jarn.mkrelease

Python package releaser


Keywords
create, release, upload, python, sdist, sdists, wheel, wheels, pypi, releaser, package, packages, publish
License
BSD-2-Clause
Install
pip install jarn.mkrelease==5.3

Documentation

jarn.mkrelease

Python package releaser

mkrelease is a no-frills Python package releaser. It is designed to take the cumber out of building and distributing Python packages. The releaser supports source distributions, eggs, and wheels.

Motivation

After preparing a package for release (update version strings, dates) we typically have to:

  1. Commit modified files.
  2. Tag the release.
  3. Build a source distribution and wheel.
  4. Distribute the results via scp or upload them to an index server.

If we are doing this a lot, the need for automation becomes obvious.

Contents

Installation

mkrelease works with Python 2.7 - 3.11 and all released versions of setuptools.

Use pip install jarn.mkrelease to install the mkrelease script.

Since version 4.4 mkrelease requires twine for register and upload operations. Twine may be installed as a global utility on the system PATH or into the same environment as jarn.mkrelease. [1]

Use pip install jarn.mkrelease[twine] to install mkrelease + twine.

Since version 5.0 file-finder extensions are no longer installed by default. If you still want to use file-finders specify the filefinder extra.

Use pip install jarn.mkrelease[filefinder] to install mkrelease + file-finder extensions.

Use pip uninstall setuptools-subversion setuptools-hg setuptools-git to uninstall file-finder extensions.

Usage

mkrelease [options] [scm-sandbox|scm-url [rev]]

Options

-C, --no-commit
Do not commit modified files from the sandbox.
-T, --no-tag
Do not tag the release in SCM.
-P, --no-push
Do not push commits and tags upstream.
-R, --no-register
Do not register the release with dist-location.
-S, --no-upload
Do not upload the release to dist-location.
-n, --dry-run
Dry-run; equivalent to -CTPRS. This flag turns mkrelease into a simple package builder.
--svn, --hg, --git
Select the SCM type. Only required if the SCM type cannot be guessed from the argument.
-d dist-location, --dist-location=dist-location
An scp destination specification, an index server configured in ~/.pypirc, or an alias name for either. This option may be specified more than once.
-s, --sign
Sign the release with GnuPG.
-i identity, --identity=identity
The GnuPG identity to sign with. Implies -s.
-z, --zip
Release a zip archive.
-g, --gztar
Release a tar.gz archive (default).
-b, --egg
Release a binary egg.
-w, --wheel
Release a wheel file (default).
-m, --manifest-only
Ignore setuptools file-finder extensions and collect files via MANIFEST.in only.
-e, --develop
Allow setuptools build tags. Implies -T.
-q, --quiet
Suppress output of setuptools commands.
-t twine, --twine=twine
Override the twine executable used.
-c config-file, --config-file=config-file
Use config-file instead of the default ~/.mkrelease.
-l, --list-locations
List known dist-locations and exit.
-h, --help
Print the help message and exit.
-v, --version
Print the version string and exit.
--no-color
Disable output colors.
--non-interactive
Do not prompt for username and password if the required credentials are missing.

Arguments

scm-sandbox
A local SCM sandbox. Defaults to the current working directory.
scm-url [rev]
The URL of a remote SCM repository. The optional rev argument specifies a branch or tag to check out.

Configuration

mkrelease reads available index servers from the distutils configuration file ~/.pypirc. This file should contain your PyPI account information: [2]

[distutils]
index-servers =
    pypi

[pypi]
repository = https://upload.pypi.org/legacy/
username = fred
password = secret

Next, mkrelease reads its own configuration file ~/.mkrelease. It may be used to change defaults and to define location aliases:

[mkrelease]
# Release steps
commit = yes
tag = yes
push = yes
register = no
upload = yes

# One or more of: zip gztar egg wheel
formats = gztar wheel

# Setuptools options
manifest-only = yes
develop = no
quiet = no

# Sign with GnuPG
sign = no
identity =

# Default dist-location
dist-location =

[aliases]
# Map name to one or more dist-locations
customerA =
    jarn.com:/var/dist/customerA/
public =
    jarn.com:/var/dist/public/
world =
    pypi
    public

Upload with SCP

The simplest distribution location is a server directory reachable by ssh. Releasing a package means scp-ing it to the appropriate place on the server:

$ mkrelease -d customerA
$ mkrelease -d jarn.com:/var/dist/customerB/
$ mkrelease -d scp://jarn.com/var/dist/customerC/
$ mkrelease -d stefan@jarn.com:eggs -C -e -q

To upload via sftp instead of scp, use the sftp URL scheme:

$ mkrelease -d sftp://jarn.com/var/dist/customerD/

Note: Unlike scp, the sftp client does not prompt for login credentials. This means that non-interactive login must be configured on the destination server or the upload will fail.

Upload to Index Servers

Another way of publishing a Python package is by uploading it to a dedicated index server like PyPI. Given the ~/.pypirc file from above, we can release to PyPI simply by typing:

$ mkrelease -d pypi

Index servers are not limited to PyPI though. There is TestPyPI, and there are alternative index servers like devpi. We extend our ~/.pypirc: [2]

[distutils]
index-servers =
    pypi
    testpypi

[pypi]
repository = https://upload.pypi.org/legacy/
username = fred
password = secret

[testpypi]
repository = https://test.pypi.org/legacy/
username = fred
password = secret

We can now release to TestPyPI with:

$ mkrelease -d testpypi -C -e

Using GnuPG

Release a package and sign the distributions with GnuPG:

$ mkrelease -d pypi -s -i fred@bedrock.com

The -i flag is optional and GnuPG will pick your default key if not given.

Requirements

The following commands must be available on the system PATH (you only need what you plan to use):

  • svn
  • hg
  • git
  • scp
  • sftp
  • gpg
  • twine [1]

Footnotes

[1] (1, 2)

The twine executable is determined by trying in order:

  1. Value of --twine command line option, or
  2. Value of TWINE environment variable, or
  3. Value of twine configuration file setting, or
  4. python -m twine if twine is importable, or
  5. twine
[2] (1, 2)

There are more secure ways to handle login credentials:

  1. Generate an API token on PyPI, and/or
  2. Make use of twine's keyring support.

Also see our Python documentation viewer jarn.viewdoc.