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versioneer.py
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# Version: 0.10
"""
The Versioneer
==============
* like a rocketeer, but for versions!
* https://github.com/warner/python-versioneer
* Brian Warner
* License: Public Domain
* Compatible With: python2.6, 2.7, and 3.2, 3.3
[![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/warner/python-versioneer.png?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/warner/python-versioneer)
This is a tool for managing a recorded version number in distutils-based
python projects. The goal is to remove the tedious and error-prone "update
the embedded version string" step from your release process. Making a new
release should be as easy as recording a new tag in your version-control
system, and maybe making new tarballs.
## Quick Install
* `pip install versioneer` to somewhere to your $PATH
* run `versioneer-installer` in your source tree: this installs `versioneer.py`
* follow the instructions below (also in the `versioneer.py` docstring)
## Version Identifiers
Source trees come from a variety of places:
* a version-control system checkout (mostly used by developers)
* a nightly tarball, produced by build automation
* a snapshot tarball, produced by a web-based VCS browser, like github's
"tarball from tag" feature
* a release tarball, produced by "setup.py sdist", distributed through PyPI
Within each source tree, the version identifier (either a string or a number,
this tool is format-agnostic) can come from a variety of places:
* ask the VCS tool itself, e.g. "git describe" (for checkouts), which knows
about recent "tags" and an absolute revision-id
* the name of the directory into which the tarball was unpacked
* an expanded VCS variable ($Id$, etc)
* a `_version.py` created by some earlier build step
For released software, the version identifier is closely related to a VCS
tag. Some projects use tag names that include more than just the version
string (e.g. "myproject-1.2" instead of just "1.2"), in which case the tool
needs to strip the tag prefix to extract the version identifier. For
unreleased software (between tags), the version identifier should provide
enough information to help developers recreate the same tree, while also
giving them an idea of roughly how old the tree is (after version 1.2, before
version 1.3). Many VCS systems can report a description that captures this,
for example 'git describe --tags --dirty --always' reports things like
"0.7-1-g574ab98-dirty" to indicate that the checkout is one revision past the
0.7 tag, has a unique revision id of "574ab98", and is "dirty" (it has
uncommitted changes.
The version identifier is used for multiple purposes:
* to allow the module to self-identify its version: `myproject.__version__`
* to choose a name and prefix for a 'setup.py sdist' tarball
## Theory of Operation
Versioneer works by adding a special `_version.py` file into your source
tree, where your `__init__.py` can import it. This `_version.py` knows how to
dynamically ask the VCS tool for version information at import time. However,
when you use "setup.py build" or "setup.py sdist", `_version.py` in the new
copy is replaced by a small static file that contains just the generated
version data.
`_version.py` also contains `$Revision$` markers, and the installation
process marks `_version.py` to have this marker rewritten with a tag name
during the "git archive" command. As a result, generated tarballs will
contain enough information to get the proper version.
## Installation
First, decide on values for the following configuration variables:
* `versionfile_source`:
A project-relative pathname into which the generated version strings should
be written. This is usually a `_version.py` next to your project's main
`__init__.py` file. If your project uses `src/myproject/__init__.py`, this
should be `src/myproject/_version.py`. This file should be checked in to
your VCS as usual: the copy created below by `setup.py versioneer` will
include code that parses expanded VCS keywords in generated tarballs. The
'build' and 'sdist' commands will replace it with a copy that has just the
calculated version string.
* `versionfile_build`:
Like `versionfile_source`, but relative to the build directory instead of
the source directory. These will differ when your setup.py uses
'package_dir='. If you have `package_dir={'myproject': 'src/myproject'}`,
then you will probably have `versionfile_build='myproject/_version.py'` and
`versionfile_source='src/myproject/_version.py'`.
* `tag_prefix`:
a string, like 'PROJECTNAME-', which appears at the start of all VCS tags.
If your tags look like 'myproject-1.2.0', then you should use
tag_prefix='myproject-'. If you use unprefixed tags like '1.2.0', this
should be an empty string.
* `parentdir_prefix`:
a string, frequently the same as tag_prefix, which appears at the start of
all unpacked tarball filenames. If your tarball unpacks into
'myproject-1.2.0', this should be 'myproject-'.
This tool provides one script, named `versioneer-installer`. That script does
one thing: write a copy of `versioneer.py` into the current directory.
