python-peps/pep-0621.rst

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PEP: 621
Title: Storing project metadata in pyproject.toml
Author: Brett Cannon <brett@python.org>,
Dustin Ingram <di@python.org>,
Paul Ganssle <paul at ganssle.io>,
Paul Moore <p.f.moore@gmail.com>,
Pradyun Gedam <pradyunsg@gmail.com>,
Sébastien Eustace <sebastien@eustace.io>,
Thomas Kluyver <thomas@kluyver.me.uk>,
Tzu-Ping Chung <uranusjr@gmail.com>
Discussions-To: https://discuss.python.org/t/pep-621-storing-project-metadata-in-pyproject-toml/4513
Status: Draft
Type: Standards Track
Content-Type: text/x-rst
Created: 22-Jun-2020
Post-History: 22-Jun-2020
Abstract
========
This PEP specifies how to write a project's `core metadata`_ in a
``pyproject.toml`` for packaging-related tools to consume.
Motivation
==========
Up until now, all tools in the Python community had their
own unique way for users to specify the `core metadata`_ for their
project. This is unfortunate as the metadata itself is standardized
at a lower level for when build back-ends record this information in
e.g. a wheel file. It means users must learn a specific way to specify
something for whichever build back-end they choose. Unfortunately a
`survey of tools`_ both in the Python community and outside of it
showed that there was very little in the way of consistent agreement
on how to record project metadata.
This lack of standardization becomes a form of lock-in for build
back-ends. When migration requires learning a new set of terms and a
way to record metadata, it makes transitioning to another tool
cumbersome. That leads to less innovation in the packaging ecosystem
as people are less likely to try out other approaches.
A single format makes specifying project metadata easier to learn. As
things currently stand, one must find a tutorial for the appropriate
build back-end when it comes to learning how to record metadata. This
leads to duplicated effort in teaching and debugging: when trying to
help users, you must find out which build back-end they are using and
hope you are familiar with that tool.
Finally, this PEP makes core metadata for projects statically defined.
By being statically defined, metadata can be read more quickly and
easily than if it were dynamically calculated. Tools which read
and write metadata can do so without worrying about which build
back-end the user specified the metadata for. Statically defined
metadata is also more secure, since it does not require code execution
to gather, and is guaranteed to be deterministic.
Rationale
=========
The design guidelines the authors of this PEP followed were:
- Define as much of the `core metadata`_ as reasonable
- Define the metadata statically with an escape hatch for those who
want to define it dynamically
- Use familiar names where it made sense, but be willing to use more
modern terminology
- Try to be ergonomic within a TOML file instead of mirroring how
tools specify metadata at a low-level
- Learn from other build back-ends in the packaging ecosystem which
have used TOML for their metadata
- Don't try to standardize things which lack a pre-existing standard
at a lower-level
Specification
=============
When specifying project metadata, tools MUST adhere and honour the
metadata as specified in this PEP. If metadata is improperly specified
then tools MUST raise an error to notify the user about their mistake.
Details
-------
Table name
''''''''''
Tools MUST specify fields defined by this PEP in a table named
``[project]``. No tools may add fields to this table which are not
defined by this PEP. For tools wishing to store their own settings in
``pyproject.toml``, they may use the ``[tool]`` table as defined in
:pep:`518`.
``name``
''''''''
- Format: string
- `Core metadata`_: ``Name``
(`link <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#name>`__)
- Synonyms
- Flit_: ``module``/``dist-name``
(`link <https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pyproject_toml.html#metadata-section>`__)
- Poetry_: ``name``
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#name>`__)
- Setuptools_: ``name``
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
The name of the project.
Tools MUST require users to statically define this field.
Tools SHOULD normalize this name, as specified by :pep:`503`, as soon
as it is read for internal consistency.
``version``
'''''''''''
- Format: string
- `Core metadata`_: ``Version``
(`link <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#version>`__)
- Synonyms
- Flit_: N/A (read from a ``__version__`` attribute)
(`link <https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.html#usage>`__)
- Poetry_: ``version``
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#version>`__)
- Setuptools_: ``version``
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
The version of the project as supported by :pep:`440`.
Users SHOULD prefer to specify already-normalized versions.
``description``
'''''''''''''''
- Format: string
- `Core metadata`_: ``Summary``
(`link <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#summary>`__)
- Synonyms
- Flit_: N/A
- Poetry_: ``description``
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#description>`__)
- Setuptools_: ``description``
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
The summary description of the project.
