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편집 파일: pyproject_config.rst
.. _pyproject.toml config: ----------------------------------------------------- Configuring setuptools using ``pyproject.toml`` files ----------------------------------------------------- .. note:: New in 61.0.0 .. important:: If compatibility with legacy builds or versions of tools that don't support certain packaging standards (e.g. :pep:`517` or :pep:`660`), a simple ``setup.py`` script can be added to your project [#setupcfg-caveats]_ (while keeping the configuration in ``pyproject.toml``): .. code-block:: python from setuptools import setup setup() Starting with :pep:`621`, the Python community selected ``pyproject.toml`` as a standard way of specifying *project metadata*. ``Setuptools`` has adopted this standard and will use the information contained in this file as an input in the build process. The example below illustrates how to write a ``pyproject.toml`` file that can be used with ``setuptools``. It contains two TOML tables (identified by the ``[table-header]`` syntax): ``build-system`` and ``project``. The ``build-system`` table is used to tell the build frontend (e.g. :pypi:`build` or :pypi:`pip`) to use ``setuptools`` and any other plugins (e.g. ``setuptools-scm``) to build the package. The ``project`` table contains metadata fields as described by the :doc:`PyPUG:guides/writing-pyproject-toml` guide. .. _example-pyproject-config: .. code-block:: toml [build-system] requires = ["setuptools", "setuptools-scm"] build-backend = "setuptools.build_meta" [project] name = "my_package" authors = [ {name = "Josiah Carberry", email = "josiah_carberry@brown.edu"}, ] description = "My package description" readme = "README.rst" requires-python = ">=3.7" keywords = ["one", "two"] license = {text = "BSD-3-Clause"} classifiers = [ "Framework :: Django", "Programming Language :: Python :: 3", ] dependencies = [ "requests", 'importlib-metadata; python_version<"3.8"', ] dynamic = ["version"] [project.optional-dependencies] pdf = ["ReportLab>=1.2", "RXP"] rest = ["docutils>=0.3", "pack ==1.1, ==1.3"] [project.scripts] my-script = "my_package.module:function" # ... other project metadata fields as listed in: # https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/guides/writing-pyproject-toml/ .. _setuptools-table: Setuptools-specific configuration ================================= While the standard ``project`` table in the ``pyproject.toml`` file covers most of the metadata used during the packaging process, there are still some ``setuptools``-specific configurations that can be set by users that require customization. These configurations are completely optional and probably can be skipped when creating simple packages. They are equivalent to the :doc:`/references/keywords` used by the ``setup.py`` file, and can be set via the ``tool.setuptools`` table: ========================= =========================== ========================= Key Value Type (TOML) Notes ========================= =========================== ========================= ``py-modules`` array See tip below. ``packages`` array or ``find`` directive See tip below. ``package-dir`` table/inline-table Used when explicitly/manually listing ``packages``. ------------------------- --------------------------- ------------------------- ``package-data`` table/inline-table See :doc:`/userguide/datafiles`. ``include-package-data`` boolean ``True`` by default (only when using ``pyproject.toml`` project metadata/config). See :doc:`/userguide/datafiles`. ``exclude-package-data`` table/inline-table Empty by default. See :doc:`/userguide/datafiles`. ------------------------- --------------------------- ------------------------- ``license-files`` array of glob patterns **Provisional** - likely to change with :pep:`639` (by default: ``['LICEN[CS]E*', 'COPYING*', 'NOTICE*', 'AUTHORS*']``) ``data-files`` table/inline-table **Discouraged** - check :doc:`/userguide/datafiles`. Whenever possible, consider using data files inside the package directories. ``script-files`` array **Discouraged** - equivalent to the ``script`` keyword in ``setup.py``. Whenever possible, please use ``project.scripts`` instead. ------------------------- --------------------------- ------------------------- ``provides`` array *ignored by pip when installing packages* ``obsoletes`` array *ignored by pip when installing packages* ``platforms`` array Sets the ``Platform`` :doc:`core-metadata <PyPUG:specifications/core-metadata>` field (*ignored by pip when installing packages*). ------------------------- --------------------------- ------------------------- ``zip-safe`` boolean **Obsolete** - only relevant for ``pkg_resources``, ``easy_install`` and ``setup.py install`` in the context of :doc:`eggs </deprecated/python_eggs>` (deprecated). ``eager-resources`` array **Obsolete** - only relevant for ``pkg_resources``, ``easy_install`` and ``setup.py install`` in the context of :doc:`eggs </deprecated/python_eggs>` (deprecated). ``namespace-packages`` array **Deprecated** - use implicit namespaces instead (:pep:`420`). ========================= =========================== ========================= .. note:: The `TOML value types`_ ``array`` and ``table/inline-table`` are roughly equivalent to the Python's :obj:`list` and :obj:`dict` data types, respectively. Please note that some of these configurations are deprecated, obsolete or at least discouraged, but they are made available to ensure portability. Deprecated and obsolete configurations may be removed in future versions of ``setuptools``. New packages should avoid relying on discouraged fields if possible, and existing packages should consider migrating to alternatives. .. tip:: When both ``py-modules`` and ``packages`` are left unspecified, ``setuptools`` will attempt to perform :ref:`auto-discovery`, which should cover most popular project directory organization techniques, such as the :ref:`src-layout` and the :ref:`flat-layout`. However if your project does not follow these conventional layouts (e.g. you want to use a ``flat-layout`` but at the same time have custom directories at the root of your project), you might need to use the ``find`` directive [#directives]_ as shown below: .. code-block:: toml [tool.setuptools.packages.find] where = ["src"] # list of folders that contain the packages (["."] by default) include = ["my_package*"] # package names should match these glob patterns (["*"] by default) exclude = ["my_package.tests*"] # exclude packages matching these glob patterns (empty by default) namespaces = false # to disable scanning PEP 420 namespaces (true by default) Note that the glob patterns in the example above need to be matched by the **entire** package name. This means that if you specify ``exclude = ["tests"]``, modules like ``tests.my_package.test1`` will still be included in the distribution (to remove them, add a wildcard to the end of the pattern: ``"tests*"``). Alternatively, you can explicitly list the packages in modules: .. code-block:: toml [tool.setuptools] packages = ["my_package"] If you want to publish a distribution that does not include any Python module (e.g. a "meta-distribution" that just aggregate dependencies), please consider something like the following: .. code-block:: toml [tool.setuptools] packages = [] .. _dynamic-pyproject-config: Dynamic Metadata ================ Note that in the first example of this page we use ``dynamic`` to identify which metadata fields are dynamically computed during the build by either ``setuptools`` itself or the plugins installed via ``build-system.requires`` (e.g. ``setuptools-scm`` is capable of deriving the current project version directly from the ``git`` :wiki:`version control` system). Currently the following fields can be listed as dynamic: ``version``, ``classifiers``, ``description``, ``entry-points``, ``scripts``, ``gui-scripts`` and ``readme``. When these fields are expected to be provided by ``setuptools`` a corresponding entry is required in the ``tool.setuptools.dynamic`` table [#entry-points]_. For example: .. code-block:: toml # ... [project] name = "my_package" dynamic = ["version", "readme"] # ... [tool.setuptools.dynamic] version = {attr = "my_package.VERSION"} readme = {file = ["README.rst", "USAGE.rst"]} In the ``dynamic`` table, the ``attr`` directive [#directives]_ will read an attribute from the given module [#attr]_, while ``file`` will read the contents of all given files and concatenate them in a single string. ========================== =================== ================================================================================================= Key Directive Notes ========================== =================== ================================================================================================= ``version`` ``attr``, ``file`` ``readme`` ``file`` Here you can also set ``"content-type"``: ``readme = {file = ["README.txt", "USAGE.txt"], content-type = "text/plain"}`` If ``content-type`` is not given, ``"text/x-rst"`` is used by default. ``description`` ``file`` One-line text (no line breaks) ``classifiers`` ``file`` Multi-line text with one classifier per line ``entry-points`` ``file`` INI format following :doc:`PyPUG:specifications/entry-points` (``console_scripts`` and ``gui_scripts`` can be included) ``dependencies`` ``file`` *subset* of the ``requirements.txt`` format (``#`` comments and blank lines excluded) **BETA** ``optional-dependencies`` ``file`` *subset* of the ``requirements.txt`` format per group (``#`` comments and blank lines excluded) **BETA** ========================== =================== ================================================================================================= Supporting ``file`` for dependencies is meant for a convenience for packaging applications with possibly strictly versioned dependencies. Library packagers are discouraged from using overly strict (or "locked") dependency versions in their ``dependencies`` and ``optional-dependencies``. Currently, when specifying ``optional-dependencies`` dynamically, all of the groups must be specified dynamically; one can not specify some of them statically and some of them dynamically. Also note that the file format for specifying dependencies resembles a ``requirements.txt`` file, however please keep in mind that all non-comment lines must conform with :pep:`508` (``pip``-specify syntaxes, e.g. ``-c/-r/-e`` flags, are not supported). .. note:: If you are using an old version of ``setuptools``, you might need to ensure that all files referenced by the ``file`` directive are included in the ``sdist`` (you can do that via ``MANIFEST.in`` or using plugins such as ``setuptools-scm``, please have a look on :doc:`/userguide/miscellaneous` for more information). .. versionchanged:: 66.1.0 Newer versions of ``setuptools`` will automatically add these files to the ``sdist``. It is advisable to use literal values together with ``attr`` (e.g. ``str``, ``tuple[str]``, see :func:`ast.literal_eval`). This is recommend in order to support the common case of a literal value assigned to a variable in a module containing (directly or indirectly) third-party imports. ``attr`` first tries to read the value from the module by examining the module's AST. If that fails, ``attr`` falls back to importing the module, using :func:`importlib.util.spec_from_file_location` recommended recipe (see :ref:`example on Python docs <python:importlib-examples>` about "Importing a source file directly"). Note however that importing the module is error prone since your package is not installed yet. You may also need to manually add the project directory to ``sys.path`` (via ``setup.py``) in order to be able to do that. ---- .. rubric:: Notes .. [#setupcfg-caveats] ``pip`` may allow editable install only with ``pyproject.toml`` and ``setup.cfg``. However, this behavior may not be consistent over various ``pip`` versions and other packaging-related tools (``setup.py`` is more reliable on those scenarios). .. [#entry-points] Dynamic ``scripts`` and ``gui-scripts`` are a special case. When resolving these metadata keys, ``setuptools`` will look for ``tool.setuptools.dynamic.entry-points``, and use the values of the ``console_scripts`` and ``gui_scripts`` :doc:`entry-point groups <PyPUG:specifications/entry-points>`. .. [#directives] In the context of this document, *directives* are special TOML values that are interpreted differently by ``setuptools`` (usually triggering an associated function). Most of the times they correspond to a special TOML table (or inline-table) with a single top-level key. For example, you can have the ``{find = {where = ["src"], exclude=["tests*"]}}`` directive for ``tool.setuptools.packages``, or ``{attr = "mymodule.attr"}`` directive for ``tool.setuptools.dynamic.version``. .. [#attr] ``attr`` is meant to be used when the module attribute is statically specified (e.g. as a string, list or tuple). As a rule of thumb, the attribute should be able to be parsed with :func:`ast.literal_eval`, and should not be modified or re-assigned. .. _TOML value types: https://toml.io/en/v1.0.0