To versioneer-enable your project:
* 1: Run `versioneer-installer` to copy `versioneer.py` into the top of your
source tree.
* 2: add the following lines to the top of your `setup.py`, with the
configuration values you decided earlier:
import versioneer
versioneer.versionfile_source = 'src/myproject/_version.py'
versioneer.versionfile_build = 'myproject/_version.py'
versioneer.tag_prefix = '' # tags are like 1.2.0
versioneer.parentdir_prefix = 'myproject-' # dirname like 'myproject-1.2.0'
* 3: add the following arguments to the setup() call in your setup.py:
version=versioneer.get_version(),
cmdclass=versioneer.get_cmdclass(),
* 4: now run `setup.py versioneer`, which will create `_version.py`, and
will modify your `__init__.py` to define `__version__` (by calling a
function from `_version.py`). It will also modify your `MANIFEST.in` to
include both `versioneer.py` and the generated `_version.py` in sdist
tarballs.
* 5: commit these changes to your VCS. To make sure you won't forget,
`setup.py versioneer` will mark everything it touched for addition.
## Post-Installation Usage
Once established, all uses of your tree from a VCS checkout should get the
current version string. All generated tarballs should include an embedded
version string (so users who unpack them will not need a VCS tool installed).
If you distribute your project through PyPI, then the release process should
boil down to two steps:
* 1: git tag 1.0
* 2: python setup.py register sdist upload
If you distribute it through github (i.e. users use github to generate
tarballs with `git archive`), the process is:
* 1: git tag 1.0
* 2: git push; git push --tags
Currently, all version strings must be based upon a tag. Versioneer will
report "unknown" until your tree has at least one tag in its history. This
restriction will be fixed eventually (see issue #12).
## Version-String Flavors
Code which uses Versioneer can learn about its version string at runtime by
importing `_version` from your main `__init__.py` file and running the
`get_versions()` function. From the "outside" (e.g. in `setup.py`), you can
import the top-level `versioneer.py` and run `get_versions()`.
Both functions return a dictionary with different keys for different flavors
of the version string:
* `['version']`: condensed tag+distance+shortid+dirty identifier. For git,
this uses the output of `git describe --tags --dirty --always` but strips
the tag_prefix. For example "0.11-2-g1076c97-dirty" indicates that the tree
is like the "1076c97" commit but has uncommitted changes ("-dirty"), and
that this commit is two revisions ("-2-") beyond the "0.11" tag. For
released software (exactly equal to a known tag), the identifier will only
contain the stripped tag, e.g. "0.11".
* `['full']`: detailed revision identifier. For Git, this is the full SHA1
commit id, followed by "-dirty" if the tree contains uncommitted changes,
e.g. "1076c978a8d3cfc70f408fe5974aa6c092c949ac-dirty".
Some variants are more useful than others. Including `full` in a bug report
should allow developers to reconstruct the exact code being tested (or
indicate the presence of local changes that should be shared with the
developers). `version` is suitable for display in an "about" box or a CLI
`--version` output: it can be easily compared against release notes and lists
of bugs fixed in various releases.
In the future, this will also include a
[PEP-0440](http://legacy.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0440/) -compatible flavor
(e.g. `1.2.post0.dev123`). This loses a lot of information (and has no room
for a hash-based revision id), but is safe to use in a `setup.py`
"`version=`" argument. It also enables tools like *pip* to compare version
strings and evaluate compatibility constraint declarations.
The `setup.py versioneer` command adds the following text to your
`__init__.py` to place a basic version in `YOURPROJECT.__version__`:
from ._version import get_versions
__version = get_versions()['version']
del get_versions
## Updating Versioneer
To upgrade your project to a new release of Versioneer, do the following:
* install the new Versioneer (`pip install -U versioneer` or equivalent)
* re-run `versioneer-installer` in your source tree to replace `versioneer.py`
* edit `setup.py`, if necessary, to include any new configuration settings indicated by the release notes
* re-run `setup.py versioneer` to replace `SRC/_version.py`
* commit any changed files
## Future Directions
This tool is designed to make it easily extended to other version-control
systems: all VCS-specific components are in separate directories like
src/git/ . The top-level `versioneer.py` script is assembled from these
components by running make-versioneer.py . In the future, make-versioneer.py
will take a VCS name as an argument, and will construct a version of
`versioneer.py` that is specific to the given VCS. It might also take the
configuration arguments that are currently provided manually during
installation by editing setup.py . Alternatively, it might go the other
direction and include code from all supported VCS systems, reducing the
number of intermediate scripts.
