658 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
658 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 376
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Title: Database of Installed Python Distributions
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Author: Tarek Ziadé <tarek@ziade.org>
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Status: Final
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Type: Standards Track
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Topic: Packaging
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 22-Feb-2009
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Python-Version: 2.7, 3.2
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Post-History: `22-Jun-2009 <https://mail.python.org/archives/list/python-dev@python.org/thread/ILLTIOZAULMDY5CAS6GOITEYJ4HNFATQ/>`__
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.. canonical-pypa-spec:: :ref:`packaging:core-metadata`
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Abstract
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========
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The goal of this PEP is to provide a standard infrastructure to manage
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project distributions installed on a system, so all tools that are
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installing or removing projects are interoperable.
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To achieve this goal, the PEP proposes a new format to describe installed
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distributions on a system. It also describes a reference implementation
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for the standard library.
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In the past an attempt was made to create an installation database
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(see :pep:`262`).
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Combined with :pep:`345`, the current proposal supersedes :pep:`262`.
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Note: the implementation plan didn't go as expected, so it should be
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considered informative only for this PEP.
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Rationale
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=========
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There are two problems right now in the way distributions are installed in
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Python:
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- There are too many ways to do it and this makes interoperation difficult.
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- There is no API to get information on installed distributions.
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How distributions are installed
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-------------------------------
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Right now, when a distribution is installed in Python, every element can
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be installed in a different directory.
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For instance, ``Distutils`` installs the pure Python code in the ``purelib``
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directory, which is ``lib/python2.6/site-packages`` for unix-like systems and
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Mac OS X, or ``Lib\site-packages`` under Python's installation directory for
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Windows.
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Additionally, the ``install_egg_info`` subcommand of the Distutils ``install``
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command adds an ``.egg-info`` file for the project into the ``purelib``
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directory.
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For example, for the ``docutils`` distribution, which contains one package an
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extra module and executable scripts, three elements are installed in
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``site-packages``:
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- ``docutils``: The ``docutils`` package.
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- ``roman.py``: An extra module used by ``docutils``.
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- ``docutils-0.5-py2.6.egg-info``: A file containing the distribution metadata
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as described in :pep:`314`. This file corresponds to the file
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called ``PKG-INFO``, built by the ``sdist`` command.
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Some executable scripts, such as ``rst2html.py``, are also added in the
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``bin`` directory of the Python installation.
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Another project called ``setuptools`` [#setuptools]_ has two other formats
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to install distributions, called ``EggFormats`` [#eggformats]_:
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- a self-contained ``.egg`` directory, that contains all the distribution files
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and the distribution metadata in a file called ``PKG-INFO`` in a subdirectory
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called ``EGG-INFO``. ``setuptools`` creates other files in that directory that can
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be considered as complementary metadata.
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- an ``.egg-info`` directory installed in ``site-packages``, that contains the same
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files ``EGG-INFO`` has in the ``.egg`` format.
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The first format is automatically used when you install a distribution that
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uses the ``setuptools.setup`` function in its setup.py file, instead of
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the ``distutils.core.setup`` one.
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``setuptools`` also add a reference to the distribution into an
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``easy-install.pth`` file.
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Last, the ``setuptools`` project provides an executable script called
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``easy_install`` [#easyinstall]_ that installs all distributions, including
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distutils-based ones in self-contained ``.egg`` directories.
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If you want to have standalone ``.egg-info`` directories for your distributions,
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e.g. the second ``setuptools`` format, you have to force it when you work
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with a setuptools-based distribution or with the ``easy_install`` script.
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You can force it by using the ``--single-version-externally-managed`` option
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**or** the ``--root`` option. This will make the ``setuptools`` project install
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the project like distutils does.
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This option is used by :
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- the ``pip`` [#pip]_ installer
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- the Fedora packagers [#fedora]_.
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- the Debian packagers [#debian]_.
