Per the referenced bug, relying on the terminal encoding to read setup.cfg is not safe. Unfortunately, Python 2 doesn't accept an encoding when reading config files so we need a fallback path for that version. Change-Id: If49344db2f9139c0557f6acd17671163e02468a5 Closes-Bug: 1745396
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Usage
pbr is a setuptools plugin and so to use it you
must use setuptools and call setuptools.setup()
.
While the normal setuptools facilities are available,
pbr makes it possible to express them through static data
files.
setup.py
pbr only requires a minimal setup.py
file
compared to a standard setuptools project. This is because most
configuration is located in static configuration files. This recommended
minimal setup.py
file should look something like this:
#!/usr/bin/env python
from setuptools import setup
setup(
setup_requires=['pbr'],
pbr=True,
)
Note
It is necessary to specify pbr=True
to enabled
pbr functionality.
Note
While one can pass any arguments supported by setuptools to
setup()
, any conflicting arguments supplied in
setup.cfg
will take precedence.
setup.cfg
The setup.cfg
file is an INI-like file that can mostly
replace the setup.py
file. It is similar to the
setup.cfg
file found in recent versions of setuptools. A
simple sample can be found in pbr's own setup.cfg
(it uses its own machinery to install itself):
[metadata]
name = pbr
author = OpenStack Foundation
author-email = openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org
summary = OpenStack's setup automation in a reusable form
description-file = README.rst
description-content-type = text/x-rst; charset=UTF-8
home-page = https://launchpad.net/pbr
project_urls =
Bug Tracker = https://bugs.launchpad.net/pbr/
Documentation = https://docs.openstack.org/pbr/
Source Code = https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack-dev/pbr/
license = Apache-2
classifier =
Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Environment :: Console
Environment :: OpenStack
Intended Audience :: Developers
Intended Audience :: Information Technology
License :: OSI Approved :: Apache Software License
Operating System :: OS Independent
Programming Language :: Python
keywords =
setup
distutils
[files]
packages =
pbr
data_files =
etc/pbr = etc/*
etc/init =
pbr.packaging.conf
pbr.version.conf
[entry_points]
console_scripts =
pbr = pbr.cmd:main
pbr.config.drivers =
plain = pbr.cfg.driver:Plain
Recent versions of setuptools provide many of the same sections as pbr. However, pbr does provide a number of additional sections:
files
entry_points
backwards_compat
pbr
In addition, there are some modifications to other sections:
metadata
build_sphinx
For all other sections, you should refer to either the setuptools
documentation or the documentation of the package that provides the
section, such as the extract_mesages
section provided by Babel.
Note
Comments may be used in setup.cfg
, however all comments
should start with a #
and may be on a single line, or in
line, with at least one white space character immediately preceding the
#
. Semicolons are not a supported comment delimiter. For
instance:
[section]
# A comment at the start of a dedicated line
key =
value1 # An in line comment
value2
# A comment on a dedicated line
value3
Note
On Python 3 setup.cfg
is explicitly read as UTF-8. On
Python 2 the encoding is dependent on the terminal encoding.
files
The files
section defines the install location of files
in the package using three fundamental keys: packages
,
namespace_packages
, and data_files
.
packages
-
A list of top-level packages that should be installed. The behavior of packages is similar to
setuptools.find_packages
in that it recurses the Python package hierarchy below the given top level and installs all of it. Ifpackages
is not specified, it defaults to the value of thename
field given in the[metadata]
section. namespace_packages
-
Similar to
packages
, but is a list of packages that provide namespace packages. data_files
-
A list of files to be installed. The format is an indented block that contains key value pairs which specify target directory and source file to install there. More than one source file for a directory may be indicated with a further indented list. Source files are stripped of leading directories. Additionally, pbr supports a simple file globbing syntax for installing entire directory structures. For example:
[files] data_files = etc/pbr = etc/pbr/* etc/neutron = etc/api-paste.ini etc/dhcp-agent.ini etc/init.d = neutron.init
This will result in
/etc/neutron
containingapi-paste.ini
anddhcp-agent.ini
, both of which pbr will expect to find in theetc
directory in the root of the source tree. Additionally,neutron.init
from that directory will be installed in/etc/init.d
. All of the files and directories located underetc/pbr
in the source tree will be installed into/etc/pbr
.Note that this behavior is relative to the effective root of the environment into which the packages are installed, so depending on available permissions this could be the actual system-wide
/etc
directory or just a top-leveletc
subdirectory of a virtualenv.
entry_points
The entry_points
section defines entry points for
generated console scripts and Python libraries. This is actually
provided by setuptools but is documented here owing to its
importance.
The general syntax of specifying entry points is a top level name indicating the entry point group name, followed by one or more key value pairs naming the entry point to be installed. For instance:
[entry_points]
console_scripts =
pbr = pbr.cmd:main
pbr.config.drivers =
plain = pbr.cfg.driver:Plain
fancy = pbr.cfg.driver:Fancy
Will cause a console script called pbr to be installed that
executes the main
function found in pbr.cmd
.