## License
To make Versioneer easier to embed, all its code is hereby released into the
public domain. The `_version.py` that it creates is also in the public
domain.
"""
import os, sys, re
from distutils.core import Command
from distutils.command.sdist import sdist as _sdist
from distutils.command.build import build as _build
versionfile_source = None
versionfile_build = None
tag_prefix = None
parentdir_prefix = None
VCS = "git"
LONG_VERSION_PY = '''
# This file helps to compute a version number in source trees obtained from
# git-archive tarball (such as those provided by githubs download-from-tag
# feature). Distribution tarballs (build by setup.py sdist) and build
# directories (produced by setup.py build) will contain a much shorter file
# that just contains the computed version number.
# This file is released into the public domain. Generated by
# versioneer-0.10 (https://github.com/warner/python-versioneer)
# these strings will be replaced by git during git-archive
git_refnames = "%(DOLLAR)sFormat:%%d%(DOLLAR)s"
git_full = "%(DOLLAR)sFormat:%%H%(DOLLAR)s"
import subprocess
import sys
import errno
def run_command(commands, args, cwd=None, verbose=False, hide_stderr=False):
assert isinstance(commands, list)
p = None
for c in commands:
try:
# remember shell=False, so use git.cmd on windows, not just git
p = subprocess.Popen([c] + args, cwd=cwd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=(subprocess.PIPE if hide_stderr
else None))
break
except EnvironmentError:
e = sys.exc_info()[1]
if e.errno == errno.ENOENT:
continue
if verbose:
print("unable to run %%s" %% args[0])
print(e)
return None
else:
if verbose:
print("unable to find command, tried %%s" %% (commands,))
return None
stdout = p.communicate()[0].strip()
if sys.version >= '3':
stdout = stdout.decode()
if p.returncode != 0:
if verbose:
print("unable to run %%s (error)" %% args[0])
return None
return stdout
import sys
import re
import os.path
def get_expanded_variables(versionfile_abs):
# the code embedded in _version.py can just fetch the value of these
# variables. When used from setup.py, we don't want to import
# _version.py, so we do it with a regexp instead. This function is not
# used from _version.py.
variables = {}
try:
f = open(versionfile_abs,"r")
for line in f.readlines():
if line.strip().startswith("git_refnames ="):
mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line)
if mo:
variables["refnames"] = mo.group(1)
if line.strip().startswith("git_full ="):
mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line)
if mo:
variables["full"] = mo.group(1)
f.close()
except EnvironmentError:
pass
return variables
def versions_from_expanded_variables(variables, tag_prefix, verbose=False):
refnames = variables["refnames"].strip()
if refnames.startswith("$Format"):
if verbose:
print("variables are unexpanded, not using")
return {} # unexpanded, so not in an unpacked git-archive tarball
refs = set([r.strip() for r in refnames.strip("()").split(",")])
# starting in git-1.8.3, tags are listed as "tag: foo-1.0" instead of
# just "foo-1.0". If we see a "tag: " prefix, prefer those.
TAG = "tag: "
tags = set([r[len(TAG):] for r in refs if r.startswith(TAG)])
if not tags:
