## Summary
After we resolve, we filter out any wheels that aren't applicable for
the target platforms. So, e.g., we remove macOS wheels if we find that
the user only asked to solve for Windows.
This PR extends the same logic to architectures, so that we filter out
ARM-only wheels when the user is only solving for x86, etc.
Closes#10571.
Make the local packse workflow work again:
```
# In packse:
uv run --extra index --extra serve packse serve --no-hash scenarios &
# In uv:
UV_TEST_INDEX_URL="http://localhost:3141/simple/" ./scripts/scenarios/generate.py
```
Bugs fixed:
* The default scenario pattern didn't match anything.
* The snapshot update test command was wrong since the test
centralization
* Snapshot update failures would not be reported
Implement a full working version of local version semantics. The (AFAIA)
major move towards this was implemented in #2430. This added support
such that the version specifier `torch==2.1.0+cpu` would install
`torch@2.1.0+cpu` and consider `torch@2.1.0+cpu` a valid way to satisfy
the requirement `torch==2.1.0` in further dependency resolution.
In this feature, we more fully support local version semantics. Namely,
we now allow `torch==2.1.0` to install `torch@2.1.0+cpu` regardless of
whether `torch@2.1.0` (no local tag) actually exists.
We do this by adding an internal-only `Max` value to local versions that
compare greater to all other local versions. Then we can translate
`torch==2.1.0` into bounds: greater than 2.1.0 with no local tag and
less than 2.1.0 with the `Max` local tag.
Depends on https://github.com/astral-sh/packse/pull/227.
## Summary
This PR declares and documents all environment variables that are used
in one way or another in `uv`, either internally, or externally, or
transitively under a common struct.
I think over time as uv has grown there's been many environment
variables introduced. Its harder to know which ones exists, which ones
are missing, what they're used for, or where are they used across the
code. The docs only documents a handful of them, for others you'd have
to dive into the code and inspect across crates to know which crates
they're used on or where they're relevant.
This PR is a starting attempt to unify them, make it easier to discover
which ones we have, and maybe unlock future posibilities in automating
generating documentation for them.
I think we can split out into multiple structs later to better organize,
but given the high influx of PR's and possibly new environment variables
introduced/re-used, it would be hard to try to organize them all now
into their proper namespaced struct while this is all happening given
merge conflicts and/or keeping up to date.
I don't think this has any impact on performance as they all should
still be inlined, although it may affect local build times on changes to
the environment vars as more crates would likely need a rebuild. Lastly,
some of them are declared but not used in the code, for example those in
`build.rs`. I left them declared because I still think it's useful to at
least have a reference.
Did I miss any? Are their initial docs cohesive?
Note, `uv-static` is a terrible name for a new crate, thoughts? Others
considered `uv-vars`, `uv-consts`.
## Test Plan
Existing tests
As per
https://matklad.github.io/2021/02/27/delete-cargo-integration-tests.html
Before that, there were 91 separate integration tests binary.
(As discussed on Discord — I've done the `uv` crate, there's still a few
more commits coming before this is mergeable, and I want to see how it
performs in CI and locally).
## Summary
This PR changes the definition of `--locked` from:
> Produces the same `Lock`
To:
> Passes `Lock::satisfies`
This is a subtle but important difference. Previous, if
`Lock::satisfies` failed, we would run a resolution, then do
`existing_lock == lock`. If the two weren't equal, and `--locked` was
specified, we'd throw an error.
The equality check is hard to get right. For example, it means that we
can't ship #6076 without changing our marker representation, since the
deserialized lockfile "loses" some of the internal marker state that
gets accumulated during resolution.
The downside of this change is that there could be scenarios in which
`uv lock --locked` fails even though the lockfile would actually work
and the exact TOML would be unchanged. But... I think it's ok if
`--locked` fails after the user modifies something?
## Summary
Historically, in order to "resolve from a lockfile", we've taken the
lockfile, used it to pre-populate the in-memory metadata index, then run
a resolution. If the resolution didn't match our existing resolution, we
re-resolved from scratch.
This was an appealing approach because (in theory) it didn't require any
dedicated logic beyond pre-populating the index. However, it's proven to
be _really_ hard to get right, because it's a stricter requirement than
we need. We just need the current lockfile to _satisfy_ the requirements
provided by the user. We don't actually need a second resolution to
produce the exact same result. And it's not uncommon that this second
resolution differs, because we seed it with preferences, which
fundamentally changes its course. We've worked hard to minimize those
"instabilities", but they're still present.
The approach here is intended to be much simpler. Instead of resolving
from the lockfile, we just check if the current resolution satisfies the
state of the workspace. Specifically, we check if the lockfile (1)
contains all the relevant members, and (2) matches the metadata for all
dependencies, recursively. (We skip registry dependencies, assuming that
they're immutable.)
This may actually be too conservative, since we can have resolutions
that satisfy the requirements, even if the requirements have changed
slightly. But we want to bias towards correctness for now.
My hope is that this scheme will be more performant, simpler, and more
robust.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6063.
## Summary
Now, if you resolve against a registry, then swap it out for another, we
won't reuse the lockfile. (If you don't provide any registry
configuration, then we won't enforce this, so that `uv lock --index-url
foo` and `uv lock` is stable.)