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Uninstall information
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---------------------
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Distutils doesn't provide an ``uninstall`` command. If you want to uninstall
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a distribution, you have to be a power user and remove the various elements
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that were installed, and then look over the ``.pth`` file to clean them if
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necessary.
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And the process differs depending on the tools you have used to install the
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distribution and if the distribution's ``setup.py`` uses Distutils or
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Setuptools.
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Under some circumstances, you might not be able to know for sure that you
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have removed everything, or that you didn't break another distribution by
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removing a file that is shared among several distributions.
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But there's a common behavior: when you install a distribution, files are
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copied in your system. And it's possible to keep track of these files for
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later removal.
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Moreover, the Pip project has gained an ``uninstall`` feature lately. It
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records all installed files, using the ``record`` option of the ``install``
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command.
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What this PEP proposes
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----------------------
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To address those issues, this PEP proposes a few changes:
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- A new ``.dist-info`` structure using a directory, inspired on one format of
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the ``EggFormats`` standard from ``setuptools``.
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- New APIs in ``pkgutil`` to be able to query the information of installed
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distributions.
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- An uninstall function and an uninstall script in Distutils.
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One .dist-info directory per installed distribution
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===================================================
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This PEP proposes an installation format inspired by one of the options in the
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``EggFormats`` standard, the one that uses a distinct directory located in the
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site-packages directory.
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This distinct directory is named as follows::
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name + '-' + version + '.dist-info'
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This ``.dist-info`` directory can contain these files:
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- ``METADATA``: contains metadata, as described in :pep:`345`, :pep:`314` and :pep:`241`.
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- ``RECORD``: records the list of installed files
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- ``INSTALLER``: records the name of the tool used to install the project
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- ``REQUESTED``: the presence of this file indicates that the project
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installation was explicitly requested (i.e., not installed as a dependency).
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The METADATA, RECORD and INSTALLER files are mandatory, while REQUESTED may
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be missing.
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This proposal will not impact Python itself because the metadata files are not
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used anywhere yet in the standard library besides Distutils.
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It will impact the ``setuptools`` and ``pip`` projects but, given the fact that
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they already work with a directory that contains a ``PKG-INFO`` file, the change
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will have no deep consequences.
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RECORD
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------
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A ``RECORD`` file is added inside the ``.dist-info`` directory at installation
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time when installing a source distribution using the ``install`` command.
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Notice that when installing a binary distribution created with ``bdist`` command
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or a ``bdist``-based command, the ``RECORD`` file will be installed as well since
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these commands use the ``install`` command to create binary distributions.
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The ``RECORD`` file holds the list of installed files. These correspond
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to the files listed by the ``record`` option of the ``install`` command, and will
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be generated by default. This allows the implementation of an uninstallation
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feature, as explained later in this PEP. The ``install`` command also provides
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an option to prevent the ``RECORD`` file from being written and this option
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should be used when creating system packages.
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Third-party installation tools also should not overwrite or delete files
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that are not in a RECORD file without prompting or warning.
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This RECORD file is inspired from :pep:`262` FILES.
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The ``RECORD`` file is a CSV file, composed of records, one line per
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installed file. The ``csv`` module is used to read the file, with
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these options:
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- field delimiter : ``,``
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- quoting char : ``"``.
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- line terminator : ``os.linesep`` (so ``\r\n`` or ``\n``)
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When a distribution is installed, files can be installed under:
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- the **base location**: path defined by the ``--install-lib`` option,
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which defaults to the site-packages directory.
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- the **installation prefix**: path defined by the ``--prefix`` option, which
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defaults to ``sys.prefix``.
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- any other path on the system.
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Each record is composed of three elements:
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- the file's **path**
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- a '/'-separated path, relative to the **base location**, if the file is
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under the **base location**.
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- a '/'-separated path, relative to the **base location**, if the file
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is under the **installation prefix** AND if the **base location** is a
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subpath of the **installation prefix**.
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- an absolute path, using the local platform separator
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- a hash of the file's contents.
