1592 lines
62 KiB
Plaintext
1592 lines
62 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 440
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Title: Version Identification and Dependency Specification
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Nick Coghlan <ncoghlan@gmail.com>,
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Donald Stufft <donald@stufft.io>
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BDFL-Delegate: Nick Coghlan <ncoghlan@gmail.com>
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Discussions-To: Distutils SIG <distutils-sig@python.org>
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Status: Accepted
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Type: Informational
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 18 Mar 2013
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Post-History: 30 Mar 2013, 27 May 2013, 20 Jun 2013,
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21 Dec 2013, 28 Jan 2014, 08 Aug 2014
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22 Aug 2014
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Replaces: 386
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Resolution: https://mail.python.org/pipermail/distutils-sig/2014-August/024673.html
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Abstract
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========
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This PEP describes a scheme for identifying versions of Python software
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distributions, and declaring dependencies on particular versions.
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This document addresses several limitations of the previous attempt at a
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standardized approach to versioning, as described in PEP 345 and PEP 386.
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Definitions
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===========
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The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
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"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
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document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.
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"Projects" are software components that are made available for integration.
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Projects include Python libraries, frameworks, scripts, plugins,
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applications, collections of data or other resources, and various
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combinations thereof. Public Python projects are typically registered on
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the `Python Package Index <https://pypi.python.org>`__.
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"Releases" are uniquely identified snapshots of a project.
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"Distributions" are the packaged files which are used to publish
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and distribute a release.
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"Build tools" are automated tools intended to run on development systems,
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producing source and binary distribution archives. Build tools may also be
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invoked by integration tools in order to build software distributed as
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sdists rather than prebuilt binary archives.
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"Index servers" are active distribution registries which publish version and
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dependency metadata and place constraints on the permitted metadata.
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"Publication tools" are automated tools intended to run on development
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systems and upload source and binary distribution archives to index servers.
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"Installation tools" are integration tools specifically intended to run on
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deployment targets, consuming source and binary distribution archives from
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an index server or other designated location and deploying them to the target
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system.
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"Automated tools" is a collective term covering build tools, index servers,
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publication tools, integration tools and any other software that produces
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or consumes distribution version and dependency metadata.
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Version scheme
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==============
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Distributions are identified by a public version identifier which
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supports all defined version comparison operations
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The version scheme is used both to describe the distribution version
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provided by a particular distribution archive, as well as to place
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constraints on the version of dependencies needed in order to build or
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run the software.
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Public version identifiers
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--------------------------
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The canonical public version identifiers MUST comply with the following
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scheme::
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[N!]N(.N)*[{a|b|rc}N][.postN][.devN]
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Public version identifiers MUST NOT include leading or trailing whitespace.
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Public version identifiers MUST be unique within a given distribution.
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Installation tools SHOULD ignore any public versions which do not comply with
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this scheme but MUST also include the normalizations specified below.
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Installation tools MAY warn the user when non-compliant or ambiguous versions
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are detected.
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Public version identifiers are separated into up to five segments:
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* Epoch segment: ``N!``
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* Release segment: ``N(.N)*``
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* Pre-release segment: ``{a|b|rc}N``
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* Post-release segment: ``.postN``
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* Development release segment: ``.devN``
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Any given release will be a "final release", "pre-release", "post-release" or
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"developmental release" as defined in the following sections.
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All numeric components MUST be non-negative integers.
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All numeric components MUST be interpreted and ordered according to their
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numeric value, not as text strings.
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All numeric components MAY be zero. Except as described below for the
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release segment, a numeric component of zero has no special significance
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aside from always being the lowest possible value in the version ordering.
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.. note::
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Some hard to read version identifiers are permitted by this scheme in
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order to better accommodate the wide range of versioning practices
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across existing public and private Python projects.
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Accordingly, some of the versioning practices which are technically
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permitted by the PEP are strongly discouraged for new projects. Where
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this is the case, the relevant details are noted in the following
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sections.
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Local version identifiers
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-------------------------
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Local version identifiers MUST comply with the following scheme::
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<public version identifier>[+<local version label>]
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They consist of a normal public version identifier (as defined in the
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previous section), along with an arbitrary "local version label", separated
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from the public version identifier by a plus. Local version labels have
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no specific semantics assigned, but some syntactic restrictions are imposed.
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Local version identifiers are used to denote fully API (and, if applicable,
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ABI) compatible patched versions of upstream projects. For example, these
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may be created by application developers and system integrators by applying
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specific backported bug fixes when upgrading to a new upstream release would
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be too disruptive to the application or other integrated system (such as a
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Linux distribution).
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The inclusion of the local version label makes it possible to differentiate
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upstream releases from potentially altered rebuilds by downstream
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integrators. The use of a local version identifier does not affect the kind
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of a release but, when applied to a source distribution, does indicate that
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it may not contain the exact same code as the corresponding upstream release.
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To ensure local version identifiers can be readily incorporated as part of
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filenames and URLs, and to avoid formatting inconsistencies in hexadecimal
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hash representations, local version labels MUST be limited to the following
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set of permitted characters:
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* ASCII letters (``[a-zA-Z]``)
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* ASCII digits (``[0-9]``)
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* periods (``.``)
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Local version labels MUST start and end with an ASCII letter or digit.
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Comparison and ordering of local versions considers each segment of the local
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version (divided by a ``.``) separately. If a segment consists entirely of
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ASCII digits then that section should be considered an integer for comparison
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purposes and if a segment contains any ASCII letters then that segment is
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compared lexicographically with case insensitivity. When comparing a numeric
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and lexicographic segment, the numeric section always compares as greater than
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the lexicographic segment. Additionally a local version with a great number of
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segments will always compare as greater than a local version with fewer
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segments, as long as the shorter local version's segments match the beginning
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of the longer local version's segments exactly.
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An "upstream project" is a project that defines its own public versions. A
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"downstream project" is one which tracks and redistributes an upstream project,
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potentially backporting security and bug fixes from later versions of the
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upstream project.
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Local version identifiers SHOULD NOT be used when publishing upstream
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projects to a public index server, but MAY be used to identify private
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builds created directly from the project source. Local
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version identifiers SHOULD be used by downstream projects when releasing a
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version that is API compatible with the version of the upstream project
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identified by the public version identifier, but contains additional changes
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(such as bug fixes). As the Python Package Index is intended solely for
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indexing and hosting upstream projects, it MUST NOT allow the use of local
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version identifiers.
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Source distributions using a local version identifier SHOULD provide the
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``python.integrator`` extension metadata (as defined in :pep:`459`).
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Final releases
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--------------
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A version identifier that consists solely of a release segment and optionally
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an epoch identifier is termed a "final release".
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The release segment consists of one or more non-negative integer
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values, separated by dots::
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N(.N)*
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Final releases within a project MUST be numbered in a consistently
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increasing fashion, otherwise automated tools will not be able to upgrade
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them correctly.
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Comparison and ordering of release segments considers the numeric value
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of each component of the release segment in turn. When comparing release
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segments with different numbers of components, the shorter segment is
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padded out with additional zeros as necessary.
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While any number of additional components after the first are permitted
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under this scheme, the most common variants are to use two components
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("major.minor") or three components ("major.minor.micro").
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For example::
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0.9
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0.9.1
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0.9.2
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...
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0.9.10
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0.9.11
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1.0
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1.0.1
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1.1
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2.0
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2.0.1
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...
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A release series is any set of final release numbers that start with a
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common prefix. For example, ``3.3.1``, ``3.3.5`` and ``3.3.9.45`` are all
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part of the ``3.3`` release series.
