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separated by either periods or strings of letters. When comparing
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version numbers, the numeric components will be compared
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numerically, and the alphabetic components lexically. The following
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are all valid version numbers, in no particular order:
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1.5.1
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1.5.2b2
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161
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3.10a
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8.02
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3.4j
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1996.07.12
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3.2.pl0
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3.1.1.6
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2g6
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11g
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0.960923
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2.2beta29
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1.13++
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5.5.kw
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2.0b1pl0
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In fact, there is no such thing as an invalid version number under
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this scheme; the rules for comparison are simple and predictable,
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but may not always give the results you want (for some definition
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of "want").
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This class makes any version string valid, and provides an algorithm to sort
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them numerically then lexically. It means that anything can be used to version
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your project::
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>>> from distutils.version import LooseVersion as V
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>>> v1 = V('FunkyVersion')
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>>> v2 = V('GroovieVersion')
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>>> v1 > v2
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False
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The `StrictVersion` class is more strict. From the doc::
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Version numbering for anal retentive and software idealists.
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Implements the standard interface for version number classes as
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described above. A version number consists of two or three
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dot-separated numeric components, with an optional "pre-release" tag
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on the end. The pre-release tag consists of the letter 'a' or 'b'
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followed by a number. If the numeric components of two version
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numbers are equal, then one with a pre-release tag will always
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be deemed earlier (lesser) than one without.
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The following are valid version numbers (shown in the order that
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would be obtained by sorting according to the supplied cmp function):
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0.4 0.4.0 (these two are equivalent)
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0.4.1
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0.5a1
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0.5b3
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0.5
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0.9.6
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1.0
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1.0.4a3
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1.0.4b1
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1.0.4
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The following are examples of invalid version numbers:
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1
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2.7.2.2
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1.3.a4
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1.3pl1
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1.3c4
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This class enforces a few rules, and makes a decent tool to work with version
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numbers::
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>>> from distutils.version import StrictVersion as V
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>>> v2 = V('GroovieVersion')
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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...
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ValueError: invalid version number 'GroovieVersion'
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>>> v2 = V('1.1')
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>>> v3 = V('1.3')
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>>> v2 < v3
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True
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Although, it lacks a few elements to make it usable:
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- development releases
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- post-release tags
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- development releases of post-release tags.
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Notice that Distutils version classes are not really used in the community.
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Setuptools
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----------
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Setuptools provides another version comparison tool [#setuptools-version]_
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which does not enforce any rule for the version, but try to provide a better
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algorithm to convert the strings to sortable keys, with a ``parse_version``
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function.
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From the doc::
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Convert a version string to a chronologically-sortable key
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This is a rough cross between Distutils' StrictVersion and LooseVersion;
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if you give it versions that would work with StrictVersion, then it behaves
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the same; otherwise it acts like a slightly-smarter LooseVersion. It is
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*possible* to create pathological version coding schemes that will fool
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this parser, but they should be very rare in practice.
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The returned value will be a tuple of strings. Numeric portions of the
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version are padded to 8 digits so they will compare numerically, but
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without relying on how numbers compare relative to strings. Dots are
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dropped, but dashes are retained. Trailing zeros between alpha segments
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or dashes are suppressed, so that e.g. "2.4.0" is considered the same as
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"2.4". Alphanumeric parts are lower-cased.
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The algorithm assumes that strings like "-" and any alpha string that
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alphabetically follows "final" represents a "patch level". So, "2.4-1"
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is assumed to be a branch or patch of "2.4", and therefore "2.4.1" is
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considered newer than "2.4-1", which in turn is newer than "2.4".
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Strings like "a", "b", "c", "alpha", "beta", "candidate" and so on (that
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come before "final" alphabetically) are assumed to be pre-release versions,
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so that the version "2.4" is considered newer than "2.4a1".
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Finally, to handle miscellaneous cases, the strings "pre", "preview", and
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"rc" are treated as if they were "c", i.e. as though they were release
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candidates, and therefore are not as new as a version string that does not
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contain them, and "dev" is replaced with an '@' so that it sorts lower than
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than any other pre-release tag.
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In other words, ``parse_version`` will return a tuple for each version string,
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that is compatible with ``StrictVersion`` but also accept arbitrary version and
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deal with them so they can be compared::
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>>> from pkg_resources import parse_version as V
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>>> V('1.2')
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('00000001', '00000002', '*final')
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>>> V('1.2b2')
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('00000001', '00000002', '*b', '00000002', '*final')
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>>> V('FunkyVersion')
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('*funkyversion', '*final')
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Caveats of existing systems
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---------------------------
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The major problem with the described version comparison tools is that they are
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too permissive. Many of the versions on PyPI [#pypi]_ are obviously not useful
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versions, which makes it difficult for users to grok the versioning that a
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particular package was using and to provide tools on top of PyPI.