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Notice that ``pyc`` and ``pyo`` generated files don't have any hash because
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they are automatically produced from ``py`` files. So checking the hash
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of the corresponding ``py`` file is enough to decide if the file and
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its associated ``pyc`` or ``pyo`` files have changed.
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The hash is either the empty string or the hash algorithm as named in
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``hashlib.algorithms_guaranteed``, followed by the equals character
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``=``, followed by the urlsafe-base64-nopad encoding of the digest
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(``base64.urlsafe_b64encode(digest)`` with trailing ``=`` removed).
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- the file's size in bytes
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The ``csv`` module is used to generate this file, so the field separator is
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",". Any "," character found within a field is escaped automatically by
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``csv``.
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When the file is read, the ``U`` option is used so the universal newline
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support (see :pep:`278`) is activated, avoiding any trouble
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reading a file produced on a platform that uses a different new line
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terminator.
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Here's an example of a RECORD file (extract)::
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lib/python2.6/site-packages/docutils/__init__.py,md5=nWt-Dge1eug4iAgqLS_uWg,9544
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lib/python2.6/site-packages/docutils/__init__.pyc,,
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lib/python2.6/site-packages/docutils/core.py,md5=X90C_JLIcC78PL74iuhPnA,66188
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lib/python2.6/site-packages/docutils/core.pyc,,
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lib/python2.6/site-packages/roman.py,md5=7YhfNczihNjOY0FXlupwBg,234
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lib/python2.6/site-packages/roman.pyc,,
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/usr/local/bin/rst2html.py,md5=g22D3amDLJP-FhBzCi7EvA,234
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/usr/local/bin/rst2html.pyc,,
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python2.6/site-packages/docutils-0.5.dist-info/METADATA,md5=ovJyUNzXdArGfmVyb0onyA,195
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lib/python2.6/site-packages/docutils-0.5.dist-info/RECORD,,
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Notice that the ``RECORD`` file can't contain a hash of itself and is just mentioned here
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A project that installs a ``config.ini`` file in ``/etc/myapp`` will be added like this::
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/etc/myapp/config.ini,md5=gLfd6IANquzGLhOkW4Mfgg,9544
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For a windows platform, the drive letter is added for the absolute paths,
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so a file that is copied in c:\MyApp\ will be::
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c:\etc\myapp\config.ini,md5=gLfd6IANquzGLhOkW4Mfgg,9544
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INSTALLER
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---------
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The ``install`` command has a new option called ``installer``. This option
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is the name of the tool used to invoke the installation. It's a normalized
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lower-case string matching ``[a-z0-9_\-\.]``.
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$ python setup.py install --installer=pkg-system
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It defaults to ``distutils`` if not provided.
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When a distribution is installed, the INSTALLER file is generated in the
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``.dist-info`` directory with this value, to keep track of **who** installed the
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distribution. The file is a single-line text file.
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REQUESTED
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---------
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Some install tools automatically detect unfulfilled dependencies and
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install them. In these cases, it is useful to track which
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distributions were installed purely as a dependency, so if their
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dependent distribution is later uninstalled, the user can be alerted
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of the orphaned dependency.
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If a distribution is installed by direct user request (the usual
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case), a file REQUESTED is added to the .dist-info directory of the
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installed distribution. The REQUESTED file may be empty, or may
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contain a marker comment line beginning with the "#" character.
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If an install tool installs a distribution automatically, as a
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dependency of another distribution, the REQUESTED file should not be
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created.
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The ``install`` command of distutils by default creates the REQUESTED
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file. It accepts ``--requested`` and ``--no-requested`` options to explicitly
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specify whether the file is created.
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If a distribution that was already installed on the system as a dependency
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is later installed by name, the distutils ``install`` command will
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create the REQUESTED file in the .dist-info directory of the existing
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installation.
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Implementation details
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======================
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Note: this section is non-normative. In the end, this PEP was
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implemented by third-party libraries and tools, not the standard
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library.
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New functions and classes in pkgutil
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------------------------------------
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To use the ``.dist-info`` directory content, we need to add in the standard
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library a set of APIs. The best place to put these APIs is ``pkgutil``.