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.. note::
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``X.Y`` and ``X.Y.0`` are not considered distinct release numbers, as
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the release segment comparison rules implicit expand the two component
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form to ``X.Y.0`` when comparing it to any release segment that includes
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three components.
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Date based release segments are also permitted. An example of a date based
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release scheme using the year and month of the release::
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2012.04
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2012.07
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2012.10
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2013.01
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2013.06
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...
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Pre-releases
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------------
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Some projects use an "alpha, beta, release candidate" pre-release cycle to
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support testing by their users prior to a final release.
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If used as part of a project's development cycle, these pre-releases are
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indicated by including a pre-release segment in the version identifier::
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X.YaN # Alpha release
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X.YbN # Beta release
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X.YrcN # Release Candidate
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X.Y # Final release
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A version identifier that consists solely of a release segment and a
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pre-release segment is termed a "pre-release".
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The pre-release segment consists of an alphabetical identifier for the
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pre-release phase, along with a non-negative integer value. Pre-releases for
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a given release are ordered first by phase (alpha, beta, release candidate)
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and then by the numerical component within that phase.
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Installation tools MAY accept both ``c`` and ``rc`` releases for a common
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release segment in order to handle some existing legacy distributions.
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Installation tools SHOULD interpret ``c`` versions as being equivalent to
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``rc`` versions (that is, ``c1`` indicates the same version as ``rc1``).
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Build tools, publication tools and index servers SHOULD disallow the creation
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of both ``rc`` and ``c`` releases for a common release segment.
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Post-releases
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-------------
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Some projects use post-releases to address minor errors in a final release
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that do not affect the distributed software (for example, correcting an error
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in the release notes).
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If used as part of a project's development cycle, these post-releases are
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indicated by including a post-release segment in the version identifier::
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X.Y.postN # Post-release
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A version identifier that includes a post-release segment without a
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developmental release segment is termed a "post-release".
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The post-release segment consists of the string ``.post``, followed by a
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non-negative integer value. Post-releases are ordered by their
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numerical component, immediately following the corresponding release,
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and ahead of any subsequent release.
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.. note::
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The use of post-releases to publish maintenance releases containing
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actual bug fixes is strongly discouraged. In general, it is better
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to use a longer release number and increment the final component
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for each maintenance release.
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Post-releases are also permitted for pre-releases::
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X.YaN.postM # Post-release of an alpha release
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X.YbN.postM # Post-release of a beta release
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X.YrcN.postM # Post-release of a release candidate
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.. note::
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Creating post-releases of pre-releases is strongly discouraged, as
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it makes the version identifier difficult to parse for human readers.
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In general, it is substantially clearer to simply create a new
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pre-release by incrementing the numeric component.
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Developmental releases
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----------------------
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Some projects make regular developmental releases, and system packagers
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(especially for Linux distributions) may wish to create early releases
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directly from source control which do not conflict with later project
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releases.
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If used as part of a project's development cycle, these developmental
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releases are indicated by including a developmental release segment in the
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version identifier::
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X.Y.devN # Developmental release
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A version identifier that includes a developmental release segment is
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termed a "developmental release".
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The developmental release segment consists of the string ``.dev``,
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followed by a non-negative integer value. Developmental releases are ordered
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by their numerical component, immediately before the corresponding release
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(and before any pre-releases with the same release segment), and following
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any previous release (including any post-releases).
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Developmental releases are also permitted for pre-releases and
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post-releases::
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X.YaN.devM # Developmental release of an alpha release
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X.YbN.devM # Developmental release of a beta release
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X.YrcN.devM # Developmental release of a release candidate
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X.Y.postN.devM # Developmental release of a post-release
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.. note::
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While they may be useful for continuous integration purposes, publishing
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developmental releases of pre-releases to general purpose public index
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servers is strongly discouraged, as it makes the version identifier
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difficult to parse for human readers. If such a release needs to be
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published, it is substantially clearer to instead create a new
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pre-release by incrementing the numeric component.
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Developmental releases of post-releases are also strongly discouraged,
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but they may be appropriate for projects which use the post-release
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notation for full maintenance releases which may include code changes.
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Version epochs
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--------------
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If included in a version identifier, the epoch appears before all other
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components, separated from the release segment by an exclamation mark::
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E!X.Y # Version identifier with epoch
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If no explicit epoch is given, the implicit epoch is ``0``.
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Most version identifiers will not include an epoch, as an explicit epoch is
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only needed if a project *changes* the way it handles version numbering in
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a way that means the normal version ordering rules will give the wrong
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answer. For example, if a project is using date based versions like
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``2014.04`` and would like to switch to semantic versions like ``1.0``, then
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the new releases would be identified as *older* than the date based releases
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when using the normal sorting scheme::
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1.0
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1.1
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2.0
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2013.10
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2014.04
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However, by specifying an explicit epoch, the sort order can be changed
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appropriately, as all versions from a later epoch are sorted after versions
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from an earlier epoch::
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2013.10
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2014.04
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1!1.0
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1!1.1
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1!2.0
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Normalization
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-------------
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In order to maintain better compatibility with existing versions there are a
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number of "alternative" syntaxes that MUST be taken into account when parsing
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versions. These syntaxes MUST be considered when parsing a version, however
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they should be "normalized" to the standard syntax defined above.
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Case sensitivity
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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All ascii letters should be interpreted case insensitively within a version and
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the normal form is lowercase. This allows versions such as ``1.1RC1`` which
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would be normalized to ``1.1rc1``.
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Integer Normalization
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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All integers are interpreted via the ``int()`` built in and normalize to the
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string form of the output. This means that an integer version of ``00`` would
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normalize to ``0`` while ``09000`` would normalize to ``9000``. This does not
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hold true for integers inside of an alphanumeric segment of a local version
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such as ``1.0+foo0100`` which is already in its normalized form.
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Pre-release separators
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Pre-releases should allow a ``.``, ``-``, or ``_`` separator between the
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release segment and the pre-release segment. The normal form for this is
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without a separator. This allows versions such as ``1.1.a1`` or ``1.1-a1``
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which would be normalized to ``1.1a1``. It should also allow a separator to
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be used between the pre-release signifier and the numeral. This allows versions
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such as ``1.0a.1`` which would be normalized to ``1.0a1``.
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Pre-release spelling
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Pre-releases allow the additional spellings of ``alpha``, ``beta``, ``c``,
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``pre``, and ``preview`` for ``a``, ``b``, ``rc``, ``rc``, and ``rc``
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respectively. This allows versions such as ``1.1alpha1``, ``1.1beta2``, or
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``1.1c3`` which normalize to ``1.1a1``, ``1.1b2``, and ``1.1rc3``. In every
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case the additional spelling should be considered equivalent to their normal
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forms.
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Implicit pre-release number
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Pre releases allow omitting the numeral in which case it is implicitly assumed
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to be ``0``. The normal form for this is to include the ``0`` explicitly. This
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allows versions such as ``1.2a`` which is normalized to ``1.2a0``.
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Post release separators
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Post releases allow a ``.``, ``-``, or ``_`` separator as well as omitting the
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separator all together. The normal form of this is with the ``.`` separator.
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This allows versions such as ``1.2-post2`` or ``1.2post2`` which normalize to
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``1.2.post2``. Like the pre-release separator this also allows an optional
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separator between the post release signifier and the numeral. This allows
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versions like ``1.2.post-2`` which would normalize to ``1.2.post2``.
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Post release spelling
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Post-releases allow the additional spellings of ``rev`` and ``r``. This allows
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versions such as ``1.0-r4`` which normalizes to ``1.0.post4``. As with the
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pre-releases the additional spellings should be considered equivalent to their
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normal forms.