``readme``
''''''''''
- Format: String or table
- `Core metadata`_: ``Description``
(`link <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#description>`__)
- Synonyms
- Flit_: ``description-file``
(`link <https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pyproject_toml.html#metadata-section>`__)
- Poetry_: ``readme``
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#readme>`__)
- Setuptools_: ``long_description``
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
The full description of the project (i.e. the README).
The field accepts either a string or a table. If it is a string then
it is the relative path to a text file containing the full
description. Tools MUST assume the file's encoding as UTF-8. If the
file path ends in a case-insensitive ``.md`` suffix, then tools MUST
assume the content-type is ``text/markdown``. If the file path ends in
a case-insensitive ``.rst``, then tools MUST assume the content-type
is ``text/x-rst``. If a tool recognizes more extensions than this PEP,
they MAY infer the content-type for the user. For all unrecognized
suffixes, tools MUST raise an error.
The ``readme`` field may also take a table. The ``file`` key has a
string value representing a relative path to a file containing the
full description. The ``text`` key has a string value which is the
full description. These keys are mutually-exclusive, thus tools MUST
raise an error if the metadata specifies both keys.
The table also has a ``content-type`` field which takes a string
specifying the content-type of the full description. A tool MUST raise
an error if the metadata does not specify this field in the table. If
the metadata does not specify the ``charset`` parameter, then it is
assumed to be UTF-8. Tools MAY support other encodings if they choose
to. Tools MAY support alternative content-types which they can
transform to a content-type as supported by the `core metadata`_.
Otherwise tools MUST raise an error for unsupported content-types.
``requires-python``
'''''''''''''''''''
- Format: string
- `Core metadata`_: ``Requires-Python``
(`link <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#summary>`__)
- Synonyms
- Flit_: ``requires-python``
(`link <https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pyproject_toml.html#metadata-section>`__)
- Poetry_: As a ``python`` dependency in the
``[tool.poetry.dependencies]`` table
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#dependencies-and-dev-dependencies>`__)
- Setuptools_: ``python_requires``
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
The Python version requirements of the project.
Build back-ends MAY try to backfill appropriate
``Programming Language :: Python`` `trove classifiers`_ based on what
the user specified for this field.
``license``
'''''''''''
- Format: Table
- `Core metadata`_: ``License``
(`link <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#license>`__)
- Synonyms
- Flit_: ``license``
(`link <https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pyproject_toml.html#metadata-section>`__)
- Poetry_: ``license``
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#license>`__)
- Setuptools_: ``license``, ``license_file``, ``license_files``
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
The table may have one of two keys. The ``file`` key has a string
value that is a relative file path to the file which contains the
license for the project. Tools MUST assume the file's encoding is
UTF-8. The ``text`` key has a string value which is the license of the
project. These keys are mutually exclusive, so a tool MUST raise an
error if the metadata specifies both keys.
A practical string value for the ``license`` key has been purposefully
left out to allow for a future PEP to specify support for SPDX_
expressions. If such support comes to fruition and a tool can
unambiguously identify the license specified, then the tool MAY
fill in the appropriate trove classifier.
``authors``
'''''''''''
- Format: Array of inline tables with string keys and values
- `Core metadata`_: ``Author``/``Author-email``
(`link <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#author>`__)
- Synonyms
- Flit_: ``author``/``author-email``/``maintainer``/``maintainer-email``
(`link <https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pyproject_toml.html#metadata-section>`__)
- Poetry_: ``authors``/``maintainers``
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#authors>`__)
- Setuptools_: ``author``/``author_email``/``maintainer``/``maintainer_email``
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
The people or organizations considered to be the "authors" of the
project. The exact meaning is open to interpretation — it may list the
original or primary authors, current maintainers, or owners of the
package.
The field accepts an array of tables with 2 keys: ``name`` and
``email``. Both values must be strings. The ``name`` value MUST be a
valid email name (i.e. whatever can be put as a name, before an email,
in `RFC #822`_) and not contain commas. The ``email`` value MUST be a
valid email address. Both keys are optional.
Using the data to fill in `core metadata`_ is as follows:
1. If only ``name`` is provided, the value goes in ``Author``.
2. If only ``email`` is provided, the value goes in ``Author-email``.
3. If both ``email`` and ``name`` are provided, the value goes in
``Author-email``, with the format ``{name} <{email}>``.
``keywords``
''''''''''''
- Format: array of strings
- `Core metadata`_: ``Keywords``
(`link <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#keywords>`__)
- Synonyms
- Flit_: ``keywords``
(`link <https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pyproject_toml.html#metadata-section>`__)
- Poetry_: ``keywords``
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#keywords>`_)
- Setuptools_: ``keywords``
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
The keywords for the project.