# Either we're using git < 1.8.3, or there really are no tags. We use
# a heuristic: assume all version tags have a digit. The old git %%d
# expansion behaves like git log --decorate=short and strips out the
# refs/heads/ and refs/tags/ prefixes that would let us distinguish
# between branches and tags. By ignoring refnames without digits, we
# filter out many common branch names like "release" and
# "stabilization", as well as "HEAD" and "master".
tags = set([r for r in refs if re.search(r'\d', r)])
if verbose:
print("discarding '%%s', no digits" %% ",".join(refs-tags))
if verbose:
print("likely tags: %%s" %% ",".join(sorted(tags)))
for ref in sorted(tags):
# sorting will prefer e.g. "2.0" over "2.0rc1"
if ref.startswith(tag_prefix):
r = ref[len(tag_prefix):]
if verbose:
print("picking %%s" %% r)
return { "version": r,
"full": variables["full"].strip() }
# no suitable tags, so we use the full revision id
if verbose:
print("no suitable tags, using full revision id")
return { "version": variables["full"].strip(),
"full": variables["full"].strip() }
def versions_from_vcs(tag_prefix, root, verbose=False):
# this runs 'git' from the root of the source tree. This only gets called
# if the git-archive 'subst' variables were *not* expanded, and
# _version.py hasn't already been rewritten with a short version string,
# meaning we're inside a checked out source tree.
if not os.path.exists(os.path.join(root, ".git")):
if verbose:
print("no .git in %%s" %% root)
return {}
GITS = ["git"]
if sys.platform == "win32":
GITS = ["git.cmd", "git.exe"]
stdout = run_command(GITS, ["describe", "--tags", "--dirty", "--always"],
cwd=root)
if stdout is None:
return {}
if not stdout.startswith(tag_prefix):
if verbose:
print("tag '%%s' doesn't start with prefix '%%s'" %% (stdout, tag_prefix))
return {}
tag = stdout[len(tag_prefix):]
stdout = run_command(GITS, ["rev-parse", "HEAD"], cwd=root)
if stdout is None:
return {}
full = stdout.strip()
if tag.endswith("-dirty"):
full += "-dirty"
return {"version": tag, "full": full}
def versions_from_parentdir(parentdir_prefix, root, verbose=False):
# Source tarballs conventionally unpack into a directory that includes
# both the project name and a version string.
dirname = os.path.basename(root)
if not dirname.startswith(parentdir_prefix):
if verbose:
print("guessing rootdir is '%%s', but '%%s' doesn't start with prefix '%%s'" %%
(root, dirname, parentdir_prefix))
return None
return {"version": dirname[len(parentdir_prefix):], "full": ""}
tag_prefix = "%(TAG_PREFIX)s"
parentdir_prefix = "%(PARENTDIR_PREFIX)s"
versionfile_source = "%(VERSIONFILE_SOURCE)s"
def get_versions(default={"version": "unknown", "full": ""}, verbose=False):
# I am in _version.py, which lives at ROOT/VERSIONFILE_SOURCE. If we have
# __file__, we can work backwards from there to the root. Some
# py2exe/bbfreeze/non-CPython implementations don't do __file__, in which
# case we can only use expanded variables.
variables = { "refnames": git_refnames, "full": git_full }
ver = versions_from_expanded_variables(variables, tag_prefix, verbose)
if ver:
return ver
try:
root = os.path.abspath(__file__)
# versionfile_source is the relative path from the top of the source
# tree (where the .git directory might live) to this file. Invert
# this to find the root from __file__.
for i in range(len(versionfile_source.split("/"))):
root = os.path.dirname(root)
except NameError:
return default
return (versions_from_vcs(tag_prefix, root, verbose)
or versions_from_parentdir(parentdir_prefix, root, verbose)
or default)
'''
import subprocess
import sys
import errno
def run_command(commands, args, cwd=None, verbose=False, hide_stderr=False):
assert isinstance(commands, list)
p = None
for c in commands:
try:
# remember shell=False, so use git.cmd on windows, not just git
p = subprocess.Popen([c] + args, cwd=cwd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=(subprocess.PIPE if hide_stderr
else None))
break
except EnvironmentError:
e = sys.exc_info()[1]
if e.errno == errno.ENOENT:
continue
if verbose:
print("unable to run %s" % args[0])
print(e)
return None
else:
if verbose:
print("unable to find command, tried %s" % (commands,))
return None
stdout = p.communicate()[0].strip()
if sys.version >= '3':
stdout = stdout.decode()
if p.returncode != 0:
if verbose:
print("unable to run %s (error)" % args[0])
return None
return stdout
import sys
import re
import os.path
def get_expanded_variables(versionfile_abs):
# the code embedded in _version.py can just fetch the value of these
# variables. When used from setup.py, we don't want to import
# _version.py, so we do it with a regexp instead. This function is not
# used from _version.py.
variables = {}
try:
f = open(versionfile_abs,"r")
for line in f.readlines():
if line.strip().startswith("git_refnames ="):
mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line)
if mo:
variables["refnames"] = mo.group(1)
if line.strip().startswith("git_full ="):
mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line)
if mo:
variables["full"] = mo.group(1)
f.close()
except EnvironmentError:
pass
return variables
def versions_from_expanded_variables(variables, tag_prefix, verbose=False):
refnames = variables["refnames"].strip()
if refnames.startswith("$Format"):
if verbose:
print("variables are unexpanded, not using")
return {} # unexpanded, so not in an unpacked git-archive tarball
refs = set([r.strip() for r in refnames.strip("()").split(",")])