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Implicit post release number
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Post releases allow omitting the numeral in which case it is implicitly assumed
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to be ``0``. The normal form for this is to include the ``0`` explicitly. This
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allows versions such as ``1.2.post`` which is normalized to ``1.2.post0``.
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Implicit post releases
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Post releases allow omitting the ``post`` signifier all together. When using
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this form the separator MUST be ``-`` and no other form is allowed. This allows
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versions such as ``1.0-1`` to be normalized to ``1.0.post1``. This particular
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normalization MUST NOT be used in conjunction with the implicit post release
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number rule. In other words, ``1.0-`` is *not* a valid version and it does *not*
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normalize to ``1.0.post0``.
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Development release separators
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Development releases allow a ``.``, ``-``, or a ``_`` separator as well as
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omitting the separator all together. The normal form of this is with the ``.``
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separator. This allows versions such as ``1.2-dev2`` or ``1.2dev2`` which
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normalize to ``1.2.dev2``.
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Implicit development release number
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Development releases allow omitting the numeral in which case it is implicitly
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assumed to be ``0``. The normal form for this is to include the ``0``
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explicitly. This allows versions such as ``1.2.dev`` which is normalized to
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``1.2.dev0``.
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Local version segments
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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With a local version, in addition to the use of ``.`` as a separator of
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segments, the use of ``-`` and ``_`` is also acceptable. The normal form is
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using the ``.`` character. This allows versions such as ``1.0+ubuntu-1`` to be
|
|
normalized to ``1.0+ubuntu.1``.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Preceding v character
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
In order to support the common version notation of ``v1.0`` versions may be
|
|
preceded by a single literal ``v`` character. This character MUST be ignored
|
|
for all purposes and should be omitted from all normalized forms of the
|
|
version. The same version with and without the ``v`` is considered equivalent.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Leading and Trailing Whitespace
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Leading and trailing whitespace must be silently ignored and removed from all
|
|
normalized forms of a version. This includes ``" "``, ``\t``, ``\n``, ``\r``,
|
|
``\f``, and ``\v``. This allows accidental whitespace to be handled sensibly,
|
|
such as a version like ``1.0\n`` which normalizes to ``1.0``.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Examples of compliant version schemes
|
|
-------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The standard version scheme is designed to encompass a wide range of
|
|
identification practices across public and private Python projects. In
|
|
practice, a single project attempting to use the full flexibility offered
|
|
by the scheme would create a situation where human users had difficulty
|
|
figuring out the relative order of versions, even though the rules above
|
|
ensure all compliant tools will order them consistently.
|
|
|
|
The following examples illustrate a small selection of the different
|
|
approaches projects may choose to identify their releases, while still
|
|
ensuring that the "latest release" and the "latest stable release" can
|
|
be easily determined, both by human users and automated tools.
|
|
|
|
Simple "major.minor" versioning::
|
|
|
|
0.1
|
|
0.2
|
|
0.3
|
|
1.0
|
|
1.1
|
|
...
|
|
|
|
Simple "major.minor.micro" versioning::
|
|
|
|
1.1.0
|
|
1.1.1
|
|
1.1.2
|
|
1.2.0
|
|
...
|
|
|
|
"major.minor" versioning with alpha, beta and candidate
|
|
pre-releases::
|
|
|
|
0.9
|
|
1.0a1
|
|
1.0a2
|
|
1.0b1
|
|
1.0rc1
|
|
1.0
|
|
1.1a1
|
|
...
|
|
|
|
"major.minor" versioning with developmental releases, release candidates
|
|
and post-releases for minor corrections::
|
|
|
|
0.9
|
|
1.0.dev1
|
|
1.0.dev2
|
|
1.0.dev3
|
|
1.0.dev4
|
|
1.0c1
|
|
1.0c2
|
|
1.0
|
|
1.0.post1
|
|
1.1.dev1
|
|
...
|
|
|
|
Date based releases, using an incrementing serial within each year, skipping
|
|
zero::
|
|
|
|
2012.1
|
|
2012.2
|
|
2012.3
|
|
...
|
|
2012.15
|
|
2013.1
|
|
2013.2
|
|
...
|
|
|
|
|
|
Summary of permitted suffixes and relative ordering
|
|
---------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
This section is intended primarily for authors of tools that
|
|
automatically process distribution metadata, rather than developers
|
|
of Python distributions deciding on a versioning scheme.
|
|
|
|
The epoch segment of version identifiers MUST be sorted according to the
|
|
numeric value of the given epoch. If no epoch segment is present, the
|
|
implicit numeric value is ``0``.
|
|
|
|
The release segment of version identifiers MUST be sorted in
|
|
the same order as Python's tuple sorting when the normalized release segment is
|
|
parsed as follows::
|
|
|
|
tuple(map(int, release_segment.split(".")))
|
|
|
|
All release segments involved in the comparison MUST be converted to a
|
|
consistent length by padding shorter segments with zeros as needed.
|
|
|
|
Within a numeric release (``1.0``, ``2.7.3``), the following suffixes
|
|
are permitted and MUST be ordered as shown::
|
|
|
|
.devN, aN, bN, rcN, <no suffix>, .postN
|
|
|
|
Note that `c` is considered to be semantically equivalent to `rc` and must be
|
|
sorted as if it were `rc`. Tools MAY reject the case of having the same ``N``
|
|
for both a ``c`` and a ``rc`` in the same release segment as ambiguous and
|
|
remain in compliance with the PEP.
|
|
|
|
Within an alpha (``1.0a1``), beta (``1.0b1``), or release candidate
|
|
(``1.0rc1``, ``1.0c1``), the following suffixes are permitted and MUST be
|
|
ordered as shown::
|
|
|
|
.devN, <no suffix>, .postN
|
|
|
|
Within a post-release (``1.0.post1``), the following suffixes are permitted
|
|
and MUST be ordered as shown::
|
|
|
|
.devN, <no suffix>
|
|
|
|
Note that ``devN`` and ``postN`` MUST always be preceded by a dot, even
|
|
when used immediately following a numeric version (e.g. ``1.0.dev456``,
|
|
``1.0.post1``).
|
|
|
|
Within a pre-release, post-release or development release segment with a
|
|
shared prefix, ordering MUST be by the value of the numeric component.
|
|
|
|
The following example covers many of the possible combinations::
|
|
|
|
1.0.dev456
|
|
1.0a1
|
|
1.0a2.dev456
|
|
1.0a12.dev456
|
|
1.0a12
|
|
1.0b1.dev456
|
|
1.0b2
|
|
1.0b2.post345.dev456
|
|
1.0b2.post345
|
|
1.0rc1.dev456
|
|
1.0rc1
|
|
1.0
|
|
1.0+abc.5
|
|
1.0+abc.7
|
|
1.0+5
|
|
1.0.post456.dev34
|
|
1.0.post456
|
|
1.1.dev1
|
|
|
|
|
|
Version ordering across different metadata versions
|
|
---------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Metadata v1.0 (PEP 241) and metadata v1.1 (PEP 314) do not specify a standard
|
|
version identification or ordering scheme. However metadata v1.2 (PEP 345)
|
|
does specify a scheme which is defined in PEP 386.
|
|
|
|
Due to the nature of the simple installer API it is not possible for an
|
|
installer to be aware of which metadata version a particular distribution was
|
|
using. Additionally installers required the ability to create a reasonably
|
|
prioritized list that includes all, or as many as possible, versions of
|
|
a project to determine which versions it should install. These requirements
|
|
necessitate a standardization across one parsing mechanism to be used for all
|
|
versions of a project.