``classifiers``
'''''''''''''''
- Format: array of strings
- `Core metadata`_: ``Classifier``
(`link <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#classifier-multiple-use>`__)
- Synonyms
- Flit_: ``classifiers``
(`link <https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pyproject_toml.html#metadata-section>`__)
- Poetry_: ``classifiers``
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#classifiers>`__)
- Setuptools_: ``classifiers``
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
`Trove classifiers`_ which apply to the project.
Build back-ends MAY automatically fill in extra trove classifiers
if the back-end can deduce the classifiers from the provided metadata.
``urls``
''''''''
- Format: Table, with keys and values of strings
- `Core metadata`_: ``Project-URL``
(`link <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#project-url-multiple-use>`__)
- Synonyms
- Flit_: ``[tool.flit.metadata.urls]`` table
(`link <https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pyproject_toml.html#metadata-section>`__)
- Poetry_: ``[tool.poetry.urls]`` table
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#urls>`__)
- Setuptools_: ``project_urls``
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
A table of URLs where the key is the URL label and the value is the
URL itself.
Entry points
''''''''''''
- Format: Table (``[project.scripts]``, ``[project.gui-scripts]``, and
``[project.entry-points]``)
- `Core metadata`_: N/A;
`Entry point specification <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/entry-points/>`_
- Synonyms
- Flit_: ``[tool.flit.scripts]`` table for console scripts,
``[tool.flit.entrypoints]`` for the rest
(`link <https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pyproject_toml.html#scripts-section>`__)
- Poetry_: ``[tool.poetry.scripts]`` table for console scripts
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#scripts>`__)
- Setuptools_: ``entry_points``
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
There are three tables related to entry points. The
``[project.scripts]`` table corresponds to ``console_scripts`` group.
The key of the table is the name of the entry point and the value is
the object reference.
The ``[project.gui-scripts]`` table corresponds to the ``gui_scripts``
group. Its format is the same as ``[project.scripts]``.
The ``[project.entry-points]`` table is a collection of tables. Each
sub-table's name is an entry point group. The key and value semantics
are the same as ``[project.scripts]``. Users MUST not create
nested sub-tables but instead keep the entry point groups to only one
level deep.
Build back-ends MUST raise an error if the metadata defines a
``[project.entry-points.console_scripts]`` or
``[project.entry-points.gui_scripts]`` table, as they would
be ambiguous in the face of ``[project.scripts]`` and
``[project.gui-scripts]``, respectively.
``dependencies``/``optional-dependencies``
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
- Format: TBD
- `Core metadata`_: ``Requires-Dist``
(`link <https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/#requires-dist-multiple-use>`__)
- Synonyms
- Flit_: ``requires`` for required dependencies, ``requires-extra``
for optional dependencies
(`link <https://flit.readthedocs.io/en/latest/pyproject_toml.html#metadata-section>`__)
- Poetry_: ``[tool.poetry.dependencies]`` for dependencies (both
required and for development),
``[tool.poetry.extras]`` for optional dependencies
(`link <https://python-poetry.org/docs/pyproject/#dependencies-and-dev-dependencies>`__)
- Setuptools_: ``install_requires`` for required dependencies,
``extras_require`` for optional dependencies
(`link <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata>`__)
See the open issue on `How to specify dependencies?`_ for a
discussion of the options of how to specify a project's dependencies.
``dynamic``
'''''''''''
- Format: Array of strings
- `Core metadata`_: N/A
- No synonyms
Specifies which fields listed by this PEP were intentionally
unspecified so another tool can/will provide such metadata
dynamically. This clearly delineates which metadata is purposefully
unspecified and expected to stay unspecified compared to being
provided via tooling later on.
- A build back-end MUST honour statically-specified metadata (which
means the metadata did not list the field in ``dynamic``).
- A build back-end MUST raise an error if the metadata specifies the
``name`` in ``dynamic``.
- If the `core metadata`_ specification lists a field as "Required",
then the metadata MUST specify the field statically or list it in
``dynamic`` (build back-ends MUST raise an error otherwise, i.e. a
required field is in no way listed in a ``pyproject.toml`` file).
- If the `core metadata`_ specification lists a field as "Optional",
the metadata MAY list it in ``dynamic`` if the expectation is a
build back-end will provide the data for the field later.
- Build back-ends MUST raise an error if the metadata specifies a
field statically as well as being listed in ``dynamic``.
- If the metadata does not list a field in ``dynamic``, then a build
back-end CANNOT fill in the requisite metadata on behalf of the user
(i.e. ``dynamic`` is the only way to allow a tool to fill in
metadata and the user must opt into the filling in).