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Functions
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~~~~~~~~~
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The new functions added in the ``pkgutil`` module are :
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- ``distinfo_dirname(name, version)`` -> directory name
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``name`` is converted to a standard distribution name by replacing any
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runs of non-alphanumeric characters with a single '-'.
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``version`` is converted to a standard version string. Spaces become
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dots, and all other non-alphanumeric characters (except dots) become
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dashes, with runs of multiple dashes condensed to a single dash.
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Both attributes are then converted into their filename-escaped form,
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i.e. any '-' characters are replaced with '_' other than the one in
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'dist-info' and the one separating the name from the version number.
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- ``get_distributions()`` -> iterator of ``Distribution`` instances.
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Provides an iterator that looks for ``.dist-info`` directories in
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``sys.path`` and returns ``Distribution`` instances for
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each one of them.
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- ``get_distribution(name)`` -> ``Distribution`` or None.
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- ``obsoletes_distribution(name, version=None)`` -> iterator of ``Distribution``
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instances.
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Iterates over all distributions to find which distributions *obsolete*
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``name``. If a ``version`` is provided, it will be used to filter the results.
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- ``provides_distribution(name, version=None)`` -> iterator of ``Distribution``
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instances.
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Iterates over all distributions to find which distributions *provide*
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``name``. If a ``version`` is provided, it will be used to filter the results.
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Scans all elements in ``sys.path`` and looks for all directories ending with
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``.dist-info``. Returns a ``Distribution`` corresponding to the
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``.dist-info`` directory that contains a METADATA that matches ``name``
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for the ``name`` metadata.
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This function only returns the first result founded, since no more than one
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values are expected. If the directory is not found, returns None.
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- ``get_file_users(path)`` -> iterator of ``Distribution`` instances.
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Iterates over all distributions to find out which distributions uses ``path``.
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``path`` can be a local absolute path or a relative '/'-separated path.
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A local absolute path is an absolute path in which occurrences of '/'
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have been replaced by the system separator given by ``os.sep``.
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Distribution class
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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A new class called ``Distribution`` is created with the path of the
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``.dist-info`` directory provided to the constructor. It reads the metadata
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contained in ``METADATA`` when it is instantiated.
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``Distribution(path)`` -> instance
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Creates a ``Distribution`` instance for the given ``path``.
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``Distribution`` provides the following attributes:
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- ``name``: The name of the distribution.
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- ``metadata``: A ``DistributionMetadata`` instance loaded with the
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distribution's METADATA file.
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- ``requested``: A boolean that indicates whether the REQUESTED
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metadata file is present (in other words, whether the distribution was
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installed by user request).
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And following methods:
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- ``get_installed_files(local=False)`` -> iterator of (path, hash, size)
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Iterates over the ``RECORD`` entries and return a tuple ``(path, hash, size)``
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for each line. If ``local`` is ``True``, the path is transformed into a
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local absolute path. Otherwise the raw value from ``RECORD`` is returned.
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A local absolute path is an absolute path in which occurrences of '/'
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have been replaced by the system separator given by ``os.sep``.
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- ``uses(path)`` -> Boolean
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Returns ``True`` if ``path`` is listed in ``RECORD``. ``path``
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can be a local absolute path or a relative '/'-separated path.
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- ``get_distinfo_file(path, binary=False)`` -> file object
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Returns a file located under the ``.dist-info`` directory.
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Returns a ``file`` instance for the file pointed by ``path``.
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``path`` has to be a '/'-separated path relative to the ``.dist-info``
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directory or an absolute path.
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If ``path`` is an absolute path and doesn't start with the ``.dist-info``
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directory path, a ``DistutilsError`` is raised.
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If ``binary`` is ``True``, opens the file in read-only binary mode (``rb``),
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otherwise opens it in read-only mode (``r``).
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- ``get_distinfo_files(local=False)`` -> iterator of paths
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Iterates over the ``RECORD`` entries and returns paths for each line if the path
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is pointing to a file located in the ``.dist-info`` directory or one of its
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subdirectories.