|
|
|
|
Due to the above, this PEP MUST be used for all versions of metadata and
|
|
supersedes PEP 386 even for metadata v1.2. Tools SHOULD ignore any versions
|
|
which cannot be parsed by the rules in this PEP, but MAY fall back to
|
|
implementation defined version parsing and ordering schemes if no versions
|
|
complying with this PEP are available.
|
|
|
|
Distribution users may wish to explicitly remove non-compliant versions from
|
|
any private package indexes they control.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Compatibility with other version schemes
|
|
----------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Some projects may choose to use a version scheme which requires
|
|
translation in order to comply with the public version scheme defined in
|
|
this PEP. In such cases, the project specific version can be stored in the
|
|
metadata while the translated public version is published in the version field.
|
|
|
|
This allows automated distribution tools to provide consistently correct
|
|
ordering of published releases, while still allowing developers to use
|
|
the internal versioning scheme they prefer for their projects.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Semantic versioning
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
`Semantic versioning`_ is a popular version identification scheme that is
|
|
more prescriptive than this PEP regarding the significance of different
|
|
elements of a release number. Even if a project chooses not to abide by
|
|
the details of semantic versioning, the scheme is worth understanding as
|
|
it covers many of the issues that can arise when depending on other
|
|
distributions, and when publishing a distribution that others rely on.
|
|
|
|
The "Major.Minor.Patch" (described in this PEP as "major.minor.micro")
|
|
aspects of semantic versioning (clauses 1-9 in the 2.0.0-rc-1 specification)
|
|
are fully compatible with the version scheme defined in this PEP, and abiding
|
|
by these aspects is encouraged.
|
|
|
|
Semantic versions containing a hyphen (pre-releases - clause 10) or a
|
|
plus sign (builds - clause 11) are *not* compatible with this PEP
|
|
and are not permitted in the public version field.
|
|
|
|
One possible mechanism to translate such semantic versioning based source
|
|
labels to compatible public versions is to use the ``.devN`` suffix to
|
|
specify the appropriate version order.
|
|
|
|
Specific build information may also be included in local version labels.
|
|
|
|
.. _Semantic versioning: http://semver.org/
|
|
|
|
|
|
DVCS based version labels
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Many build tools integrate with distributed version control systems like
|
|
Git and Mercurial in order to add an identifying hash to the version
|
|
identifier. As hashes cannot be ordered reliably such versions are not
|
|
permitted in the public version field.
|
|
|
|
As with semantic versioning, the public ``.devN`` suffix may be used to
|
|
uniquely identify such releases for publication, while the original DVCS based
|
|
label can be stored in the project metadata.
|
|
|
|
Identifying hash information may also be included in local version labels.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Olson database versioning
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
The ``pytz`` project inherits its versioning scheme from the corresponding
|
|
Olson timezone database versioning scheme: the year followed by a lowercase
|
|
character indicating the version of the database within that year.
|
|
|
|
This can be translated to a compliant public version identifier as
|
|
``<year>.<serial>``, where the serial starts at zero or one (for the
|
|
'<year>a' release) and is incremented with each subsequent database
|
|
update within the year.
|
|
|
|
As with other translated version identifiers, the corresponding Olson
|
|
database version could be recorded in the project metadata.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Version specifiers
|
|
==================
|
|
|
|
A version specifier consists of a series of version clauses, separated by
|
|
commas. For example::
|
|
|
|
~= 0.9, >= 1.0, != 1.3.4.*, < 2.0
|
|
|
|
The comparison operator determines the kind of version clause:
|
|
|
|
* ``~=``: `Compatible release`_ clause
|
|
* ``==``: `Version matching`_ clause
|
|
* ``!=``: `Version exclusion`_ clause
|
|
* ``<=``, ``>=``: `Inclusive ordered comparison`_ clause
|
|
* ``<``, ``>``: `Exclusive ordered comparison`_ clause
|
|
* ``===``: `Arbitrary equality`_ clause.
|
|
|
|
The comma (",") is equivalent to a logical **and** operator: a candidate
|
|
version must match all given version clauses in order to match the
|
|
specifier as a whole.
|
|
|
|
Whitespace between a conditional operator and the following version
|
|
identifier is optional, as is the whitespace around the commas.
|
|
|
|
When multiple candidate versions match a version specifier, the preferred
|
|
version SHOULD be the latest version as determined by the consistent
|
|
ordering defined by the standard `Version scheme`_. Whether or not
|
|
pre-releases are considered as candidate versions SHOULD be handled as
|
|
described in `Handling of pre-releases`_.
|
|
|
|
Except where specifically noted below, local version identifiers MUST NOT be
|
|
permitted in version specifiers, and local version labels MUST be ignored
|
|
entirely when checking if candidate versions match a given version
|
|
specifier.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Compatible release
|
|
------------------
|
|
|
|
A compatible release clause consists of the compatible release operator ``~=``
|
|
and a version identifier. It matches any candidate version that is expected
|
|
to be compatible with the specified version.
|
|
|
|
The specified version identifier must be in the standard format described in
|
|
`Version scheme`_. Local version identifiers are NOT permitted in this
|
|
version specifier.
|
|
|
|
For a given release identifier ``V.N``, the compatible release clause is
|
|
approximately equivalent to the pair of comparison clauses::
|
|
|
|
>= V.N, == V.*
|
|
|
|
This operator MUST NOT be used with a single segment version number such as
|
|
``~=1``.
|
|
|
|
For example, the following groups of version clauses are equivalent::
|
|
|
|
~= 2.2
|
|
>= 2.2, == 2.*
|
|
|
|
~= 1.4.5
|
|
>= 1.4.5, == 1.4.*
|
|
|
|
If a pre-release, post-release or developmental release is named in a
|
|
compatible release clause as ``V.N.suffix``, then the suffix is ignored
|
|
when determining the required prefix match::
|
|
|
|
~= 2.2.post3
|
|
>= 2.2.post3, == 2.*
|
|
|
|
~= 1.4.5a4
|
|
>= 1.4.5a4, == 1.4.*
|
|
|
|
The padding rules for release segment comparisons means that the assumed
|
|
degree of forward compatibility in a compatible release clause can be
|
|
controlled by appending additional zeros to the version specifier::
|
|
|
|
~= 2.2.0
|
|
>= 2.2.0, == 2.2.*
|
|
|
|
~= 1.4.5.0
|
|
>= 1.4.5.0, == 1.4.5.*
|
|
|
|
|
|
Version matching
|
|
----------------
|
|
|
|
A version matching clause includes the version matching operator ``==``
|
|
and a version identifier.
|
|
|
|
The specified version identifier must be in the standard format described in
|
|
`Version scheme`_, but a trailing ``.*`` is permitted on public version
|
|
identifiers as described below.
|
|
|
|
By default, the version matching operator is based on a strict equality
|
|
comparison: the specified version must be exactly the same as the requested
|
|
version. The *only* substitution performed is the zero padding of the
|
|
release segment to ensure the release segments are compared with the same
|
|
length.
|
|
|
|
Whether or not strict version matching is appropriate depends on the specific
|
|
use case for the version specifier. Automated tools SHOULD at least issue
|
|
warnings and MAY reject them entirely when strict version matches are used
|
|
inappropriately.
|
|
|
|
Prefix matching may be requested instead of strict comparison, by appending
|
|
a trailing ``.*`` to the version identifier in the version matching clause.
|
|
This means that additional trailing segments will be ignored when
|
|
determining whether or not a version identifier matches the clause. If the
|
|
specified version includes only a release segment, than trailing components
|
|
(or the lack thereof) in the release segment are also ignored.