- Build back-ends MUST raise an error if the metadata specifies a
field in ``dynamic`` but is still unspecified in the final artifact
(i.e. the build back-end was unable to provide the data for a field
listed in ``dynamic``).
Example
-------
::
[project]
name = "spam"
version = "2020.0.0"
description = "Lovely Spam! Wonderful Spam!"
readme = "README.rst"
requires-python = ">=3.8"
license = {file = "LICENSE.txt"}
keywords = ["egg", "bacon", "sausage", "tomatoes", "Lobster Thermidor"]
authors = [
{name = "Brett Cannon", email = "brett@python.org"},
{email = "oss@pradyunsg.me"},
{name = "Tzu-Ping Chung"}
]
classifiers = [
"Development Status :: 4 - Beta",
"Programming Language :: Python"
]
# Using 'dependencies' and 'optional-dependencies' as an example
# as those fields' format are an Open Issue.
dynamic = ["dependencies", "optional-dependencies"]
[project.urls]
homepage = "example.com"
documentation = "readthedocs.org"
repository = "github.com"
changelog = "github.com/me/spam/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md"
[project.scripts]
spam-cli = "spam:main_cli"
[project.gui-scripts]
spam-gui = "spam:main_gui"
[project.entry-points."spam.magical"]
tomatoes = "spam:main_tomatoes"
Backwards Compatibility
=======================
As this provides a new way to specify a project's `core metadata`_ and
is using a new table name which falls under the reserved namespace as
outlined in :pep:`518`, there are no backwards-compatibility concerns.
Security Implications
=====================
There are no direct security concerns as this PEP covers how to statically
define project metadata. Any security issues would stem from how tools
consume the metadata and choose to act upon it.
How to Teach This
=================
[How to teach users, new and experienced, how to apply the PEP to their work.]
Reference Implementation
========================
There are currently no proofs-of-concept from any build tools implementing this PEP.
Rejected Ideas
==============
Other table names
-----------------
Anything under ``[build-system]``
'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
There was worry that using this table name would exacerbate confusion
between build metadata and project metadata, e.g. by using
``[build-system.metadata]`` as a table.
``[package]``
'''''''''''''
Garnered no strong support.
``[metadata]``
''''''''''''''
The strongest contender after ``[project]``, but in the end it was
agreed that ``[project]`` read better for certain sub-tables, e.g.
``[project.urls]``.
Support for a metadata provider
-------------------------------
Initially there was a proposal to add a middle layer between the
static metadata specified by this PEP and
``prepare_metadata_for_build_wheel()`` as specified by :pep:`517`. The
idea was that if a project wanted to insert itself between a build
back-end and the metadata there would be a hook to do so.
In the end the authors considered this idea unnecessarily complicated
and would move the PEP away from its design goal to push people to
define core metadata statically as much as possible.
Require a normalized project name
---------------------------------
While it would make things easier for tools to only work with the
normalized name as specified in :pep:`503`, the idea was ultimately
rejected as it would hurt projects transitioning to using this PEP.
Specify files to include when building
--------------------------------------
The authors decided fairly quickly during design discussions that
this PEP should focus exclusively on project metadata and not build
metadata. As such, specifying what files should end up in a source
distribution or wheel file is out of scope for this PEP.
Name the ``[project.urls]`` table ``[project.project-urls]``
------------------------------------------------------------
This suggestion came thanks to the corresponding `core metadata`_
being `Project-Url`. But once the overall table name of `[project]`
was chosen, the redundant use of the word "project" suggested the
current, shorter name was a better fit.
Have a separate ``url``/``home-page`` field
-------------------------------------------
While the `core metadata`_ supports it, having a single field for a
project's URL while also supporting a full table seemed redundant and
confusing.
Recommend that tools put development-related dependencies into a "dev" extra
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
As various tools have grown the concept of required dependencies
versus development dependencies, the idea of suggesting to tools that
they put such development tool into a "dev" grouping came up. In the
end, though, the authors deemed it out-of-scope for this specification
to suggest such a workflow.
Have the ``dynamic`` field only require specifying missing required fields
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
The authors considered the idea that the ``dynamic`` field would only
require the listing of missing required fields and make listing
optional fields optional. In the end, though, this went against the
design goal of promoting specifying as much information statically as
possible.
Different structures for the ``readme`` field
---------------------------------------------
The ``readme`` field had a proposed ``readme_content_type`` field, but
the authors considered the string/table hybrid more practical for the
common case while still accommodating the more complex case. Same goes
for using``long_description`` and a corresponding
``long_description_content_type`` field.
