421 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
421 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
PEP: 427
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Title: The Wheel Binary Package Format 1.0
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Version: $Revision$
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Last-Modified: $Date$
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Author: Daniel Holth <dholth@gmail.com>
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BDFL-Delegate: Nick Coghlan <ncoghlan@gmail.com>
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Discussions-To: <distutils-sig@python.org>
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Status: Accepted
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Type: Standards Track
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Content-Type: text/x-rst
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Created: 20-Sep-2012
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Post-History: 18-Oct-2012, 15-Feb-2013
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Resolution: http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2013-February/124103.html
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Abstract
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========
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This PEP describes a built-package format for Python called "wheel".
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A wheel is a ZIP-format archive with a specially formatted file name and
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the ``.whl`` extension. It contains a single distribution nearly as it
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would be installed according to PEP 376 with a particular installation
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scheme. Although a specialized installer is recommended, a wheel file
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may be installed by simply unpacking into site-packages with the standard
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'unzip' tool while preserving enough information to spread its contents
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out onto their final paths at any later time.
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PEP Acceptance
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==============
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This PEP was accepted, and the defined wheel version updated to 1.0, by
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Nick Coghlan on 16th February, 2013 [1]_
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Rationale
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=========
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Python needs a package format that is easier to install than sdist.
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Python's sdist packages are defined by and require the distutils and
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setuptools build systems, running arbitrary code to build-and-install,
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and re-compile, code just so it can be installed into a new
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virtualenv. This system of conflating build-install is slow, hard to
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maintain, and hinders innovation in both build systems and installers.
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Wheel attempts to remedy these problems by providing a simpler
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interface between the build system and the installer. The wheel
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binary package format frees installers from having to know about the
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build system, saves time by amortizing compile time over many
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installations, and removes the need to install a build system in the
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target environment.
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Details
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=======
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Installing a wheel 'distribution-1.0-py32-none-any.whl'
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-------------------------------------------------------
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Wheel installation notionally consists of two phases:
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- Unpack.
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a. Parse ``distribution-1.0.dist-info/WHEEL``.
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b. Check that installer is compatible with Wheel-Version. Warn if
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minor version is greater, abort if major version is greater.
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c. If Root-Is-Purelib == 'true', unpack archive into purelib
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(site-packages).
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d. Else unpack archive into platlib (site-packages).
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- Spread.
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a. Unpacked archive includes ``distribution-1.0.dist-info/`` and (if
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there is data) ``distribution-1.0.data/``.
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b. Move each subtree of ``distribution-1.0.data/`` onto its
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destination path. Each subdirectory of ``distribution-1.0.data/``
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is a key into a dict of destination directories, such as
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``distribution-1.0.data/(purelib|platlib|headers|scripts|data)``.
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The initially supported paths are taken from
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``distutils.command.install``.
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c. If applicable, update scripts starting with ``#!python`` to point
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to the correct interpreter.
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d. Update ``distribution-1.0.dist.info/RECORD`` with the installed
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paths.
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e. Remove empty ``distribution-1.0.data`` directory.
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f. Compile any installed .py to .pyc. (Uninstallers should be smart
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enough to remove .pyc even if it is not mentioned in RECORD.)
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Recommended installer features
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''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
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Rewrite ``#!python``.
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In wheel, scripts are packaged in
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``{distribution}-{version}.data/scripts/``. If the first line of
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a file in ``scripts/`` starts with exactly ``b'#!python'``, rewrite to
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point to the correct interpreter. Unix installers may need to add
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the +x bit to these files if the archive was created on Windows.
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The ``b'#!pythonw'`` convention is allowed. ``b'#!pythonw'`` indicates
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a GUI script instead of a console script.
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Generate script wrappers.
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In wheel, scripts packaged on Unix systems will certainly not have
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accompanying .exe wrappers. Windows installers may want to add them
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during install.
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Recommended archiver features
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'''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
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Place ``.dist-info`` at the end of the archive.
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Archivers are encouraged to place the ``.dist-info`` files physically
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at the end of the archive. This enables some potentially interesting
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ZIP tricks including the ability to amend the metadata without
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rewriting the entire archive.
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File Format
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-----------
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File name convention
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''''''''''''''''''''
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The wheel filename is ``{distribution}-{version}(-{build
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tag})?-{python tag}-{abi tag}-{platform tag}.whl``.
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distribution
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Distribution name, e.g. 'django', 'pyramid'.
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version
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Distribution version, e.g. 1.0.
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build tag
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Optional build number. Must start with a digit. A tie breaker
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if two wheels have the same version. Sort as the empty string
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if unspecified, else sort the initial digits as a number, and the
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remainder lexicographically.
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language implementation and version tag
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E.g. 'py27', 'py2', 'py3'.
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abi tag
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E.g. 'cp33m', 'abi3', 'none'.
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platform tag
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E.g. 'linux_x86_64', 'any'.
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For example, ``distribution-1.0-1-py27-none-any.whl`` is the first
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build of a package called 'distribution', and is compatible with
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Python 2.7 (any Python 2.7 implementation), with no ABI (pure Python),
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on any CPU architecture.