|
|
|
|
For example, given the version ``1.1.post1``, the following clauses would
|
|
match or not as shown::
|
|
|
|
== 1.1 # Not equal, so 1.1.post1 does not match clause
|
|
== 1.1.post1 # Equal, so 1.1.post1 matches clause
|
|
== 1.1.* # Same prefix, so 1.1.post1 matches clause
|
|
|
|
For purposes of prefix matching, the pre-release segment is considered to
|
|
have an implied preceding ``.``, so given the version ``1.1a1``, the
|
|
following clauses would match or not as shown::
|
|
|
|
== 1.1 # Not equal, so 1.1a1 does not match clause
|
|
== 1.1a1 # Equal, so 1.1a1 matches clause
|
|
== 1.1.* # Same prefix, so 1.1a1 matches clause
|
|
|
|
An exact match is also considered a prefix match (this interpreation is
|
|
implied by the usual zero padding rules for the release segment of version
|
|
identifiers). Given the version ``1.1``, the following clauses would
|
|
match or not as shown::
|
|
|
|
== 1.1 # Equal, so 1.1 matches clause
|
|
== 1.1.0 # Zero padding expands 1.1 to 1.1.0, so it matches clause
|
|
== 1.1.dev1 # Not equal (dev-release), so 1.1 does not match clause
|
|
== 1.1a1 # Not equal (pre-release), so 1.1 does not match clause
|
|
== 1.1.post1 # Not equal (post-release), so 1.1 does not match clause
|
|
== 1.1.* # Same prefix, so 1.1 matches clause
|
|
|
|
It is invalid to have a prefix match containing a development or local release
|
|
such as ``1.0.dev1.*`` or ``1.0+foo1.*``. If present, the development release
|
|
segment is always the final segment in the public version, and the local version
|
|
is ignored for comparison purposes, so using either in a prefix match wouldn't
|
|
make any sense.
|
|
|
|
The use of ``==`` (without at least the wildcard suffix) when defining
|
|
dependencies for published distributions is strongly discouraged as it
|
|
greatly complicates the deployment of security fixes. The strict version
|
|
comparison operator is intended primarily for use when defining
|
|
dependencies for repeatable *deployments of applications* while using
|
|
a shared distribution index.
|
|
|
|
If the specified version identifier is a public version identifier (no
|
|
local version label), then the local version label of any candidate versions
|
|
MUST be ignored when matching versions.
|
|
|
|
If the specified version identifier is a local version identifier, then the
|
|
local version labels of candidate versions MUST be considered when matching
|
|
versions, with the public version identifier being matched as described
|
|
above, and the local version label being checked for equivalence using a
|
|
strict string equality comparison.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Version exclusion
|
|
-----------------
|
|
|
|
A version exclusion clause includes the version exclusion operator ``!=``
|
|
and a version identifier.
|
|
|
|
The allowed version identifiers and comparison semantics are the same as
|
|
those of the `Version matching`_ operator, except that the sense of any
|
|
match is inverted.
|
|
|
|
For example, given the version ``1.1.post1``, the following clauses would
|
|
match or not as shown::
|
|
|
|
!= 1.1 # Not equal, so 1.1.post1 matches clause
|
|
!= 1.1.post1 # Equal, so 1.1.post1 does not match clause
|
|
!= 1.1.* # Same prefix, so 1.1.post1 does not match clause
|
|
|
|
|
|
Inclusive ordered comparison
|
|
----------------------------
|
|
|
|
An inclusive ordered comparison clause includes a comparison operator and a
|
|
version identifier, and will match any version where the comparison is correct
|
|
based on the relative position of the candidate version and the specified
|
|
version given the consistent ordering defined by the standard
|
|
`Version scheme`_.
|
|
|
|
The inclusive ordered comparison operators are ``<=`` and ``>=``.
|
|
|
|
As with version matching, the release segment is zero padded as necessary to
|
|
ensure the release segments are compared with the same length.
|
|
|
|
Local version identifiers are NOT permitted in this version specifier.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Exclusive ordered comparison
|
|
----------------------------
|
|
|
|
The exclusive ordered comparisons ``>`` and ``<`` are similar to the inclusive
|
|
ordered comparisons in that they rely on the relative position of the candidate
|
|
version and the specified version given the consistent ordering defined by the
|
|
standard `Version scheme`_. However, they specifically exclude pre-releases,
|
|
post-releases, and local versions of the specified version.
|
|
|
|
The exclusive ordered comparison ``>V`` **MUST NOT** allow a post-release
|
|
of the given version unless ``V`` itself is a post release. You may mandate
|
|
that releases are later than a particular post release, including additional
|
|
post releases, by using ``>V.postN``. For example, ``>1.7`` will allow
|
|
``1.7.1`` but not ``1.7.0.post1`` and ``>1.7.post2`` will allow ``1.7.1``
|
|
and ``1.7.0.post3`` but not ``1.7.0``.
|
|
|
|
The exclusive ordered comparison ``>V`` **MUST NOT** match a local version of
|
|
the specified version.
|
|
|
|
The exclusive ordered comparison ``<V`` **MUST NOT** allow a pre-release of
|
|
the specified version unless the specified version is itself a pre-release.
|
|
Allowing pre-releases that are earlier than, but not equal to a specific
|
|
pre-release may be accomplished by using ``<V.rc1`` or similar.
|
|
|
|
As with version matching, the release segment is zero padded as necessary to
|
|
ensure the release segments are compared with the same length.
|
|
|
|
Local version identifiers are NOT permitted in this version specifier.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Arbitrary equality
|
|
------------------
|
|
|
|
Arbitrary equality comparisons are simple string equality operations which do
|
|
not take into account any of the semantic information such as zero padding or
|
|
local versions. This operator also does not support prefix matching as the
|
|
``==`` operator does.
|
|
|
|
The primary use case for arbitrary equality is to allow for specifying a
|
|
version which cannot otherwise be represented by this PEP. This operator is
|
|
special and acts as an escape hatch to allow someone using a tool which
|
|
implements this PEP to still install a legacy version which is otherwise
|
|
incompatible with this PEP.
|
|
|
|
An example would be ``===foobar`` which would match a version of ``foobar``.
|
|
|
|
This operator may also be used to explicitly require an unpatched version
|
|
of a project such as ``===1.0`` which would not match for a version
|
|
``1.0+downstream1``.
|
|
|
|
Use of this operator is heavily discouraged and tooling MAY display a warning
|
|
when it is used.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Handling of pre-releases
|
|
------------------------
|
|
|
|
Pre-releases of any kind, including developmental releases, are implicitly
|
|
excluded from all version specifiers, *unless* they are already present
|
|
on the system, explicitly requested by the user, or if the only available
|
|
version that satisfies the version specifier is a pre-release.
|
|
|
|
By default, dependency resolution tools SHOULD:
|
|
|
|
* accept already installed pre-releases for all version specifiers
|
|
* accept remotely available pre-releases for version specifiers where
|
|
there is no final or post release that satisfies the version specifier
|
|
* exclude all other pre-releases from consideration
|
|
|
|
Dependency resolution tools MAY issue a warning if a pre-release is needed
|
|
to satisfy a version specifier.
|
|
|
|
Dependency resolution tools SHOULD also allow users to request the
|
|
following alternative behaviours:
|
|
|
|
* accepting pre-releases for all version specifiers
|
|
* excluding pre-releases for all version specifiers (reporting an error or
|
|
warning if a pre-release is already installed locally, or if a
|
|
pre-release is the only way to satisfy a particular specifier)
|
|
|
|
Dependency resolution tools MAY also allow the above behaviour to be
|
|
controlled on a per-distribution basis.