# starting in git-1.8.3, tags are listed as "tag: foo-1.0" instead of
# just "foo-1.0". If we see a "tag: " prefix, prefer those.
TAG = "tag: "
tags = set([r[len(TAG):] for r in refs if r.startswith(TAG)])
if not tags:
# Either we're using git < 1.8.3, or there really are no tags. We use
# a heuristic: assume all version tags have a digit. The old git %d
# expansion behaves like git log --decorate=short and strips out the
# refs/heads/ and refs/tags/ prefixes that would let us distinguish
# between branches and tags. By ignoring refnames without digits, we
# filter out many common branch names like "release" and
# "stabilization", as well as "HEAD" and "master".
tags = set([r for r in refs if re.search(r'\d', r)])
if verbose:
print("discarding '%s', no digits" % ",".join(refs-tags))
if verbose:
print("likely tags: %s" % ",".join(sorted(tags)))
for ref in sorted(tags):
# sorting will prefer e.g. "2.0" over "2.0rc1"
if ref.startswith(tag_prefix):
r = ref[len(tag_prefix):]
if verbose:
print("picking %s" % r)
return { "version": r,
"full": variables["full"].strip() }
# no suitable tags, so we use the full revision id
if verbose:
print("no suitable tags, using full revision id")
return { "version": variables["full"].strip(),
"full": variables["full"].strip() }
def versions_from_vcs(tag_prefix, root, verbose=False):
# this runs 'git' from the root of the source tree. This only gets called
# if the git-archive 'subst' variables were *not* expanded, and
# _version.py hasn't already been rewritten with a short version string,
# meaning we're inside a checked out source tree.
if not os.path.exists(os.path.join(root, ".git")):
if verbose:
print("no .git in %s" % root)
return {}
GITS = ["git"]
if sys.platform == "win32":
GITS = ["git.cmd", "git.exe"]
stdout = run_command(GITS, ["describe", "--tags", "--dirty", "--always"],
cwd=root)
if stdout is None:
return {}
if not stdout.startswith(tag_prefix):
if verbose:
print("tag '%s' doesn't start with prefix '%s'" % (stdout, tag_prefix))
return {}
tag = stdout[len(tag_prefix):]
stdout = run_command(GITS, ["rev-parse", "HEAD"], cwd=root)
if stdout is None:
return {}
full = stdout.strip()
if tag.endswith("-dirty"):
full += "-dirty"
return {"version": tag, "full": full}
def versions_from_parentdir(parentdir_prefix, root, verbose=False):
# Source tarballs conventionally unpack into a directory that includes
# both the project name and a version string.
dirname = os.path.basename(root)
if not dirname.startswith(parentdir_prefix):
if verbose:
print("guessing rootdir is '%s', but '%s' doesn't start with prefix '%s'" %
(root, dirname, parentdir_prefix))
return None
return {"version": dirname[len(parentdir_prefix):], "full": ""}
import os.path
import sys
# os.path.relpath only appeared in Python-2.6 . Define it here for 2.5.
def os_path_relpath(path, start=os.path.curdir):
"""Return a relative version of a path"""
if not path:
raise ValueError("no path specified")
start_list = [x for x in os.path.abspath(start).split(os.path.sep) if x]
path_list = [x for x in os.path.abspath(path).split(os.path.sep) if x]