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If ``local`` is ``True``, each path is transformed into a
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local absolute path. Otherwise the raw value from ``RECORD`` is returned.
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Notice that the API is organized in five classes that work with directories
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and Zip files (so it works with files included in Zip files, see :pep:`273` for
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more details). These classes are described in the documentation
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of the prototype implementation for interested readers [#prototype]_.
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Examples
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~~~~~~~~
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Let's use some of the new APIs with our ``docutils`` example::
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>>> from pkgutil import get_distribution, get_file_users, distinfo_dirname
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>>> dist = get_distribution('docutils')
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>>> dist.name
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'docutils'
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>>> dist.metadata.version
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'0.5'
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>>> distinfo_dirname('docutils', '0.5')
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'docutils-0.5.dist-info'
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>>> distinfo_dirname('python-ldap', '2.5')
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'python_ldap-2.5.dist-info'
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>>> distinfo_dirname('python-ldap', '2.5 a---5')
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'python_ldap-2.5.a_5.dist-info'
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>>> for path, hash, size in dist.get_installed_files()::
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... print '%s %s %d' % (path, hash, size)
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...
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python2.6/site-packages/docutils/__init__.py,b690274f621402dda63bf11ba5373bf2,9544
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python2.6/site-packages/docutils/core.py,9c4b84aff68aa55f2e9bf70481b94333,66188
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python2.6/site-packages/roman.py,a4b84aff68aa55f2e9bf70481b943D3,234
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/usr/local/bin/rst2html.py,a4b84aff68aa55f2e9bf70481b943D3,234
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python2.6/site-packages/docutils-0.5.dist-info/METADATA,6fe57de576d749536082d8e205b77748,195
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python2.6/site-packages/docutils-0.5.dist-info/RECORD
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||
|
||
>>> dist.uses('docutils/core.py')
|
||
True
|
||
|
||
>>> dist.uses('/usr/local/bin/rst2html.py')
|
||
True
|
||
|
||
>>> dist.get_distinfo_file('METADATA')
|
||
<open file at ...>
|
||
|
||
>>> dist.requested
|
||
True
|
||
|
||
|
||
New functions in Distutils
|
||
--------------------------
|
||
|
||
Distutils already provides a very basic way to install a distribution, which
|
||
is running the ``install`` command over the ``setup.py`` script of the
|
||
distribution.
|
||
|
||
:pep:`Distutils2 <262>` will provide a very basic ``uninstall`` function, that
|
||
is added in ``distutils2.util`` and takes the name of the distribution to
|
||
uninstall as its argument. ``uninstall`` uses the APIs described earlier and
|
||
remove all unique files, as long as their hash didn't change. Then it removes
|
||
empty directories left behind.
|
||
|
||
``uninstall`` returns a list of uninstalled files::
|
||
|
||
>>> from distutils2.util import uninstall
|
||
>>> uninstall('docutils')
|
||
['/opt/local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/docutils/core.py',
|
||
...
|
||
'/opt/local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/docutils/__init__.py']
|
||
|
||
If the distribution is not found, a ``DistutilsUninstallError`` is raised.
|
||
|
||
Filtering
|
||
~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
To make it a reference API for third-party projects that wish to control
|
||
how ``uninstall`` works, a second callable argument can be used. It's
|
||
called for each file that is removed. If the callable returns ``True``, the
|
||
file is removed. If it returns False, it's left alone.
|
||
|
||
Examples::
|
||
|
||
>>> def _remove_and_log(path):
|
||
... logging.info('Removing %s' % path)
|
||
... return True
|
||
...
|
||
>>> uninstall('docutils', _remove_and_log)
|
||
|
||
>>> def _dry_run(path):
|
||
... logging.info('Removing %s (dry run)' % path)
|
||
... return False
|
||
...
|
||
>>> uninstall('docutils', _dry_run)
|
||
|
||
Of course, a third-party tool can use lower-level ``pkgutil`` APIs to
|
||
implement its own uninstall feature.
