python-peps/pep-0376.txt

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PEP: 376
Title: Changing the .egg-info structure
Version: $Revision$
Last-Modified: $Date$
Author: Tarek Ziadé <tarek@ziade.org>
Status: Draft
Type: Standards Track
Content-Type: text/x-rst
Created: 22-Feb-2009
Python-Version: 2.7, 3.2
Post-History:
Abstract
========
This PEP proposes various enhancements for Distutils:
- A new format for the .egg-info structure.
- Some APIs to read the meta-data of a project
- Replace PEP 262
- An uninstall feature
Definitions
===========
A **project** is a distribution of one or several files, which can be Python
modules, extensions or data. It is distributed using a `setup.py` script
with Distutils and/or Setuptools. The `setup.py` script indicates where each
elements should be installed.
Once installed, the elements are located in various places in the system, like:
- in Python's site-packages (Python modules, Python modules organized into packages,
Extensions, etc.)
- in Python's `include` directory.
- in Python's `bin` or `Script` directory.
- etc.
Rationale
=========
There are two problems right now in the way projects are installed in Python:
- There are too many ways to do it.
- There is no API to get the metadata of installed projects.
How projects are installed
--------------------------
Right now, when a project is installed in Python, every elements its contains
is installed in various directories.
The pure Python code for instance is installed in the `purelib` directory,
which is located in the Python installation in `lib\python2.6\site-packages`
for example under unix-like systems or Mac OS X, and in `Lib/site-packages`
under Windows. This is done with the Distutils `install` command, which calls
various subcommands.
The `install_egg_info` subcommand is called during this process, in order to
create an `.egg-info` file in the `purelib` directory.
For example, if the `zlib` project (which contains one package) is installed,
two elements will be installed in `site-packages`::
- zlib
- zlib-2.5.2-py2.4.egg-info
Where `zlib` is a Python package, and `zlib-2.5.2-py2.4.egg-info` is
a file containing the project metadata as described in PEP 314 [#pep314]_.
This file corresponds to the file called `PKG-INFO`, built by
the `sdist` command.
The problem is that many people use `easy_install` (setuptools [#setuptools]_)
or `pip` [#pip]_ to install their packages, and these third-party tools do not
install packages in the same way that Distutils does:
- `easy_install` creates an `EGG-INFO` directory inside an `.egg` directory,
and adds a `PKG-INFO` file inside this directory. The `.egg` directory
contains in that case all the elements of the project that are supposed to
be installed in `site-packages`, and is placed in the `site-packages`
directory.
- `pip` creates an `.egg-info` directory inside the `site-packages` directory
and adds a `PKG-INFO` file inside it. Elements of the project are then
installed in various places like Distutils does.
They both add other files in the `EGG-INFO` or `.egg-info` directory, and
create or modify `.pth` files.
Uninstall information
---------------------
Distutils doesn't provide any `uninstall` command. If you want to uninstall
a project, you have to be a power user and remove the various elements that
were installed. Then look over the `.pth` file to clean them if necessary.
And the process differs, depending on the tools you have used to install the
project, and if the project's `setup.py` uses Distutils or Setuptools.
Under some circumstances, you might not be able to know for sure that you
have removed everything, or that you didn't break another project by
removing a file that was shared among several projects.
But there's common behavior: when you install a project, files are copied
in your system. And there's a way to keep track of theses files, so to remove
them.
What this PEP proposes
----------------------
To address those issues, this PEP proposes a few changes:
- a new `.egg-info` structure using a directory, based on one form of
the `EggFormats` standard from `setuptools` [#eggformats]_.
- new APIs in `pkgutil` to be able to query the information of installed
projects.
- a de-facto replacement for PEP 262
- an uninstall function in Distutils.
.egg-info becomes a directory
=============================
The first change would be to make `.egg-info` a directory and let it
hold the `PKG-INFO` file built by the `write_pkg_file` method of
the `Distribution` class in Distutils.
Notice that this change is based on the standard proposed by `EggFormats`.
Although, this standard proposes two ways to install files :
- a self-contained directory that can be zipped or left unzipped and that
contains the project files *and* the `.egg-info` directory.
- a distinct `.egg-info` directory located in the site-packages directory.
You may refer to the `EggFormats` documentation for more details.
This change will not impact Python itself, because `egg-info` files are not
used anywhere yet in the standard library besides Distutils.
Although it will impact the `setuptools` and `pip` projects, but given
the fact that they already work with a directory that contains a `PKG-INFO`
file, the change will have no deep consequences.