|
|
|
|
Post-releases and final releases receive no special treatment in version
|
|
specifiers - they are always included unless explicitly excluded.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Examples
|
|
--------
|
|
|
|
* ``~=3.1``: version 3.1 or later, but not version 4.0 or later.
|
|
* ``~=3.1.2``: version 3.1.2 or later, but not version 3.2.0 or later.
|
|
* ``~=3.1a1``: version 3.1a1 or later, but not version 4.0 or later.
|
|
* ``== 3.1``: specifically version 3.1 (or 3.1.0), excludes all pre-releases,
|
|
post releases, developmental releases and any 3.1.x maintenance releases.
|
|
* ``== 3.1.*``: any version that starts with 3.1. Equivalent to the
|
|
``~=3.1.0`` compatible release clause.
|
|
* ``~=3.1.0, != 3.1.3``: version 3.1.0 or later, but not version 3.1.3 and
|
|
not version 3.2.0 or later.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Direct references
|
|
=================
|
|
|
|
Some automated tools may permit the use of a direct reference as an
|
|
alternative to a normal version specifier. A direct reference consists of
|
|
the specifier ``@`` and an explicit URL.
|
|
|
|
Whether or not direct references are appropriate depends on the specific
|
|
use case for the version specifier. Automated tools SHOULD at least issue
|
|
warnings and MAY reject them entirely when direct references are used
|
|
inappropriately.
|
|
|
|
Public index servers SHOULD NOT allow the use of direct references in
|
|
uploaded distributions. Direct references are intended as a tool for
|
|
software integrators rather than publishers.
|
|
|
|
Depending on the use case, some appropriate targets for a direct URL
|
|
reference may be an sdist or a wheel binary archive. The exact URLs and
|
|
targets supported will be tool dependent.
|
|
|
|
For example, a local source archive may be referenced directly::
|
|
|
|
pip @ file:///localbuilds/pip-1.3.1.zip
|
|
|
|
Alternatively, a prebuilt archive may also be referenced::
|
|
|
|
pip @ file:///localbuilds/pip-1.3.1-py33-none-any.whl
|
|
|
|
All direct references that do not refer to a local file URL SHOULD specify
|
|
a secure transport mechanism (such as ``https``) AND include an expected
|
|
hash value in the URL for verification purposes. If a direct reference is
|
|
specified without any hash information, with hash information that the
|
|
tool doesn't understand, or with a selected hash algorithm that the tool
|
|
considers too weak to trust, automated tools SHOULD at least emit a warning
|
|
and MAY refuse to rely on the URL. If such a direct reference also uses an
|
|
insecure transport, automated tools SHOULD NOT rely on the URL.
|
|
|
|
It is RECOMMENDED that only hashes which are unconditionally provided by
|
|
the latest version of the standard library's ``hashlib`` module be used
|
|
for source archive hashes. At time of writing, that list consists of
|
|
``'md5'``, ``'sha1'``, ``'sha224'``, ``'sha256'``, ``'sha384'``, and
|
|
``'sha512'``.
|
|
|
|
For source archive and wheel references, an expected hash value may be
|
|
specified by including a ``<hash-algorithm>=<expected-hash>`` entry as
|
|
part of the URL fragment.
|
|
|
|
For version control references, the ``VCS+protocol`` scheme SHOULD be
|
|
used to identify both the version control system and the secure transport,
|
|
and a version control system with hash based commit identifiers SHOULD be
|
|
used. Automated tools MAY omit warnings about missing hashes for version
|
|
control systems that do not provide hash based commit identifiers.
|
|
|
|
To handle version control systems that do not support including commit or
|
|
tag references directly in the URL, that information may be appended to the
|
|
end of the URL using the ``@<commit-hash>`` or the ``@<tag>#<commit-hash>``
|
|
notation.
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
This isn't *quite* the same as the existing VCS reference notation
|
|
supported by pip. Firstly, the distribution name is moved in front rather
|
|
than embedded as part of the URL. Secondly, the commit hash is included
|
|
even when retrieving based on a tag, in order to meet the requirement
|
|
above that *every* link should include a hash to make things harder to
|
|
forge (creating a malicious repo with a particular tag is easy, creating
|
|
one with a specific *hash*, less so).
|
|
|
|
Remote URL examples::
|
|
|
|
pip @ https://github.com/pypa/pip/archive/1.3.1.zip#sha1=da9234ee9982d4bbb3c72346a6de940a148ea686
|
|
pip @ git+https://github.com/pypa/pip.git@7921be1537eac1e97bc40179a57f0349c2aee67d
|
|
pip @ git+https://github.com/pypa/pip.git@1.3.1#7921be1537eac1e97bc40179a57f0349c2aee67d
|
|
|
|
|
|
File URLs
|
|
---------
|
|
|
|
File URLs take the form of ``file://<host>/<path>``. If the ``<host>`` is
|
|
omitted it is assumed to be ``localhost`` and even if the ``<host>`` is omitted
|
|
the third slash MUST still exist. The ``<path>`` defines what the file path on
|
|
the filesystem that is to be accessed.
|
|
|
|
On the various \*nix operating systems the only allowed values for ``<host>``
|
|
is for it to be omitted, ``localhost``, or another FQDN that the current
|
|
machine believes matches its own host. In other words, on \*nix the ``file://``
|
|
scheme can only be used to access paths on the local machine.
|
|
|
|
On Windows the file format should include the drive letter if applicable as
|
|
part of the ``<path>`` (e.g. ``file:///c:/path/to/a/file``). Unlike \*nix on
|
|
Windows the ``<host>`` parameter may be used to specify a file residing on a
|
|
network share. In other words, in order to translate ``\\machine\volume\file``
|
|
to a ``file://`` url, it would end up as ``file://machine/volume/file``. For
|
|
more information on ``file://`` URLs on Windows see MSDN [4]_.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Updating the versioning specification
|
|
=====================================
|
|
|
|
The versioning specification may be updated with clarifications without
|
|
requiring a new PEP or a change to the metadata version.
|
|
|
|
Any technical changes that impact the version identification and comparison
|
|
syntax and semantics would require an updated versioning scheme to be
|
|
defined in a new PEP.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Summary of differences from pkg_resources.parse_version
|
|
=======================================================
|
|
|
|
* Local versions sort differently, this PEP requires that they sort as greater
|
|
than the same version without a local version, whereas
|
|
``pkg_resources.parse_version`` considers it a pre-release marker.
|
|
|
|
* This PEP purposely restricts the syntax which constitutes a valid version
|
|
while ``pkg_resources.parse_version`` attempts to provide some meaning from
|
|
*any* arbitrary string.
|
|
|
|
* ``pkg_resources.parse_version`` allows arbitrarily deeply nested version
|
|
signifiers like ``1.0.dev1.post1.dev5``. This PEP however allows only a
|
|
single use of each type and they must exist in a certain order.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Summary of differences from \PEP 386
|
|
====================================
|
|
|
|
* Moved the description of version specifiers into the versioning PEP
|
|
|
|
* Added the "direct reference" concept as a standard notation for direct
|
|
references to resources (rather than each tool needing to invent its own)
|
|
|
|
* Added the "local version identifier" and "local version label" concepts to
|
|
allow system integrators to indicate patched builds in a way that is
|
|
supported by the upstream tools, as well as to allow the incorporation of
|
|
build tags into the versioning of binary distributions.