|
||
|
||
Installer marker
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
As explained earlier in this PEP, the ``install`` command adds an ``INSTALLER``
|
||
file in the ``.dist-info`` directory with the name of the installer.
|
||
|
||
To avoid removing distributions that were installed by another packaging
|
||
system, the ``uninstall`` function takes an extra argument ``installer`` which
|
||
defaults to ``distutils2``.
|
||
|
||
When called, ``uninstall`` controls that the ``INSTALLER`` file matches
|
||
this argument. If not, it raises a ``DistutilsUninstallError``::
|
||
|
||
>>> uninstall('docutils')
|
||
Traceback (most recent call last):
|
||
...
|
||
DistutilsUninstallError: docutils was installed by 'cool-pkg-manager'
|
||
|
||
>>> uninstall('docutils', installer='cool-pkg-manager')
|
||
|
||
This allows a third-party application to use the ``uninstall`` function
|
||
and strongly suggest that no other program remove a distribution it has
|
||
previously installed. This is useful when a third-party program that relies
|
||
on Distutils APIs does extra steps on the system at installation time,
|
||
it has to undo at uninstallation time.
|
||
|
||
Adding an Uninstall script
|
||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
||
|
||
An ``uninstall`` script is added in Distutils2. and is used like this::
|
||
|
||
$ python -m distutils2.uninstall projectname
|
||
|
||
Notice that script doesn't control if the removal of a distribution breaks
|
||
another distribution. Although it makes sure that all the files it removes
|
||
are not used by any other distribution, by using the uninstall function.
|
||
|
||
Also note that this uninstall script pays no attention to the
|
||
REQUESTED metadata; that is provided only for use by external tools to
|
||
provide more advanced dependency management.
|
||
|
||
Backward compatibility and roadmap
|
||
==================================
|
||
|
||
These changes don't introduce any compatibility problems since they
|
||
will be implemented in:
|
||
|
||
- pkgutil in new functions
|
||
- distutils2
|
||
|
||
The plan is to include the functionality outlined in this PEP in pkgutil for
|
||
Python 3.2, and in Distutils2.
|
||
|
||
Distutils2 will also contain a backport of the new pgkutil, and can be used for
|
||
2.4 onward.
|
||
|
||
Distributions installed using existing, pre-standardization formats do not have
|
||
the necessary metadata available for the new API, and thus will be
|
||
ignored. Third-party tools may of course to continue to support previous
|
||
formats in addition to the new format, in order to ease the transition.
|
||
|
||
|
||
References
|
||
==========
|
||
|
||
.. [#distutils]
|
||
http://docs.python.org/distutils
|
||
|
||
.. [#distutils2]
|
||
http://hg.python.org/distutils2
|
||
|
||
.. [#setuptools]
|
||
http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/setuptools
|
||
|
||
.. [#easyinstall]
|
||
http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/EasyInstall
|
||
|
||
.. [#pip]
|
||
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pip
|
||
|
||
.. [#eggformats]
|
||
http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/EggFormats
|
||
|
||
.. [#fedora]
|
||
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Packaging/Python/Eggs#Providing_Eggs_using_Setuptools
|
||
|
||
.. [#debian]
|
||
http://wiki.debian.org/DebianPython/NewPolicy
|
||
|
||
.. [#prototype]
|
||
http://bitbucket.org/tarek/pep376/
|
||
|
||
Acknowledgements
|
||
================
|
||
|
||
Jim Fulton, Ian Bicking, Phillip Eby, Rafael Villar Burke, and many people at
|
||
Pycon and Distutils-SIG.
|
||
|
||
Copyright
|
||
=========
|
||
|
||
This document has been placed in the public domain.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
..
|
||
Local Variables:
|
||
mode: indented-text
|
||
indent-tabs-mode: nil
|
||
sentence-end-double-space: t
|
||
fill-column: 70
|
||
coding: utf-8
|
||
End:
|