For example, if the `zlib` package is installed, the elements that
will be installed in `site-packages` will become::
- zlib
- zlib-2.5.2.egg-info/
PKG-INFO
The syntax of the egg-info directory name is as follows::
name + '-' + version + '.egg-info'
The egg-info directory name is created using a new function called
``egginfo_dirname(name, version)`` added to ``pkgutil``. ``name`` is
converted to a standard distribution name any runs of non-alphanumeric
characters are replaced with a single '-'. ``version`` is converted
to a standard version string. Spaces become dots, and all other
non-alphanumeric characters become dashes, with runs of multiple dashes
condensed to a single dash. Both attributes are then converted into their
filename-escaped form. Any '-' characters are currently replaced with '_'.
Examples::
>>> egginfo_dirname('zlib', '2.5.2')
'zlib-2.5.2.egg-info'
>>> egginfo_dirname('python-ldap', '2.5')
'python_ldap-2.5.egg-info'
>>> egginfo_dirname('python-ldap', '2.5 a---5')
'python_ldap-2.5.a_5.egg-info'
Adding a RECORD file in the .egg-info directory
===============================================
A `RECORD` file will be added inside the `.egg-info` directory at installation
time. The `RECORD` file will hold the list of installed files. These correspond
to the files listed by the `record` option of the `install` command, and will
be generated by default. This will allow uninstallation, as explained later in this
PEP. The `install` command will also provide an option to prevent the `RECORD`
file from being written and this option should be used when creating system
packages.
Third-party installation tools also should not overwrite or delete files
that are not in a RECORD file without prompting or warning.
This RECORD file is inspired from PEP 262 FILES [#pep262]_.
The RECORD format
-----------------
The `RECORD` file is a CSV file, composed of records, one line per
installed file. The ``csv`` module is used to read the file, with
the `excel` dialect, which uses these options to read the file:
- field delimiter : `,`
- quoting char : `"`.
- line terminator : `\r\n`
Each record is composed of three elements.
- the file's full **path**
- if the installed file is located in the directory where the .egg-info
directory of the package is located, it will be a '/'-separated relative
path, no matter what is the target system. This makes this information
cross-compatible and allows simple installation to be relocatable.
- if the installed file is located elsewhere in the system, a
'/'-separated absolute path is used.
- the **MD5** hash of the file, encoded in hex. Notice that `pyc` and `pyo`
generated files will not have a hash.
- the file's size in bytes
The ``csv`` module with its default options will be used to generate this file,
so the field separator will be ",". Any "," characters found within a field
will be escaped automatically by ``csv``.
Example
-------
Back to our `zlib` example, we will have::
- zlib
- zlib-2.5.2.egg-info/
PKG-INFO
RECORD
And the RECORD file will contain::
zlib/include/zconf.h,b690274f621402dda63bf11ba5373bf2,9544
zlib/include/zlib.h,9c4b84aff68aa55f2e9bf70481b94333,66188
zlib/lib/libz.a,e6d43fb94292411909404b07d0692d46,91128
zlib/share/man/man3/zlib.3,785dc03452f0508ff0678fba2457e0ba,4486
zlib-2.5.2.egg-info/PKG-INFO,6fe57de576d749536082d8e205b77748,195
zlib-2.5.2.egg-info/RECORD
Notice that:
- the `RECORD` file can't contain a hash of itself and is just mentioned here
- `zlib` and `zlib-2.5.2.egg-info` are located in `site-packages` so the file
paths are relative to it.
Adding an INSTALLER file in the .egg-info directory
===================================================
The `install` command will have a new option called `installer`. This option
is the name of the tool used to invoke the installation. It's an normalized
lower-case string matching `[a-z0-9_\-\.]`.
$ python setup.py install --installer=pkg-system
It will default to `distutils` if not provided.
When a project is installed, the INSTALLER file is generated in the
`.egg-info` directory with this value, to keep track of **who** installed the
project. The file is a single-line text file.
New APIs in pkgutil
===================
To use the `.egg-info` directory content, we need to add in the standard
library a set of APIs. The best place to put these APIs seems to be `pkgutil`.
The API is organized in three classes:
- ``Distribution``: manages an `.egg-info` directory.
- ``DistributionDirectory``: manages a directory that contains some `.egg-info`
directories.
- ``DistributionDirectories``: manages ``EggInfoDirectory`` instances.