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The last three components of the filename before the extension are
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called "compatibility tags." The compatibility tags express the
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package's basic interpreter requirements and are detailed in PEP 425.
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Escaping and Unicode
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''''''''''''''''''''
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Each component of the filename is escaped by replacing runs of
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non-alphanumeric characters with an underscore ``_``::
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re.sub("[^\w\d.]+", "_", distribution, re.UNICODE)
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The archive filename is Unicode. It will be some time before the tools
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are updated to support non-ASCII filenames, but they are supported in
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this specification.
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The filenames *inside* the archive are encoded as UTF-8. Although some
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ZIP clients in common use do not properly display UTF-8 filenames,
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the encoding is supported by both the ZIP specification and Python's
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``zipfile``.
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File contents
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'''''''''''''
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The contents of a wheel file, where {distribution} is replaced with the
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name of the package, e.g. ``beaglevote`` and {version} is replaced with
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its version, e.g. ``1.0.0``, consist of:
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#. ``/``, the root of the archive, contains all files to be installed in
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``purelib`` or ``platlib`` as specified in ``WHEEL``. ``purelib`` and
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``platlib`` are usually both ``site-packages``.
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#. ``{distribution}-{version}.dist-info/`` contains metadata.
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#. ``{distribution}-{version}.data/`` contains one subdirectory
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for each non-empty install scheme key not already covered, where
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the subdirectory name is an index into a dictionary of install paths
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(e.g. ``data``, ``scripts``, ``include``, ``purelib``, ``platlib``).
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#. Python scripts must appear in ``scripts`` and begin with exactly
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``b'#!python'`` in order to enjoy script wrapper generation and
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``#!python`` rewriting at install time. They may have any or no
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extension.
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#. ``{distribution}-{version}.dist-info/METADATA`` is Metadata version 1.1
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or greater format metadata.
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#. ``{distribution}-{version}.dist-info/WHEEL`` is metadata about the archive
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itself in the same basic key: value format::
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Wheel-Version: 1.0
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Generator: bdist_wheel 1.0
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Root-Is-Purelib: true
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Tag: py2-none-any
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Tag: py3-none-any
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Build: 1
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#. ``Wheel-Version`` is the version number of the Wheel specification.
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#. ``Generator`` is the name and optionally the version of the software
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that produced the archive.
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#. ``Root-Is-Purelib`` is true if the top level directory of the archive
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should be installed into purelib; otherwise the root should be installed
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into platlib.
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#. ``Tag`` is the wheel's expanded compatibility tags; in the example the
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filename would contain ``py2.py3-none-any``.
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#. ``Build`` is the build number and is omitted if there is no build number.
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#. A wheel installer should warn if Wheel-Version is greater than the
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version it supports, and must fail if Wheel-Version has a greater
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major version than the version it supports.
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#. Wheel, being an installation format that is intended to work across
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multiple versions of Python, does not generally include .pyc files.
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#. Wheel does not contain setup.py or setup.cfg.
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This version of the wheel specification is based on the distutils install
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schemes and does not define how to install files to other locations.
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The layout offers a superset of the functionality provided by the existing
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wininst and egg binary formats.
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The .dist-info directory
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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#. Wheel .dist-info directories include at a minimum METADATA, WHEEL,
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and RECORD.
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#. METADATA is the package metadata, the same format as PKG-INFO as
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found at the root of sdists.
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#. WHEEL is the wheel metadata specific to a build of the package.
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#. RECORD is a list of (almost) all the files in the wheel and their
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secure hashes. Unlike PEP 376, every file except RECORD, which
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cannot contain a hash of itself, must include its hash. The hash
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algorithm must be sha256 or better; specifically, md5 and sha1 are
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not permitted, as signed wheel files rely on the strong hashes in
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RECORD to validate the integrity of the archive.
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#. PEP 376's INSTALLER and REQUESTED are not included in the archive.
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#. RECORD.jws is used for digital signatures. It is not mentioned in
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RECORD.
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#. RECORD.p7s is allowed as a courtesy to anyone who would prefer to
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use S/MIME signatures to secure their wheel files. It is not
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mentioned in RECORD.
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#. During extraction, wheel installers verify all the hashes in RECORD
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against the file contents. Apart from RECORD and its signatures,
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installation will fail if any file in the archive is not both
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mentioned and correctly hashed in RECORD.
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The .data directory
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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Any file that is not normally installed inside site-packages goes into
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the .data directory, named as the .dist-info directory but with the
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.data/ extension::
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distribution-1.0.dist-info/
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distribution-1.0.data/
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The .data directory contains subdirectories with the scripts, headers,
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documentation and so forth from the distribution. During installation the
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contents of these subdirectories are moved onto their destination paths.
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Signed wheel files
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------------------
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Wheel files include an extended RECORD that enables digital
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signatures. PEP 376's RECORD is altered to include a secure hash
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``digestname=urlsafe_b64encode_nopad(digest)`` (urlsafe base64
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encoding with no trailing = characters) as the second column instead
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of an md5sum. All possible entries are hashed, including any
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generated files such as .pyc files, but not RECORD which cannot contain its
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own hash. For example::
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file.py,sha256=AVTFPZpEKzuHr7OvQZmhaU3LvwKz06AJw8mT\_pNh2yI,3144
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distribution-1.0.dist-info/RECORD,,
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The signature file(s) RECORD.jws and RECORD.p7s are not mentioned in
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RECORD at all since they can only be added after RECORD is generated.