|
|
|
|
* Added the "compatible release" clause
|
|
|
|
* Added the trailing wildcard syntax for prefix based version matching
|
|
and exclusion
|
|
|
|
* Changed the top level sort position of the ``.devN`` suffix
|
|
|
|
* Allowed single value version numbers
|
|
|
|
* Explicit exclusion of leading or trailing whitespace
|
|
|
|
* Explicit support for date based versions
|
|
|
|
* Explicit normalisation rules to improve compatibility with
|
|
existing version metadata on PyPI where it doesn't introduce
|
|
ambiguity
|
|
|
|
* Implicitly exclude pre-releases unless they're already present or
|
|
needed to satisfy a dependency
|
|
|
|
* Treat post releases the same way as unqualified releases
|
|
|
|
* Discuss ordering and dependencies across metadata versions
|
|
|
|
* Switch from preferring ``c`` to ``rc``.
|
|
|
|
The rationale for major changes is given in the following sections.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Changing the version scheme
|
|
---------------------------
|
|
|
|
One key change in the version scheme in this PEP relative to that in
|
|
PEP 386 is to sort top level developmental releases like ``X.Y.devN`` ahead
|
|
of alpha releases like ``X.Ya1``. This is a far more logical sort order, as
|
|
projects already using both development releases and alphas/betas/release
|
|
candidates do not want their developmental releases sorted in
|
|
between their release candidates and their final releases. There is no
|
|
rationale for using ``dev`` releases in that position rather than
|
|
merely creating additional release candidates.
|
|
|
|
The updated sort order also means the sorting of ``dev`` versions is now
|
|
consistent between the metadata standard and the pre-existing behaviour
|
|
of ``pkg_resources`` (and hence the behaviour of current installation
|
|
tools).
|
|
|
|
Making this change should make it easier for affected existing projects to
|
|
migrate to the latest version of the metadata standard.
|
|
|
|
Another change to the version scheme is to allow single number
|
|
versions, similar to those used by non-Python projects like Mozilla
|
|
Firefox, Google Chrome and the Fedora Linux distribution. This is actually
|
|
expected to be more useful for version specifiers, but it is easier to
|
|
allow it for both version specifiers and release numbers, rather than
|
|
splitting the two definitions.
|
|
|
|
The exclusion of leading and trailing whitespace was made explicit after
|
|
a couple of projects with version identifiers differing only in a
|
|
trailing ``\n`` character were found on PyPI.
|
|
|
|
Various other normalisation rules were also added as described in the
|
|
separate section on version normalisation below.
|
|
|
|
`Appendix A` shows detailed results of an analysis of PyPI distribution
|
|
version information, as collected on 8th August, 2014. This analysis
|
|
compares the behavior of the explicitly ordered version scheme defined in
|
|
this PEP with the de facto standard defined by the behavior of setuptools.
|
|
These metrics are useful, as the intent of this PEP is to follow existing
|
|
setuptools behavior as closely as is feasible, while still throwing
|
|
exceptions for unorderable versions (rather than trying to guess an
|
|
appropriate order as setuptools does).
|
|
|
|
|
|
A more opinionated description of the versioning scheme
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
As in PEP 386, the primary focus is on codifying existing practices to make
|
|
them more amenable to automation, rather than demanding that existing
|
|
projects make non-trivial changes to their workflow. However, the
|
|
standard scheme allows significantly more flexibility than is needed
|
|
for the vast majority of simple Python packages (which often don't even
|
|
need maintenance releases - many users are happy with needing to upgrade to a
|
|
new feature release to get bug fixes).
|
|
|
|
For the benefit of novice developers, and for experienced developers
|
|
wishing to better understand the various use cases, the specification
|
|
now goes into much greater detail on the components of the defined
|
|
version scheme, including examples of how each component may be used
|
|
in practice.
|
|
|
|
The PEP also explicitly guides developers in the direction of
|
|
semantic versioning (without requiring it), and discourages the use of
|
|
several aspects of the full versioning scheme that have largely been
|
|
included in order to cover esoteric corner cases in the practices of
|
|
existing projects and in repackaging software for Linux distributions.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Describing version specifiers alongside the versioning scheme
|
|
-------------------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The main reason to even have a standardised version scheme in the first place
|
|
is to make it easier to do reliable automated dependency analysis. It makes
|
|
more sense to describe the primary use case for version identifiers alongside
|
|
their definition.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Changing the interpretation of version specifiers
|
|
-------------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
The previous interpretation of version specifiers made it very easy to
|
|
accidentally download a pre-release version of a dependency. This in
|
|
turn made it difficult for developers to publish pre-release versions
|
|
of software to the Python Package Index, as even marking the package as
|
|
hidden wasn't enough to keep automated tools from downloading it, and also
|
|
made it harder for users to obtain the test release manually through the
|
|
main PyPI web interface.
|
|
|
|
The previous interpretation also excluded post-releases from some version
|
|
specifiers for no adequately justified reason.
|
|
|
|
The updated interpretation is intended to make it difficult to accidentally
|
|
accept a pre-release version as satisfying a dependency, while still
|
|
allowing pre-release versions to be retrieved automatically when that's the
|
|
only way to satisfy a dependency.
|
|
|
|
The "some forward compatibility assumed" version constraint is derived from the
|
|
Ruby community's "pessimistic version constraint" operator [2]_ to allow
|
|
projects to take a cautious approach to forward compatibility promises, while
|
|
still easily setting a minimum required version for their dependencies. The
|
|
spelling of the compatible release clause (``~=``) is inspired by the Ruby
|
|
(``~>``) and PHP (``~``) equivalents.
|
|
|
|
Further improvements are also planned to the handling of parallel
|
|
installation of multiple versions of the same library, but these will
|
|
depend on updates to the installation database definition along with
|
|
improved tools for dynamic path manipulation.
|
|
|
|
The trailing wildcard syntax to request prefix based version matching was
|
|
added to make it possible to sensibly define compatible release clauses.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Support for date based version identifiers
|
|
------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Excluding date based versions caused significant problems in migrating
|
|
``pytz`` to the new metadata standards. It also caused concerns for the
|
|
OpenStack developers, as they use a date based versioning scheme and would
|
|
like to be able to migrate to the new metadata standards without changing
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adding version epochs
|
|
---------------------
|
|
|
|
Version epochs are added for the same reason they are part of other
|
|
versioning schemes, such as those of the Fedora and Debian Linux
|
|
distributions: to allow projects to gracefully change their approach to
|
|
numbering releases, without having a new release appear to have a lower
|
|
version number than previous releases and without having to change the name
|
|
of the project.
|
|
|
|
In particular, supporting version epochs allows a project that was previously
|
|
using date based versioning to switch to semantic versioning by specifying
|
|
a new version epoch.
|
|
|
|
The ``!`` character was chosen to delimit an epoch version rather than the
|
|
``:`` character, which is commonly used in other systems, due to the fact that
|
|
``:`` is not a valid character in a Windows directory name.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adding direct references
|
|
------------------------
|
|
|
|
Direct references are added as an "escape clause" to handle messy real
|
|
world situations that don't map neatly to the standard distribution model.
|
|
This includes dependencies on unpublished software for internal use, as well
|
|
as handling the more complex compatibility issues that may arise when
|
|
wrapping third party libraries as C extensions (this is of especial concern
|
|
to the scientific community).