Distribution class
------------------
A new class called ``Distribution`` is created with a the path of the
`.egg-info` directory provided to the contructor. It reads the metadata
contained in `PKG-INFO` when it is instanciated.
``Distribution`` provides the following attributes:
- ``name``: The name of the distribution.
- ``metadata``: A ``DistributionMetadata`` instance loaded with the
distribution's PKG-INFO file.
And following methods:
- ``get_installed_files(local=False)`` -> iterator of (path, md5, size)
Iterates over the `RECORD` entries and return a tuple ``(path, md5, size)``
for each line. If ``local`` is ``True``, the path is transformed into a
local absolute path. Otherwise the raw value from `RECORD` is returned.
- ``uses(path)`` -> Boolean
Returns ``True`` if ``path`` is listed in `RECORD`. ``path``
can be a local absolute path or a relative '/'-separated path.
- ``get_egginfo_file(path, binary=False)`` -> file object
Returns a file located under the `.egg-info` directory.
Returns a ``file`` instance for the file pointed by ``path``.
``path`` has to be a '/'-separated path relative to the `.egg-info`
directory or an absolute path.
If ``path`` is an absolute path and doesn't start with the `.egg-info`
directory path, a ``DistutilsError`` is raised.
If ``binary`` is ``True``, opens the file in binary mode.
- ``get_egginfo_files(local=False)`` -> iterator of paths
Iterates over the `RECORD` entries and return paths for each line if the path
is pointing a file located in the `.egg-info` directory or one of its
subdirectory.
If ``local`` is ``True``, each path is transformed into a
local absolute path. Otherwise the raw value from `RECORD` is returned.
DistributionDirectory class
---------------------------
A new class called ``DistributionDirectory`` is created with a path
corresponding to a directory. For each `.egg-info` directory founded in
`path`, the class creates a corresponding ``Distribution``.
The class is a ``set`` of ``Distribution`` instances. ``DistributionDirectory``
provides a ``path`` attribute corresponding to the path is was created with.
It also provides two methods besides the ones from ``set``:
- ``file_users(path)`` -> Iterator of ``Distribution``.
Returns all ``Distribution`` which uses ``path``, by calling
``Distribution.uses(path)`` on all ``Distribution`` instances.
- ``owner(path)`` -> ``Distribution`` instance or None
If ``path`` is used by only one ``Distribution`` instance, returns it.
Otherwise returns None.
DistributionDirectories class
-----------------------------
A new class called ``DistributionDirectories`` is created. It's a collection of
``DistributionDirectory`` instances. The constructor takes one optional
argument ``use_cache`` set to ``True`` by default. When ``True``,
``DistributionDirectories`` will use a global cache to reduce the numbers of
I/O accesses and speed up the lookups.
The cache is a global mapping containing ``DistributionDirectory`` instances.
When an ``DistributionDirectories`` object is created, it will use the cache to
add an entry for each path it visits, or reuse existing entries. The cache
usage can be disabled at any time with the ``use_cache`` attribute.
The cache can also be emptied with the global ``purge_cache`` function.
The class is a ``dict`` where the values are ``DistributionDirectory``
instances and the keys are their path attributes.
``EggInfoDirectories`` also provides the following methods besides the ones
from ``dict``:
- ``append(path)``
Creates an ``DistributionDirectory`` instance for ``path`` and adds it
in the mapping.
- ``load(paths)``
Creates and adds ``DistributionDirectory`` instances corresponding to
``paths``.
- ``reload()``
Reloads existing entries.
- ``get_distributions()`` -> Iterator of ``Distribution`` instances.
Iterates over all ``Distribution`` contained in ``DistributionDirectory``
instances.
- ``get_distribution(project_name)`` -> ``Distribution`` or None.
Returns a ``Distribution`` instance for the given project name.
If not found, returns None.
- ``get_file_users(path)`` -> Iterator of ``Distribution`` instances.
Iterates over all projects to find out which project uses the file.
Returns ``Distribution`` instances.
.egg-info functions
-------------------
The new functions added in the ``pkgutil`` are :
- ``get_distributions()`` -> iterator of ``Distribution`` instance.
Provides an iterator that looks for ``.egg-info`` directories in ``sys.path``
and returns ``Distribution`` instances for each one of them.
- ``get_distribution(name)`` -> ``Distribution`` or None.
Scans all elements in ``sys.path`` and looks for all directories ending with
``.egg-info``. Returns an ``Distribution`` corresponding to the ``.egg-info``
directory that contains a PKG-INFO that matches `name` for the `name`
metadata.