# Work out how much of the filepath is shared by start and path.
i = len(os.path.commonprefix([start_list, path_list]))
rel_list = [os.path.pardir] * (len(start_list)-i) + path_list[i:]
if not rel_list:
return os.path.curdir
return os.path.join(*rel_list)
def do_vcs_install(manifest_in, versionfile_source, ipy):
GITS = ["git"]
if sys.platform == "win32":
GITS = ["git.cmd", "git.exe"]
files = [manifest_in, versionfile_source, ipy]
try:
me = __file__
if me.endswith(".pyc") or me.endswith(".pyo"):
me = os.path.splitext(me)[0] + ".py"
versioneer_file = os_path_relpath(me)
except NameError:
versioneer_file = "versioneer.py"
files.append(versioneer_file)
present = False
try:
f = open(".gitattributes", "r")
for line in f.readlines():
if line.strip().startswith(versionfile_source):
if "export-subst" in line.strip().split()[1:]:
present = True
f.close()
except EnvironmentError:
pass
if not present:
f = open(".gitattributes", "a+")
f.write("%s export-subst\n" % versionfile_source)
f.close()
files.append(".gitattributes")
run_command(GITS, ["add", "--"] + files)
SHORT_VERSION_PY = """
# This file was generated by 'versioneer.py' (0.10) from
# revision-control system data, or from the parent directory name of an
# unpacked source archive. Distribution tarballs contain a pre-generated copy
# of this file.
version_version = '%(version)s'
version_full = '%(full)s'
def get_versions(default={}, verbose=False):
return {'version': version_version, 'full': version_full}
"""
DEFAULT = {"version": "unknown", "full": "unknown"}
def versions_from_file(filename):
versions = {}
try:
f = open(filename)
except EnvironmentError:
return versions
for line in f.readlines():
mo = re.match("version_version = '([^']+)'", line)
if mo:
versions["version"] = mo.group(1)
mo = re.match("version_full = '([^']+)'", line)
if mo:
versions["full"] = mo.group(1)
f.close()
return versions
def write_to_version_file(filename, versions):
f = open(filename, "w")
f.write(SHORT_VERSION_PY % versions)
f.close()
print("set %s to '%s'" % (filename, versions["version"]))
def get_root():
try:
return os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__))
except NameError:
return os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(sys.argv[0]))
def get_versions(default=DEFAULT, verbose=False):
# returns dict with two keys: 'version' and 'full'
assert versionfile_source is not None, "please set versioneer.versionfile_source"
assert tag_prefix is not None, "please set versioneer.tag_prefix"
assert parentdir_prefix is not None, "please set versioneer.parentdir_prefix"
# I am in versioneer.py, which must live at the top of the source tree,
# which we use to compute the root directory. py2exe/bbfreeze/non-CPython
# don't have __file__, in which case we fall back to sys.argv[0] (which
# ought to be the setup.py script). We prefer __file__ since that's more
# robust in cases where setup.py was invoked in some weird way (e.g. pip)
root = get_root()
versionfile_abs = os.path.join(root, versionfile_source)
# extract version from first of _version.py, 'git describe', parentdir.
# This is meant to work for developers using a source checkout, for users
# of a tarball created by 'setup.py sdist', and for users of a
# tarball/zipball created by 'git archive' or github's download-from-tag
# feature.
variables = get_expanded_variables(versionfile_abs)
if variables:
ver = versions_from_expanded_variables(variables, tag_prefix)
if ver:
if verbose: print("got version from expanded variable %s" % ver)
return ver
ver = versions_from_file(versionfile_abs)
if ver:
if verbose: print("got version from file %s %s" % (versionfile_abs,ver))
return ver
ver = versions_from_vcs(tag_prefix, root, verbose)
if ver:
if verbose: print("got version from git %s" % ver)
return ver
ver = versions_from_parentdir(parentdir_prefix, root, verbose)
if ver:
if verbose: print("got version from parentdir %s" % ver)
return ver
if verbose: print("got version from default %s" % ver)
return default
def get_version(verbose=False):
return get_versions(verbose=verbose)["version"]
class cmd_version(Command):
description = "report generated version string"
user_options = []
boolean_options = []
def initialize_options(self):
pass
def finalize_options(self):
pass
def run(self):
ver = get_version(verbose=True)
print("Version is currently: %s" % ver)
class cmd_build(_build):
def run(self):
versions = get_versions(verbose=True)
_build.run(self)
# now locate _version.py in the new build/ directory and replace it
# with an updated value
target_versionfile = os.path.join(self.build_lib, versionfile_build)
print("UPDATING %s" % target_versionfile)
os.unlink(target_versionfile)
f = open(target_versionfile, "w")
f.write(SHORT_VERSION_PY % versions)
f.close()
if 'cx_Freeze' in sys.modules: # cx_freeze enabled?