Additionally, two entry points will be installed for
pbr.config.drivers
, one called plain
which
maps to the Plain
class in pbr.cfg.driver
and
one called fancy
which maps to the Fancy
class
in pbr.cfg.driver
.
backwards_compat
Describe this section
pbr
The pbr
section controls pbr-specific options
and behaviours.
autodoc_tree_index_modules
A boolean option controlling whether pbr should generate an index of modules using
sphinx-apidoc
. By default, all files exceptsetup.py
are included, but this can be overridden using theautodoc_tree_excludes
option.
autodoc_tree_excludes
A list of modules to exclude when building documentation using
sphinx-apidoc
. Defaults to[setup.py]
. Refer to the sphinx-apidoc man page for more information.
autodoc_index_modules
A boolean option controlling whether pbr should itself generates documentation for Python modules of the project. By default, all found Python modules are included; some of them can be excluded by listing them in
autodoc_exclude_modules
.
autodoc_exclude_modules
A list of modules to exclude when building module documentation using pbr. fnmatch style pattern (e.g.
myapp.tests.*
) can be used.
api_doc_dir
A subdirectory inside the
build_sphinx.source_dir
where auto-generated API documentation should be written, ifautodoc_index_modules
is set to True. Defaults to"api"
.
Note
When using autodoc_tree_excludes
or
autodoc_index_modules
you may also need to set
exclude_patterns
in your Sphinx configuration file
(generally found at doc/source/conf.py
in most OpenStack
projects) otherwise Sphinx may complain about documents that are not in
a toctree. This is especially true if the
[sphinx_build] warning-is-error
option is set. See the Sphinx
build configuration file documentation for more information on
configuring Sphinx.
2.0
The pbr
section used to take a warnerrors
option that would enable the -W
(Turn warnings into
errors.) option when building Sphinx. This feature was broken in 1.10
and was removed in pbr 2.0 in favour of the
[build_sphinx] warning-is-error
provided in Sphinx
1.5+.
metadata
Describe this section
build_sphinx
3.0
The build_sphinx
plugin used to default to building both
HTML and man page output. This is no longer the case, and you should
explicitly set builders
to html man
if you
wish to retain this behavior.
The build_sphinx
section is a version of the
build_sphinx
setuptools plugin provided with
Sphinx. This plugin extends the original plugin to add the
following:
Automatic generation of module documentation using the
sphinx-apidoc
toolAutomatic configuration of the
project
,version
andrelease
settings using information from pbr itselfSupport for multiple builders using the
builders
configuration optionNote
Only applies to Sphinx < 1.6. See documentation on
builders
below.
The version of build_sphinx
provided by pbr
provides a single additional option.
builders
-
A comma separated list of builders to run. For example, to build both HTML and man page documentation, you would define the following in your
setup.cfg
:[build_sphinx] builders = html,man source-dir = doc/source build-dir = doc/build all-files = 1 warning-is-error = 1
3.2.0
Sphinx 1.6+ adds support for specifying multiple builders in the default
builder
option. You should use this option instead. Refer to the Sphinx documentation for more information.
For information on the remaining options, refer to the Sphinx
documentation. In addition, the autodoc_index_modules
,
autodoc_tree_index_modules
,
autodoc_exclude_modules
and
autodoc_tree_excludes
options in the
pbr section <pbr-setup-cfg>
will affect the output of the
automatic module documentation generation.
Requirements
Requirements files are used in place of the
install_requires
and extras_require
attributes. Requirement files should be given one of the below names.
This order is also the order that the requirements are tried in (where
N
is the Python major version number used to install the
package):
requirements-pyN.txt
tools/pip-requires-py3
requirements.txt
tools/pip-requires
Only the first file found is used to install the list of packages it contains.
Note
The requirements-pyN.txt
file is deprecated -
requirements.txt
should be universal. You can use Environment markers for this
purpose.
Extra requirements
Groups of optional dependencies, or "extra"
requirements, can be described in your setup.cfg
,
rather than needing to be added to setup.py
. An example
(which also demonstrates the use of environment markers) is shown
below.
Environment markers
Environment markers are conditional
dependencies which can be added to the requirements (or to a group
of extra requirements) automatically, depending on the environment the
installer is running in. They can be added to requirements in the
requirements file, or to extras defined in setup.cfg
, but
the format is slightly different for each.
For requirements.txt
:
argparse; python_version=='2.6'
This will result in the package depending on argparse
only if it's being installed into Python 2.6.
For extras specified in setup.cfg
, add an
extras
section. For instance, to create two groups of extra
requirements with additional constraints on the environment, you can
use:
[extras]
security =
aleph
bet:python_version=='3.2'
gimel:python_version=='2.7'
testing =
quux:python_version=='2.7'
Testing
4.0
As described in /user/features
, pbr may override the
test
command depending on the test runner used.
A typical usage would be in tox.ini
such as:
[tox]
minversion = 2.0
skipsdist = True
envlist = py33,py34,py35,py26,py27,pypy,pep8,docs
[testenv]
usedevelop = True
setenv =
VIRTUAL_ENV={envdir}
CLIENT_NAME=pbr
deps = .
-r{toxinidir}/test-requirements.txt
commands =
python setup.py test --testr-args='{posargs}'
The argument --coverage
will set PYTHON
to
coverage run
to produce a coverage report.
--coverage-package-name
can be used to modify or narrow the
packages traced.