PEP 241 – Metadata for Python Software Packages
- PEP
- 241
- Title
- Metadata for Python Software Packages
- Author
- A.M. Kuchling <amk at amk.ca>
- Status
- Final
- Type
- Standards Track
- Created
- 12-Mar-2001
- Post-History
- 19-Mar-2001
Contents
Introduction
This PEP describes a mechanism for adding metadata to Python packages. It includes specifics of the field names, and their semantics and usage.
Including Metadata in Packages
The Distutils ‘sdist’ command will be modified to extract the metadata fields from the arguments and write them to a file in the generated zipfile or tarball. This file will be named PKG-INFO and will be placed in the top directory of the source distribution (where the README, INSTALL, and other files usually go).
Developers may not provide their own PKG-INFO file. The “sdist” command will, if it detects an existing PKG-INFO file, terminate with an appropriate error message. This should prevent confusion caused by the PKG-INFO and setup.py files being out of sync.
The PKG-INFO file format is a single set of RFC-822 headers parseable by the rfc822.py module. The field names listed in the following section are used as the header names. There’s no extension mechanism in this simple format; the Catalog and Distutils SIGs will aim at getting a more flexible format ready for Python 2.2.
Fields
This section specifies the names and semantics of each of the supported metadata fields.
Fields marked with “(Multiple use)” may be specified multiple times in a single PKG-INFO file. Other fields may only occur once in a PKG-INFO file. Fields marked with “(optional)” are not required to appear in a valid PKG-INFO file, all other fields must be present.
Metadata-Version
Version of the file format; currently “1.0” is the only legal value here.
Example:
Metadata-Version: 1.0
Name
The name of the package.
Example:
Name: BeagleVote
Version
A string containing the package’s version number. This field should be parseable by one of the Version classes (StrictVersion or LooseVersion) in the distutils.version module.
Example:
Version: 1.0a2
Platform (multiple use)
A comma-separated list of platform specifications, summarizing the operating systems supported by the package. The major supported platforms are listed below, but this list is necessarily incomplete.
POSIX, MacOS, Windows, BeOS, Palm OS.
Binary distributions will use the Supported-Platform field in their metadata to specify the OS and CPU for which the binary package was compiled. The semantics of the Supported-Platform are not specified in this PEP.
Example:
Platform: POSIX, Windows
Summary
A one-line summary of what the package does.
Example:
Summary: A module for collecting votes from beagles.
Description (optional)
A longer description of the package that can run to several paragraphs. (Software that deals with metadata should not assume any maximum size for this field, though one hopes that people won’t include their instruction manual as the long-description.)
Example:
Description: This module collects votes from beagles
in order to determine their electoral wishes.
Do NOT try to use this module with basset hounds;
it makes them grumpy.
Keywords (optional)
A list of additional keywords to be used to assist searching for the package in a larger catalog.
Example:
Keywords: dog puppy voting election
Home-page (optional)
A string containing the URL for the package’s home page.
Example:
Home-page: http://www.example.com/~cschultz/bvote/
License
A string selected from a short list of choices, specifying the license covering the package. Some licenses result in the software being freely redistributable, so packagers and resellers can automatically know that they’re free to redistribute the software. Other licenses will require a careful reading by a human to determine how the software can be repackaged and resold.
The choices are:
Artistic, BSD, DFSG, GNU GPL, GNU LGPL, "MIT",
Mozilla PL, "public domain", Python, Qt PL, Zope PL, unknown,
nocommercial, nosell, nosource, shareware, other
Definitions of some of the licenses are:
DFSG | The license conforms to the Debian Free Software Guidelines, but does not use one of the other DFSG conforming licenses listed here. More information is available at: http://www.debian.org/social_contract#guidelines |
Python | Python 1.6 or higher license. Version 1.5.2 and earlier are under the MIT license. |
public domain | Software is public domain, not copyrighted. |
unknown | Status is not known |
nocommercial | Free private use but commercial use not permitted |
nosell | Free use but distribution for profit by arrangement |
nosource | Freely distributable but no source code |
shareware | Payment is requested if software is used |
other | General category for other non-DFSG licenses |
Some of these licenses can be interpreted to mean the software is freely redistributable. The list of redistributable licenses is:
Artistic, BSD, DFSG, GNU GPL, GNU LGPL, "MIT",
Mozilla PL, "public domain", Python, Qt PL, Zope PL,
nosource, shareware
Note that being redistributable does not mean a package qualifies as free software, ‘nosource’ and ‘shareware’ being examples.
Example:
License: MIT
Acknowledgements
Many changes and rewrites to this document were suggested by the readers of the Distutils SIG. In particular, Sean Reifschneider often contributed actual text for inclusion in this PEP.
The list of licenses was compiled using the SourceForge license list and the CTAN license list compiled by Graham Williams; Carey Evans also offered several useful suggestions on this list.
Copyright
This document has been placed in the public domain.
Source: https://github.com/python/peps/blob/master/pep-0241.txt
Last modified: 2021-02-03 14:06:23 GMT