Notice that there should be at most one result. The first result founded
will be returned. If the directory is not found, returns None.
- ``get_file_users(path)`` -> iterator of ``Distribution`` instances.
Iterates over all projects to find out which project uses ``path``.
``path`` can be a local absolute path or a relative '/'-separated path.
All these functions use the same global instance of ``DistributionDirectories``to use the cache. Notice that the cache is never emptied explicitely.
Example
-------
Let's use some of the new APIs with our `zlib` example::
>>> from pkgutil import get_distribution, get_file_users
>>> dist = get_distribution('zlib')
>>> dist.name
'zlib'
>>> dist.metadata.version
'2.5.2'
>>> for path, hash, size in dist.get_installed_files()::
... print '%s %s %d %s' % (path, hash, size)
...
zlib/include/zconf.h b690274f621402dda63bf11ba5373bf2 9544
zlib/include/zlib.h 9c4b84aff68aa55f2e9bf70481b94333 66188
zlib/lib/libz.a e6d43fb94292411909404b07d0692d46 91128
zlib/share/man/man3/zlib.3 785dc03452f0508ff0678fba2457e0ba 4486
zlib-2.5.2.egg-info/PKG-INFO 6fe57de576d749536082d8e205b77748 195
zlib-2.5.2.egg-info/RECORD None None
>>> dist.uses('zlib/include/zlib.h')
True
>>> dist.get_egginfo_file('PKG-INFO')
<open file at ...>
PEP 262 replacement
===================
In the past an attempt was made to create a installation database (see PEP 262
[#pep262]_).
Extract from PEP 262 Requirements:
" We need a way to figure out what distributions, and what versions of
those distributions, are installed on a system..."
Since the APIs proposed in the current PEP provide everything needed to meet
this requirement, PEP 376 will replace PEP 262 and will become the official
`installation database` standard.
The new version of PEP 345 (XXX work in progress) will extend the Metadata
standard and will fullfill the requirements described in PEP 262, like the
`REQUIRES` section.
Adding an Uninstall function
============================
Distutils already provides a very basic way to install a project, which is running
the `install` command over the `setup.py` script of the distribution.
Distutils will provide a very basic ``uninstall`` function, that will be added
in ``distutils.util`` and will take the name of the project to uninstall as
its argument. ``uninstall`` will use the APIs desribed earlier and remove all
unique files, as long as their hash didn't change. Then it will remove
empty directories left behind.
``uninstall`` will return a list of uninstalled files::
>>> from distutils.util import uninstall
>>> uninstall('zlib')
['/opt/local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/zlib/file1',
'/opt/local/lib/python2.6/site-packages/zlib/file2']
If the project is not found, a ``DistutilsUninstallError`` will be 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 will be
called for each file that is removed. If the callable returns `True`, the
file will be removed. If it returns False, it will be left alone.
Examples::
>>> def _remove_and_log(path):
... logging.info('Removing %s' % path)
... return True
...
>>> uninstall('zlib', _remove_and_log)
>>> def _dry_run(path):
... logging.info('Removing %s (dry run)' % path)
... return False
...
>>> uninstall('zlib', _dry_run)
Of course, a third-party tool can use ``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 `.egg-info` directory with the name of the installer.
To avoid removing projects that where installed by another packaging system,
the ``uninstall`` function takes an extra argument ``installer`` which default
to ``distutils``.
When called, ``uninstall`` will control that the ``INSTALLER`` file matches
this argument. If not, it will raise a ``DistutilsUninstallError``::
>>> uninstall('zlib')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
DistutilsUninstallError: zlib was installed by 'cool-pkg-manager'
>>> uninstall('zlib', installer='cool-pkg-manager')
This allows a third-party application to use the ``uninstall`` function
and make sure it's the only program that can remove a project 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.
Backward compatibility and roadmap
==================================
These changes will not introduce any compatibility problems with the previous
version of Distutils, and will also work with existing third-party tools.
Although, a backport of the new Distutils for 2.5, 2.6, 3.0 and 3.1 will be
provided so people can benefit from these new features.
The plan is to integrate them for Python 2.7 and Python 3.2
References
==========
.. [#pep262]
http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0262
.. [#pep314]
http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0314
.. [#setuptools]
http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/setuptools
.. [#pip]
http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pip
.. [#eggformats]
http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/EggFormats
Aknowledgments
==============
Jim Fulton, Ian Bicking, Phillip Eby, and many people at Pycon and Distutils-SIG.
Copyright
=========
This document has been placed in the public domain.
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