from cx_Freeze.dist import build_exe as _build_exe
class cmd_build_exe(_build_exe):
def run(self):
versions = get_versions(verbose=True)
target_versionfile = versionfile_source
print("UPDATING %s" % target_versionfile)
os.unlink(target_versionfile)
f = open(target_versionfile, "w")
f.write(SHORT_VERSION_PY % versions)
f.close()
_build_exe.run(self)
os.unlink(target_versionfile)
f = open(versionfile_source, "w")
f.write(LONG_VERSION_PY % {"DOLLAR": "$",
"TAG_PREFIX": tag_prefix,
"PARENTDIR_PREFIX": parentdir_prefix,
"VERSIONFILE_SOURCE": versionfile_source,
})
f.close()
class cmd_sdist(_sdist):
def run(self):
versions = get_versions(verbose=True)
self._versioneer_generated_versions = versions
# unless we update this, the command will keep using the old version
self.distribution.metadata.version = versions["version"]
return _sdist.run(self)
def make_release_tree(self, base_dir, files):
_sdist.make_release_tree(self, base_dir, files)
# now locate _version.py in the new base_dir directory (remembering
# that it may be a hardlink) and replace it with an updated value
target_versionfile = os.path.join(base_dir, versionfile_source)
print("UPDATING %s" % target_versionfile)
os.unlink(target_versionfile)
f = open(target_versionfile, "w")
f.write(SHORT_VERSION_PY % self._versioneer_generated_versions)
f.close()
INIT_PY_SNIPPET = """
from ._version import get_versions
__version__ = get_versions()['version']
del get_versions
"""
class cmd_update_files(Command):
description = "install/upgrade Versioneer files: __init__.py SRC/_version.py"
user_options = []
boolean_options = []
def initialize_options(self):
pass
def finalize_options(self):
pass
def run(self):
print(" creating %s" % versionfile_source)
f = open(versionfile_source, "w")
f.write(LONG_VERSION_PY % {"DOLLAR": "$",
"TAG_PREFIX": tag_prefix,
"PARENTDIR_PREFIX": parentdir_prefix,
"VERSIONFILE_SOURCE": versionfile_source,
})
f.close()
ipy = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(versionfile_source), "__init__.py")
try:
old = open(ipy, "r").read()
except EnvironmentError:
old = ""
if INIT_PY_SNIPPET not in old:
print(" appending to %s" % ipy)
f = open(ipy, "a")
f.write(INIT_PY_SNIPPET)
f.close()
else:
print(" %s unmodified" % ipy)
# Make sure both the top-level "versioneer.py" and versionfile_source
# (PKG/_version.py, used by runtime code) are in MANIFEST.in, so
# they'll be copied into source distributions. Pip won't be able to
# install the package without this.
manifest_in = os.path.join(get_root(), "MANIFEST.in")
simple_includes = set()
try:
for line in open(manifest_in, "r").readlines():
if line.startswith("include "):
for include in line.split()[1:]:
simple_includes.add(include)
except EnvironmentError:
pass
# That doesn't cover everything MANIFEST.in can do
# (http://docs.python.org/2/distutils/sourcedist.html#commands), so
# it might give some false negatives. Appending redundant 'include'
# lines is safe, though.
if "versioneer.py" not in simple_includes:
print(" appending 'versioneer.py' to MANIFEST.in")
f = open(manifest_in, "a")
f.write("include versioneer.py\n")
f.close()
else:
print(" 'versioneer.py' already in MANIFEST.in")
if versionfile_source not in simple_includes:
print(" appending versionfile_source ('%s') to MANIFEST.in" %
versionfile_source)
f = open(manifest_in, "a")
f.write("include %s\n" % versionfile_source)
f.close()
else:
print(" versionfile_source already in MANIFEST.in")
# Make VCS-specific changes. For git, this means creating/changing
# .gitattributes to mark _version.py for export-time keyword
# substitution.
do_vcs_install(manifest_in, versionfile_source, ipy)
def get_cmdclass():
cmds = {'version': cmd_version,
'versioneer': cmd_update_files,
'build': cmd_build,
'sdist': cmd_sdist,
}
if 'cx_Freeze' in sys.modules: # cx_freeze enabled?
cmds['build_exe'] = cmd_build_exe
del cmds['build']
return cmds