PEP 345 – Metadata for Python Software Packages 1.2
- PEP
- 345
- Title
- Metadata for Python Software Packages 1.2
- Author
- Richard Jones <richard at python.org>
- Discussions-To
- Distutils SIG
- Status
- Final
- Type
- Standards Track
- Created
- 28-Apr-2005
- Python-Version
- 2.5
- Post-History
Contents
- Abstract
- Fields
- Metadata-Version
- Name
- Version
- Platform (multiple use)
- Supported-Platform (multiple use)
- Summary
- Description (optional)
- Keywords (optional)
- Home-page (optional)
- Download-URL
- Author (optional)
- Author-email (optional)
- Maintainer (optional)
- Maintainer-email (optional)
- License (optional)
- Classifier (multiple use)
- Requires-Dist (multiple use)
- Provides-Dist (multiple use)
- Obsoletes-Dist (multiple use)
- Requires-Python
- Requires-External (multiple use)
- Project-URL (multiple-use)
- Version Specifiers
- Environment markers
- Summary of Differences From PEP 314
- References
- Copyright
- Acknowledgements
Abstract
This PEP describes a mechanism for adding metadata to Python distributions. It includes specifics of the field names, and their semantics and usage.
This document specifies version 1.2 of the metadata format. Version 1.0 is specified in PEP 241. Version 1.1 is specified in PEP 314.
Version 1.2 of the metadata format adds a number of optional fields designed to make third-party packaging of Python Software easier. These fields are “Requires-Python”, “Requires-External”, “Requires-Dist”, “Provides-Dist”, and “Obsoletes-Dist”. This version also changes the “Platform” field. Three new fields were also added: “Maintainer”, “Maintainer-email” and “Project-URL”.
Last, this new version also adds environment markers.
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; “1.2” is the only legal value.
Example:
Metadata-Version: 1.2
Name
The name of the distributions.
Example:
Name: BeagleVote
Version
A string containing the distribution’s version number. This field must be in the format specified in PEP 440.
Example:
Version: 1.0a2
Platform (multiple use)
A Platform specification describing an operating system supported by the distribution which is not listed in the “Operating System” Trove classifiers. See “Classifier” below.
Examples:
Platform: ObscureUnix
Platform: RareDOS
Supported-Platform (multiple use)
Binary distributions containing a PKG-INFO file will use the Supported-Platform field in their metadata to specify the OS and CPU for which the binary distribution was compiled. The semantics of the Supported-Platform field are not specified in this PEP.
Example:
Supported-Platform: RedHat 7.2
Supported-Platform: i386-win32-2791
Summary
A one-line summary of what the distribution does.
Example:
Summary: A module for collecting votes from beagles.
Description (optional)
A longer description of the distribution that can run to several paragraphs. Software that deals with metadata should not assume any maximum size for this field, though people shouldn’t include their instruction manual as the description.
The contents of this field can be written using reStructuredText markup 1. For programs that work with the metadata, supporting markup is optional; programs can also display the contents of the field as-is. This means that authors should be conservative in the markup they use.
To support empty lines and lines with indentation with respect to the RFC 822 format, any CRLF character has to be suffixed by 7 spaces followed by a pipe (“|”) char. As a result, the Description field is encoded into a folded field that can be interpreted by RFC822 parser 2.
Example:
Description: This project provides powerful math functions
|For example, you can use `sum()` to sum numbers:
|
|Example::
|
| >>> sum(1, 2)
| 3
|
This encoding implies that any occurrences of a CRLF followed by 7 spaces and a pipe char have to be replaced by a single CRLF when the field is unfolded using a RFC822 reader.
Keywords (optional)
A list of additional keywords to be used to assist searching for the distribution in a larger catalog.
Example:
Keywords: dog puppy voting election
Home-page (optional)
A string containing the URL for the distribution’s home page.
Example:
Home-page: http://www.example.com/~cschultz/bvote/
Download-URL
A string containing the URL from which this version of the distribution can be downloaded. (This means that the URL can’t be something like “…/BeagleVote-latest.tgz”, but instead must be “…/BeagleVote-0.45.tgz”.)
Maintainer (optional)
A string containing the maintainer’s name at a minimum; additional contact information may be provided.
Note that this field is intended for use when a project is being
maintained by someone other than the original author: it should be
omitted if it is identical to Author
.
Example:
Maintainer: C. Schultz, Universal Features Syndicate,
Los Angeles, CA <cschultz@peanuts.example.com>
Maintainer-email (optional)
A string containing the maintainer’s e-mail address. It can contain
a name and e-mail address in the legal forms for a RFC-822
From:
header.
Note that this field is intended for use when a project is being
maintained by someone other than the original author: it should be
omitted if it is identical to Author-email
.