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Distutils classes are not really used in Python projects, but the
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Setuptools function is quite spread because it's used by tools like
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`easy_install` [#ezinstall]_, `pip` [#pip]_ or `zc.buildout` [#zc.buildout]_
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to install dependencies of a given project.
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While Setuptools *does* provide a mechanism for comparing/sorting versions,
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it is much preferable if the versioning spec is such that a human can make a
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reasonable attempt at that sorting without having to run it against some code.
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Also there's a problem with the use of dates at the "major" version number
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(e.g. a version string "20090421") with RPMs: it means that any attempt to
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switch to a more typical "major.minor..." version scheme is problematic because
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it will always sort less than "20090421".
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Last, the meaning of `-` is specific to Setuptools, while it is avoided in
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some packaging systems like the one used by Debian or Ubuntu.
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The new versioning algorithm
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============================
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During Pycon, members of the Python, Ubuntu and Fedora community worked on
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a version standard that would be acceptable for everyone.
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It's currently called `verlib` and a prototype lives here :
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http://bitbucket.org/tarek/distutilsversion/src/
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The pseudo-format supported is::
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N.N[.N]+[abc]N[.N]+[.postN+][.devN+]
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Some examples probably make it clearer::
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>>> from verlib import RationalVersion as V
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>>> (V('1.0a1')
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... < V('1.0a2.dev456')
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... < V('1.0a2')
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... < V('1.0a2.1.dev456')
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... < V('1.0a2.1')
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... < V('1.0b1.dev456')
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... < V('1.0b2')
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... < V('1.0c1.dev456')
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... < V('1.0c1')
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... < V('1.0.dev456')
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... < V('1.0')
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... < V('1.0.post623.dev456')
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... < V('1.0.post456'))
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True
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The trailing ".dev123" is for pre-releases. The ".post123" is for
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post-releases -- which apparently is used by a number of projects out there
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(e.g. Twisted [#twisted]_). For example *after* a "1.2.0" release there might
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be a "1.2.0-r678" release. We used "post" instead of "r" because the "r" is
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ambiguous as to whether it indicates a pre- or post-release.
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Last ".post623.dev456" is a development version of a post-release.
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``verlib`` provides a ``RationalVersion`` class and a
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``suggest_rational_version`` function.
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RationalVersion
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---------------
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The `RationalVersion` class is used to hold a version and to compare it with
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others. It takes a string as an argument, that contains the representation of
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the version::
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>>> from verlib import RationalVersion
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>>> version = RationalVersion('1.0')
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The version can be represented as a string::
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>>> str(version)
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'1.0'
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Or compared with others::
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>>> RationalVersion('1.0') > RationalVersion('0.9')
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True
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>>> RationalVersion('1.0') < RationalVersion('1.1')
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True
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A class method called ``from_parts`` is available if you want to create an
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instance by providing the parts that composes the version.
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Each part is a tuple and there are three parts:
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- the main version part
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- the pre-release part
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- the `postdev` marker part
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Examples ::
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>>> version = RationalVersion.from_parts((1, 0))
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>>> str(version)
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'1.0'
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>>> version = RationalVersion.from_parts((1, 0), ('c', 4))
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>>> str(version)
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'1.0c4'
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>>> version = RationalVersion.from_parts((1, 0), ('c', 4), ('dev', 34))
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>>> str(version)
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'1.0c4.dev34'
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suggest_rational_version
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------------------------
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XXX explain here suggest_rational_version
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References
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==========
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.. [#distutils]
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http://docs.python.org/distutils
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.. [#setuptools]
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http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/setuptools
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.. [#setuptools-version]
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http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/setuptools#specifying-your-project-s-version
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.. [#pypi]
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http://pypi.python.org/pypi
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.. [#pip]
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http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pip
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.. [#ezinstall]
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http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/EasyInstall
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.. [#zc.buildout]
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http://pypi.python.org/pypi/zc.buildout
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.. [#twisted]
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http://twistedmatrix.com/trac/
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.. [#requires]
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http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/setuptools
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.. [#pep345]
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http://svn.python.org/projects/peps/branches/jim-update-345/pep-0345.txt
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Aknowledgments
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==============
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Trent Mick, Matthias Klose, Phillip Eby, and many people at Pycon and
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Distutils-SIG.
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Copyright
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=========
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This document has been placed in the public domain.
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..
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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sentence-end-double-space: t
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fill-column: 70
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coding: utf-8
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End:
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