The ``file`` key in the table format was originally proposed as
``path``, but ``file`` corresponds to setuptools' ``file`` key and
there is no strong reason otherwise to choose one over the other.
Allowing the ``readme`` field to imply ``text/plain``
-----------------------------------------------------
The authors considered allowing for unspecified content-types which
would default to ``text/plain``, but decided that it would be best to
be explicit in this case to prevent accidental incorrect renderings on
PyPI and to force users to be clear in their intent.
Other names for ``dependencies``/``optional-dependencies``
----------------------------------------------------------
The authors originally proposed ``requires``/``extra-requires`` as
names, but decided to go with the current names after a survey of
other packaging ecosystems showed Python was an outlier:
1. `npm <https://docs.npmjs.com/files/package.json#optionaldependencies>`__
2. `Rust <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/guide/dependencies.html>`__
3. `Dart <https://dart.dev/guides/packages>`__
4. `Swift <https://swift.org/package-manager/>`__
5. `Ruby <https://guides.rubygems.org/specification-reference/#add_runtime_dependency>`__
Normalizing on the current names helps minimize confusion for people coming from
other ecosystems without using terminology that is necessarily foreign to new
programmers. It also prevents potential confusion with ``requires`` in the
``[build-system]`` table as specified in :pep:`518`.
Support ``Maintainers``/``Maintainers-email``
---------------------------------------------
When discussing how to support ``Authors``/``Authors-email``, the question was
brought up as to how exactly authors differed from maintainers. As this was
never clearly defined and no one could come up with a good definition, the
decision was made to drop the concept of maintainers.
Support an arbitrary depth of tables for ``project.entry-points``
-----------------------------------------------------------------
There was a worry that keeping ``project.entry-points`` to a depth of 1 for sub-tables
would cause confusion to users if they use a dotted name and are not used to table
names using quotation marks (e.g. ``project.entry-points."spam.magical"``). But
supporting an arbitrary depth -- e.g. ``project.entry-points.spam.magical`` -- would
preclude any form of an exploded table format in the future. It would also complicate
things for build back-ends as they would have to make sure to traverse the full
table structure rather than a single level and raising errors as appropriate on
value types.
Backfilling trove classifiers SHOULD occur instead of MAY happen
----------------------------------------------------------------
Originally this PEP said that toosl SHOULD backfill appropriate trove classifiers.
This was changed to say it MAY occur to emphasize it was entirely optional for
build back-ends to implement.
Open Issues
===========
How to specify dependencies?
----------------------------
People seem to fall into two camps on how to specify dependencies:
using :pep:`508` strings or TOML tables (sometimes referred to as the
"exploded table" format due to it being the equivalent of translating
a :pep:`508` string into a table format). There is no question as to
whether one format or another can fully represent what the other can.
This very much comes down to a question of familiarity and (perceived)
ease of use.
Supporters of :pep:`508` strings believe familiarity is important as
the format has been in use for 5 years and in some variant for 15
years (since the introduction of :pep:`345`). This would facilitate
transitioning people to using this PEP as there would be one less new
concept to learn. Supporters also think the format is reasonably
ergonomic and understandable upon first glance, so using a DSL for it
is not a major drawback.
Supporters of the exploded table format believe it has better
ergonomics. Tooling which can validate TOML formats could also help
detect errors in a ``pyproject.toml`` file while editing instead of
waiting until the user has run a tool in the case of :pep:`508`'s DSL.
Supporters also believe it is easier to read and reason (both in
general and for first-time users). They also point out that other
programming languages have adopted a format more like an exploded
table thanks to their use of standardized configuration formats (e.g.
`Rust <https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/reference/specifying-dependencies.html>`__,
and `Dart <https://dart.dev/tools/pub/dependencies>`__). The thinking
is that an exploded table format would be more familiar to people
coming to Python from another programming language.
The authors briefly considered supporting both formats, but decided
that it would lead to confusion as people would need to be familiar
with two formats instead of just one.
Copyright
=========
This document is placed in the public domain or under the
CC0-1.0-Universal license, whichever is more permissive.
.. _PyPI: https://pypi.org
.. _core metadata: https://packaging.python.org/specifications/core-metadata/
.. _flit: https://flit.readthedocs.io/
.. _poetry: https://python-poetry.org/
.. _setuptools: https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/
.. _setuptools metadata: https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#metadata
.. _survey of tools: https://github.com/uranusjr/packaging-metadata-comparisons
.. _trove classifiers: https://pypi.org/classifiers/
.. _SPDX: https://spdx.dev/
.. _RFC #822: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc822
..
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