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Every other file in the archive must have a correct hash in RECORD
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or the installation will fail.
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If JSON web signatures are used, one or more JSON Web Signature JSON
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Serialization (JWS-JS) signatures is stored in a file RECORD.jws adjacent
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to RECORD. JWS is used to sign RECORD by including the SHA-256 hash of
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RECORD as the signature's JSON payload::
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{ "hash": "sha256=ADD-r2urObZHcxBW3Cr-vDCu5RJwT4CaRTHiFmbcIYY" }
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(The hash value is the same format used in RECORD.)
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If RECORD.p7s is used, it must contain a detached S/MIME format signature
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of RECORD.
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A wheel installer is not required to understand digital signatures but
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MUST verify the hashes in RECORD against the extracted file contents.
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When the installer checks file hashes against RECORD, a separate signature
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checker only needs to establish that RECORD matches the signature.
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See
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- http://self-issued.info/docs/draft-ietf-jose-json-web-signature.html
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- http://self-issued.info/docs/draft-jones-jose-jws-json-serialization.html
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- http://self-issued.info/docs/draft-ietf-jose-json-web-key.html
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- http://self-issued.info/docs/draft-jones-jose-json-private-key.html
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Comparison to .egg
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------------------
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#. Wheel is an installation format; egg is importable. Wheel archives
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do not need to include .pyc and are less tied to a specific Python
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version or implementation. Wheel can install (pure Python) packages
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built with previous versions of Python so you don't always have to
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wait for the packager to catch up.
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#. Wheel uses .dist-info directories; egg uses .egg-info. Wheel is
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compatible with the new world of Python packaging and the new
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concepts it brings.
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#. Wheel has a richer file naming convention for today's
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multi-implementation world. A single wheel archive can indicate
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its compatibility with a number of Python language versions and
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implementations, ABIs, and system architectures. Historically the
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ABI has been specific to a CPython release, wheel is ready for the
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stable ABI.
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#. Wheel is lossless. The first wheel implementation bdist_wheel
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always generates egg-info, and then converts it to a .whl. It is
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also possible to convert existing eggs and bdist_wininst
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distributions.
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#. Wheel is versioned. Every wheel file contains the version of the
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wheel specification and the implementation that packaged it.
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Hopefully the next migration can simply be to Wheel 2.0.
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#. Wheel is a reference to the other Python.
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FAQ
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===
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Wheel defines a .data directory. Should I put all my data there?
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This specification does not have an opinion on how you should organize
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your code. The .data directory is just a place for any files that are
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not normally installed inside ``site-packages`` or on the PYTHONPATH.
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In other words, you may continue to use ``pkgutil.get_data(package,
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resource)`` even though *those* files will usually not be distributed
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in *wheel's* ``.data`` directory.
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Why does wheel include attached signatures?
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Attached signatures are more convenient than detached signatures
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because they travel with the archive. Since only the individual files
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are signed, the archive can be recompressed without invalidating
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the signature or individual files can be verified without having
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to download the whole archive.
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Why does wheel allow JWS signatures?
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The JOSE specifications of which JWS is a part are designed to be easy
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to implement, a feature that is also one of wheel's primary design
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goals. JWS yields a useful, concise pure-Python implementation.
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Why does wheel also allow S/MIME signatures?
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S/MIME signatures are allowed for users who need or want to use
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existing public key infrastructure with wheel.
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Signed packages are only a basic building block in a secure package
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update system. Wheel only provides the building block.
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What's the deal with "purelib" vs. "platlib"?
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Wheel preserves the historic "purelib" vs. "platlib" distinction
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even though both map to the same install location in any system the
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author could find.
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For example, a wheel with "Root-Is-Purelib: false" with all its files
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in ``{name}-{version}.data/purelib`` is equivalent to a wheel with
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"Root-Is-Purelib: true" with those same files in the root, and it
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is legal to have files in both the "purelib" and "platlib" categories.
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In practice a wheel should have only one of "purelib" or "platlib"
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depending on whether it is pure Python or not and those files should
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be at the root.
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References
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==========
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.. [1] PEP acceptance
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(http://mail.python.org/pipermail/python-dev/2013-February/124103.html)
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Appendix
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========
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Example urlsafe-base64-nopad implementation::
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# urlsafe-base64-nopad for Python 3
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import base64
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def urlsafe_b64encode_nopad(data):
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return base64.urlsafe_b64encode(data).rstrip(b'=')
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def urlsafe_b64decode_nopad(data):
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pad = b'=' * (4 - (len(data) & 3))
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return base64.urlsafe_b64decode(data + pad)
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Copyright
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=========
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This document has been placed into the public domain.
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..
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Local Variables:
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mode: indented-text
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indent-tabs-mode: nil
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sentence-end-double-space: t
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fill-column: 70
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coding: utf-8
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End:
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