|
|
|
|
Index servers are deliberately given a lot of freedom to disallow direct
|
|
references, since they're intended primarily as a tool for integrators
|
|
rather than publishers. PyPI in particular is currently going through the
|
|
process of *eliminating* dependencies on external references, as unreliable
|
|
external services have the effect of slowing down installation operations,
|
|
as well as reducing PyPI's own apparent reliability.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adding arbitrary equality
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
Arbitrary equality is added as an "escape clause" to handle the case where
|
|
someone needs to install a project which uses a non compliant version. Although
|
|
this PEP is able to attain ~97% compatibility with the versions that are
|
|
already on PyPI there are still ~3% of versions which cannot be parsed. This
|
|
operator gives a simple and effective way to still depend on them without
|
|
having to "guess" at the semantics of what they mean (which would be required
|
|
if anything other than strict string based equality was supported).
|
|
|
|
|
|
Adding local version identifiers
|
|
--------------------------------
|
|
|
|
It's a fact of life that downstream integrators often need to backport
|
|
upstream bug fixes to older versions. It's one of the services that gets
|
|
Linux distro vendors paid, and application developers may also apply patches
|
|
they need to bundled dependencies.
|
|
|
|
Historically, this practice has been invisible to cross-platform language
|
|
specific distribution tools - the reported "version" in the upstream
|
|
metadata is the same as for the unmodified code. This inaccuracy can then
|
|
cause problems when attempting to work with a mixture of integrator
|
|
provided code and unmodified upstream code, or even just attempting to
|
|
identify exactly which version of the software is installed.
|
|
|
|
The introduction of local version identifiers and "local version labels"
|
|
into the versioning scheme, with the corresponding ``python.integrator``
|
|
metadata extension allows this kind of activity to be represented
|
|
accurately, which should improve interoperability between the upstream
|
|
tools and various integrated platforms.
|
|
|
|
The exact scheme chosen is largely modeled on the existing behavior of
|
|
``pkg_resources.parse_version`` and ``pkg_resources.parse_requirements``,
|
|
with the main distinction being that where ``pkg_resources`` currently always
|
|
takes the suffix into account when comparing versions for exact matches,
|
|
the PEP requires that the local version label of the candidate version be
|
|
ignored when no local version label is present in the version specifier
|
|
clause. Furthermore, the PEP does not attempt to impose any structure on
|
|
the local version labels (aside from limiting the set of permitted
|
|
characters and defining their ordering).
|
|
|
|
This change is designed to ensure that an integrator provided version like
|
|
``pip 1.5+1`` or ``pip 1.5+1.git.abc123de`` will still satisfy a version
|
|
specifier like ``pip>=1.5``.
|
|
|
|
The plus is chosen primarily for readability of local version identifiers.
|
|
It was chosen instead of the hyphen to prevent
|
|
``pkg_resources.parse_version`` from parsing it as a prerelease, which is
|
|
important for enabling a successful migration to the new, more structured,
|
|
versioning scheme. The plus was chosen instead of a tilde because of the
|
|
significance of the tilde in Debian's version ordering algorithm.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Providing explicit version normalization rules
|
|
----------------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Historically, the de facto standard for parsing versions in Python has been the
|
|
``pkg_resources.parse_version`` command from the setuptools project. This does
|
|
not attempt to reject *any* version and instead tries to make something
|
|
meaningful, with varying levels of success, out of whatever it is given. It has
|
|
a few simple rules but otherwise it more or less relies largely on string
|
|
comparison.
|
|
|
|
The normalization rules provided in this PEP exist primarily to either increase
|
|
the compatibility with ``pkg_resources.parse_version``, particularly in
|
|
documented use cases such as ``rev``, ``r``, ``pre``, etc or to do something
|
|
more reasonable with versions that already exist on PyPI.
|
|
|
|
All possible normalization rules were weighed against whether or not they were
|
|
*likely* to cause any ambiguity (e.g. while someone might devise a scheme where
|
|
``v1.0`` and ``1.0`` are considered distinct releases, the likelihood of anyone
|
|
actually doing that, much less on any scale that is noticeable, is fairly low).
|
|
They were also weighed against how ``pkg_resources.parse_version`` treated a
|
|
particular version string, especially with regards to how it was sorted. Finally
|
|
each rule was weighed against the kinds of additional versions it allowed, how
|
|
"ugly" those versions looked, how hard there were to parse (both mentally and
|
|
mechanically) and how much additional compatibility it would bring.
|
|
|
|
The breadth of possible normalizations were kept to things that could easily
|
|
be implemented as part of the parsing of the version and not pre-parsing
|
|
transformations applied to the versions. This was done to limit the side
|
|
effects of each transformation as simple search and replace style transforms
|
|
increase the likelihood of ambiguous or "junk" versions.
|
|
|
|
For an extended discussion on the various types of normalizations that were
|
|
considered, please see the proof of concept for PEP 440 within pip [5]_.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Allowing Underscore in Normalization
|
|
------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
There are not a lot of projects on PyPI which utilize a ``_`` in the version
|
|
string. However this PEP allows its use anywhere that ``-`` is acceptable. The
|
|
reason for this is that the Wheel normalization scheme specifies that ``-``
|
|
gets normalized to a ``_`` to enable easier parsing of the filename.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Summary of changes to \PEP 440
|
|
==============================
|
|
|
|
The following changes were made to this PEP based on feedback received after
|
|
the initial reference implementation was released in setuptools 8.0 and pip
|
|
6.0:
|
|
|
|
* The exclusive ordered comparisons were updated to no longer imply a ``!=V.*``
|
|
which was deemed to be surprising behavior which was too hard to accurately
|
|
describe. Instead the exclusive ordered comparisons will simply disallow
|
|
matching pre-releases, post-releases, and local versions of the specified
|
|
version (unless the specified version is itself a pre-release, post-release
|
|
or local version). For an extended discussion see the threads on
|
|
distutils-sig [6]_ [7]_.
|
|
|
|
* The normalized form for release candidates was updated from 'c' to 'rc'.
|
|
This change was based on user feedback received when setuptools 8.0
|
|
started applying normalisation to the release metadata generated when
|
|
preparing packages for publication on PyPI [8]_.
|
|
|
|
|
|
References
|
|
==========
|
|
|
|
The initial attempt at a standardised version scheme, along with the
|
|
justifications for needing such a standard can be found in PEP 386.
|
|
|
|
.. [1] Reference Implementation of PEP 440 Versions and Specifiers
|
|
https://github.com/pypa/packaging/pull/1
|
|
|
|
.. [2] Version compatibility analysis script:
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https://github.com/pypa/packaging/blob/master/tasks/check.py
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.. [3] Pessimistic version constraint
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http://docs.rubygems.org/read/chapter/16
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.. [4] File URIs in Windows
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http://blogs.msdn.com/b/ie/archive/2006/12/06/file-uris-in-windows.aspx
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.. [5] Proof of Concept: PEP 440 within pip
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https://github.com/pypa/pip/pull/1894
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.. [6] PEP440: foo-X.Y.Z does not satisfy "foo>X.Y"
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/distutils-sig/2014-December/025451.html
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.. [7] PEP440: >1.7 vs >=1.7
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/distutils-sig/2014-December/025507.html
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.. [8] Amend PEP 440 with Wider Feedback on Release Candidates
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/distutils-sig/2014-December/025409.html
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.. [9] Changing the status of PEP 440 to Provisional
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https://mail.python.org/pipermail/distutils-sig/2014-December/025412.html
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Appendix A
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==========
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Metadata v2.0 guidelines versus setuptools::
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$ invoke check.pep440
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Total Version Compatibility: 245806/250521 (98.12%)
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Total Sorting Compatibility (Unfiltered): 45441/47114 (96.45%)
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Total Sorting Compatibility (Filtered): 47057/47114 (99.88%)
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Projects with No Compatible Versions: 498/47114 (1.06%)
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Projects with Differing Latest Version: 688/47114 (1.46%)
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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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fill-column: 70
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End:
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