Example:
Maintainer-email: "C. Schultz" <cschultz@example.com>
License (optional)
Text indicating the license covering the distribution where the license
is not a selection from the “License” Trove classifiers. See
“Classifier” below. This field may also be used to specify a
particular version of a license which is named via the Classifier
field, or to indicate a variation or exception to such a license.
Examples:
License: This software may only be obtained by sending the
author a postcard, and then the user promises not
to redistribute it.
License: GPL version 3, excluding DRM provisions
Classifier (multiple use)
Each entry is a string giving a single classification value for the distribution. Classifiers are described in PEP 301 3.
Examples:
Classifier: Development Status :: 4 - Beta
Classifier: Environment :: Console (Text Based)
Requires-Dist (multiple use)
Each entry contains a string naming some other distutils project required by this distribution.
The format of a requirement string is identical to that of a
distutils project name (e.g., as found in the Name:
field.
optionally followed by a version declaration within parentheses.
The distutils project names should correspond to names as found on the Python Package Index 4.
Version declarations must follow the rules described in Version Specifiers
Examples:
Requires-Dist: pkginfo
Requires-Dist: PasteDeploy
Requires-Dist: zope.interface (>3.5.0)
Provides-Dist (multiple use)
Each entry contains a string naming a Distutils project which
is contained within this distribution. This field must include
the project identified in the Name
field, followed by the
version : Name (Version).
A distribution may provide additional names, e.g. to indicate that
multiple projects have been bundled together. For instance, source
distributions of the ZODB
project have historically included
the transaction
project, which is now available as a separate
distribution. Installing such a source distribution satisfies
requirements for both ZODB
and transaction
.
A distribution may also provide a “virtual” project name, which does
not correspond to any separately-distributed project: such a name
might be used to indicate an abstract capability which could be supplied
by one of multiple projects. E.g., multiple projects might supply
RDBMS bindings for use by a given ORM: each project might declare
that it provides ORM-bindings
, allowing other projects to depend
only on having at most one of them installed.
A version declaration may be supplied and must follow the rules described in Version Specifiers. The distribution’s version number will be implied if none is specified.
Examples:
Provides-Dist: OtherProject
Provides-Dist: AnotherProject (3.4)
Provides-Dist: virtual_package
Obsoletes-Dist (multiple use)
Each entry contains a string describing a distutils project’s distribution which this distribution renders obsolete, meaning that the two projects should not be installed at the same time.
Version declarations can be supplied. Version numbers must be in the format specified in Version Specifiers.
The most common use of this field will be in case a project name changes, e.g. Gorgon 2.3 gets subsumed into Torqued Python 1.0. When you install Torqued Python, the Gorgon distribution should be removed.
Examples:
Obsoletes-Dist: Gorgon
Obsoletes-Dist: OtherProject (<3.0)
Requires-Python
This field specifies the Python version(s) that the distribution is guaranteed to be compatible with.
Version numbers must be in the format specified in Version Specifiers.
Examples:
Requires-Python: 2.5
Requires-Python: >2.1
Requires-Python: >=2.3.4
Requires-Python: >=2.5,<2.7
Requires-External (multiple use)
Each entry contains a string describing some dependency in the
system that the distribution is to be used. This field is intended to
serve as a hint to downstream project maintainers, and has no
semantics which are meaningful to the distutils
distribution.
The format of a requirement string is a name of an external dependency, optionally followed by a version declaration within parentheses.
Because they refer to non-Python software releases, version numbers for this field are not required to conform to the format specified in PEP 440: they should correspond to the version scheme used by the external dependency.
Notice that there’s is no particular rule on the strings to be used.
Examples:
Requires-External: C
Requires-External: libpng (>=1.5)
Project-URL (multiple-use)
A string containing an extra URL for the project and a label for it, separated by a comma. This should be used when there are other URLs to list in the metadata in addition to the “Home-page” field.
Examples:
Project-URL: Bug Tracker, https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues
Project-URL: Documentation, https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/
Project-URL: Funding, https://donate.pypi.org
The label is free text, with a maximum length of 32 characters. Notice that distributions uploaded to PyPI will have these extra entries displayed under the “Project links” section of their landing page.
Version Specifiers
Version specifiers are a series of conditional operators and version numbers, separated by commas. Conditional operators must be one of “<”, “>”, “<=”, “>=”, “==” and “!=”.
Any number of conditional operators can be specified, e.g. the string “>1.0, !=1.3.4, <2.0” is a legal version declaration. The comma (“,”) is equivalent to the and operator.
Each version number must be in the format specified in PEP 440.
