问题
I use pbr for packaging. It takes the version from git tags and applies that to setup.py
Now I also want to have the version available inside the package. For instance to have a __version__
attribute. Can I use the pbr
library for this?
There is another library: versioneer that also extracts the version from the git tags, but that would add an extra requirement. I would prefer to get this functionality from pbr
回答1:
After properly setting up for setuptools
and pbr
, here are several ways to do it:
import pkg_resources # part of setuptools
# I don't like this one because the version method is hidden
v1 = pkg_resources.require("my_package_name")[0].version
print('v1 {}'.format(v1))
# This is my favorite - the output without .version is just a longer string with
# both the package name, a space, and the version string
v2 = pkg_resources.get_distribution('my_package_name').version
print('v2 {}'.format(v2))
from pbr.version import VersionInfo
# This one seems to be slower, and with pyinstaller makes the exe a lot bigger
v3 = VersionInfo('my_package_name').release_string()
print('v3 {}'.format(v3))
# Update, new option as of Python 3.8 (credit: sinoroc)
# In Python 3.8, importlib.metadata is part of the stdlib,
# which removes run-time dependencies on `pbr` or `setuptools`
import importlib.metadata
__version__ = importlib.metadata.version('my_package_name')
If you want it from the command line, you can do:
py setup.py --version
Or even run the setup.py script from within a script, if the package will always be installed locally:
from subprocess import Popen, PIPE
(output, err) = Popen('py setup.py --version'.split(' '),
stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE, text=True).communicate()
if err: print('ERROR: "{}"'.format(err))
else: print('setup.py --version = {}'.format(output))
Note: See this answer for more details on using subprocess to launch and read stdout, etc., especially on older versions of Python (prior to 3.7).
You can then add __version__
to your package __init__.py
like this:
__all__ = (
'__version__',
'my_package_name'
)
# Or substitute a different method and assign the result to __version__
import pkg_resources # part of setuptools
__version__ = pkg_resources.get_distribution("my_package_name").version
Some other Q&A that might help with setup and details on how to update the version and other info, especially if getting info from your Git repo (version from tags, Authors, and ChangeLog info):
- How to update git metadata in a Python Packages using Setuptools and PBR
- Python Setuptools and PBR - how to create a package release using the git tag as the version?
回答2:
If you are fine with pbr
being a runtime dependency of your package, then you can use the VersionInfo class from pbr.version
:
from pbr.version import VersionInfo
package_name='my_package'
info = VersionInfo(package_name)
print(info.version_string())
(See also How to load package version into __version__ variable if you are using pbr?)
回答3:
Consider setuptools_scm, which pulls a version from a git or hg tag when available, or generates an appropriate dev release version (e.g., hgvs-1.2.5.dev6+hb5d989061852.d20181124
). The version is written into package metadata as with a hardcoded version. No non-standard runtime support is needed.
Although I've used setuptools_scm for many projects, I've not used PBR. I was curious and worked up this simple demo:
snafu$ head setup.py setup.cfg pbrversiontest/*.py
==> setup.py <==
from setuptools import setup
setup(
setup_requires=[
"pbr",
"setuptools_scm"
],
pbr=True,
use_scm_version=True,
)
==> setup.cfg <==
[metadata]
name = pbrversiontest
summary = test whether we can use pbr and setuptools_scm
[files]
packages =
pbrversiontest
==> pbrversiontest/__init__.py <==
# This is straight from setuptools_scm README
from pkg_resources import get_distribution, DistributionNotFound
try:
__version__ = get_distribution(__name__).version
except DistributionNotFound:
# package is not installed
pass
==> pbrversiontest/__main__.py <==
# this isn't required -- only for the demo
import pbrversiontest
print("version is " + pbrversiontest.__version__)
In the development directory, you might have a session like so:
snafu$ python3.6 -mvenv venv/3.6
snafu$ source venv/3.6/bin/activate
(3.6) snafu$ git tag 0.1.2
(3.6) snafu$ pip install -e .
(3.6) snafu$ python -m pbrversiontest
version is 0.1.2
(3.6) snafu$ pip install wheel
(3.6) snafu$ python setup.py bdist_wheel
...
creating 'dist/pbrversiontest-0.1.2-py3-none-any.whl' and adding 'build/bdist.linux-x86_64/wheel' to it
...
(3.6) snafu$ unzip -l dist/pbrversiontest-0.1.2-py3-none-any.whl
Archive: dist/pbrversiontest-0.1.2-py3-none-any.whl
Length Date Time Name
--------- ---------- ----- ----
192 2018-11-25 05:26 pbrversiontest/__init__.py
73 2018-11-25 05:46 pbrversiontest/__main__.py
33 2018-11-25 06:06 pbrversiontest-0.1.2.dist-info/AUTHORS
217 2018-11-25 06:06 pbrversiontest-0.1.2.dist-info/METADATA
92 2018-11-25 06:06 pbrversiontest-0.1.2.dist-info/WHEEL
47 2018-11-25 06:06 pbrversiontest-0.1.2.dist-info/pbr.json
15 2018-11-25 06:06 pbrversiontest-0.1.2.dist-info/top_level.txt
675 2018-11-25 06:06 pbrversiontest-0.1.2.dist-info/RECORD
--------- -------
1344 8 files
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48383737/get-version-from-git-tags-through-pbr