When a version is provided, it always includes all versions that starts with the same value. For example, the “2.5” version of Python will include versions like “2.5.2” or “2.5.3”. Pre and post releases in that case are excluded. So in our example, versions like “2.5a1” are not included when “2.5” is used. If the first version of the range is required, it has to be explicitly given. In our example, it will be “2.5.0”.
Notice that some projects might omit the “.0” suffix for the first release of the “2.5.x” series:
- 2.5
- 2.5.1
- 2.5.2
- etc.
In that case, “2.5.0” will have to be explicitly used to avoid any confusion between the “2.5” notation that represents the full range. It is a recommended practice to use schemes of the same length for a series to completely avoid this problem.
Some Examples:
Requires-Dist: zope.interface (3.1)
: any version that starts with 3.1, excluding post or pre-releases.Requires-Dist: zope.interface (3.1.0)
: any version that starts with 3.1.0, excluding post or pre-releases. Since that particular project doesn’t use more than 3 digits, it also means “only the 3.1.0 release”.Requires-Python: 3
: Any Python 3 version, no matter which one, excluding post or pre-releases.Requires-Python: >=2.6,<3
: Any version of Python 2.6 or 2.7, including post releases of 2.6, pre and post releases of 2.7. It excludes pre releases of Python 3.Requires-Python: 2.6.2
: Equivalent to “>=2.6.2,<2.6.3”. So this includes only Python 2.6.2. Of course, if Python was numbered with 4 digits, it would have include all versions of the 2.6.2 series.Requires-Python: 2.5.0
: Equivalent to “>=2.5.0,<2.5.1”.Requires-Dist: zope.interface (3.1,!=3.1.3)
: any version that starts with 3.1, excluding post or pre-releases of 3.1 and excluding any version that starts with “3.1.3”. For this particular project, this means: “any version of the 3.1 series but not 3.1.3”. This is equivalent to: “>=3.1,!=3.1.3,<3.2”.
Environment markers
An environment marker is a marker that can be added at the end of a field after a semi-colon (“;”), to add a condition about the execution environment.
Here are some example of fields using such markers:
Requires-Dist: pywin32 (>1.0); sys.platform == 'win32'
Obsoletes-Dist: pywin31; sys.platform == 'win32'
Requires-Dist: foo (1,!=1.3); platform.machine == 'i386'
Requires-Dist: bar; python_version == '2.4' or python_version == '2.5'
Requires-External: libxslt; 'linux' in sys.platform
The micro-language behind this is the simplest possible: it compares only
strings, with the ==
and in
operators (and their opposites), and
with the ability to combine expressions. It makes it also easy to understand
to non-pythoneers.
The pseudo-grammar is
EXPR [in|==|!=|not in] EXPR [or|and] ...
where EXPR
belongs to any of those:
- python_version = ‘%s.%s’ % (sys.version_info[0], sys.version_info[1])
- python_full_version = sys.version.split()[0]
- os.name = os.name
- sys.platform = sys.platform
- platform.version = platform.version()
- platform.machine = platform.machine()
- platform.python_implementation = platform.python_implementation()
- a free string, like
'2.4'
, or'win32'
Notice that in
is restricted to strings, meaning that it is not possible
to use other sequences like tuples or lists on the right side.
The fields that benefit from this marker are:
- Requires-External
- Requires-Dist
- Provides-Dist
- Obsoletes-Dist
- Classifier
Summary of Differences From PEP 314
- Metadata-Version is now 1.2.
- Added the environment markers.
- Changed fields:
- Platform (syntax change)
- Author-email (change to optional field)
- Added fields:
- Maintainer
- Maintainer-email
- Requires-Python
- Requires-External
- Requires-Dist
- Provides-Dist
- Obsoletes-Dist
- Project-URL
- Deprecated fields:
- Requires (in favor of Requires-Dist)
- Provides (in favor of Provides-Dist)
- Obsoletes (in favor of Obsoletes-Dist)
References
This document specifies version 1.2 of the metadata format. Version 1.0 is specified in PEP 241. Version 1.1 is specified in PEP 314.
- 1
- reStructuredText markup: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/
- 2
- RFC 822 Long Header Fields: http://www.freesoft.org/CIE/RFC/822/7.htm
- 3
- PEP 301, Package Index and Metadata for Distutils: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0301/
- 4
- http://pypi.python.org/pypi/
Copyright
This document has been placed in the public domain.
Acknowledgements
Fred Drake, Anthony Baxter and Matthias Klose have all contributed to the ideas presented in this PEP.
Tres Seaver, Jim Fulton, Marc-André Lemburg, Martin von Löwis, Tarek Ziadé, David Lyon and other people at the Distutils-SIG have contributed to the new updated version.
Source: https://github.com/python/peps/blob/master/pep-0345.txt
Last modified: 2020-09-21 21:09:10 GMT