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/5920.
Every packse version update is currently causing a huge diff (the size
of the `lock_scenarios.rs` diff in this PR). By redacting the version
from the snapshots, we will only have the actual change in the diff and
not the redundant version change noise.
The second commit moves all remaining packse url arg values to
`common/mod.rs`, which acts as a single source of truth for the packse
version.
This PR refactors the command creation in the test suite to remove the
duplication.
**1)** We add the same set of test stubbing args to almost any uv
invocation in the tests:
```rust
command
.arg("--cache-dir")
.arg(self.cache_dir.path())
.env("VIRTUAL_ENV", self.venv.as_os_str())
.env("UV_NO_WRAP", "1")
.env("HOME", self.home_dir.as_os_str())
.env("UV_TOOLCHAIN_DIR", "")
.env("UV_TEST_PYTHON_PATH", &self.python_path())
.current_dir(self.temp_dir.path());
if cfg!(all(windows, debug_assertions)) {
// TODO(konstin): Reduce stack usage in debug mode enough that the tests pass with the
// default windows stack of 1MB
command.env("UV_STACK_SIZE", (8 * 1024 * 1024).to_string());
}
```
Centralizing these into a `TestContext::add_shared_args` method removes
them from everywhere.
**2)** Prefix all `TextContext` methods of the pip interface with
`pip_`. This is now necessary due to `uv sync` vs. `uv pip sync`.
**3)** Move command creation in the various test files into dedicated
functions or methods to avoid repeating the arguments. Except for error
message tests, there should be at most one `Command::new(get_bin())`
call per test file. `EXCLUDE_NEWER` is exclusively used in
`TestContext`.
---
I'm considering adding a `TestCommand` on top of these changes (in
another PR) that holds a reference to the `TextContext`, has
`add_shared_args` as a method and uses `Fn(Self) -> Self` instead of
`Fn(&mut Self) -> Self` for methods to improved chaining.
packse has the ability to specify a project wide Requires-Python
constraint, but our lock template wasn't forwarding this to the
corresponding pyproject.toml. This update makes that happen.
The basic idea here is to make it so forking can only ever result in a
resolution that, for a particular marker environment, will only install
at most one version of a package. We can guarantee this by ensuring we
only fork on conflicting dependency specifications only when their
corresponding markers are completely disjoint. If they aren't, then
resolution _must_ find a single version of the package in the
intersection of the two dependency specifications.
A test for this case has been added to packse here:
https://github.com/astral-sh/packse/pull/182. Previously, that test
would result in a resolution with two different unconditional versions
of the same package. With this change, resolution fails (as it should).
A commit-by-commit review should be helpful here, since the first commit
is a refactor to make the second commit a bit more digestible.
This commit adds a template and does some light surgery on `generate.py`
to make use of that template. In particular, the universal tests require
using the "workspace"-aware version of `uv`, so we can't use the
existing `uv pip {compile,install}` tests.
This is just the result of running
./scripts/sync_scenarios.sh
From the root of the `uv` repository.
When I initially ran this, it produced some tests with snapshots that
weren't being updated. It turned out this was because the tests weren't
running, as they were gated behind the `python-patch` feature. In this
commit, we add `python-patch` to our `cargo insta` command, which should
update all relevant snapshots.
There are still some superfluous updates as a result of a spell checker
being run on generated files, but
The sync scenarios script is broken, so i did the updates manually
```
$ ./scripts/sync_scenarios.sh
Setting up a temporary environment...
Using Python 3.12.1 interpreter at: /home/konsti/projects/uv/.venv/bin/python3
Creating virtualenv at: .venv
Activate with: source .venv/bin/activate
× No solution found when resolving dependencies:
╰─▶ Because docutils==0.21.post1 is unusable because the package metadata was inconsistent and you require docutils==0.21.post1, we can conclude that the requirements are unsatisfiable.
hint: Metadata for docutils==0.21.post1 was inconsistent:
Package metadata version `0.21` does not match given version `0.21.post1`
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>
See https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/2617
Note this also includes:
- #2918
- #2931 (pending)
A first step towards Python toolchain management in Rust.
First, we add a new crate to manage Python download metadata:
- Adds a new `uv-toolchain` crate
- Adds Rust structs for Python version download metadata
- Duplicates the script which downloads Python version metadata
- Adds a script to generate Rust code from the JSON metadata
- Adds a utility to download and extract the Python version
I explored some alternatives like a build script using things like
`serde` and `uneval` to automatically construct the code from our
structs but deemed it to heavy. Unlike Rye, I don't generate the Rust
directly from the web requests and have an intermediate JSON layer to
speed up iteration on the Rust types.
Next, we add add a `uv-dev` command `fetch-python` to download Python
versions per the bootstrapping script.
- Downloads a requested version or reads from `.python-versions`
- Extracts to `UV_BOOTSTRAP_DIR`
- Links executables for path extension
This command is not really intended to be user facing, but it's a good
PoC for the `uv-toolchain` API. Hash checking (via the sha256) isn't
implemented yet, we can do that in a follow-up.
Finally, we remove the `scripts/bootstrap` directory, update CI to use
the new command, and update the CONTRIBUTING docs.
<img width="1023" alt="Screenshot 2024-04-08 at 17 12 15"
src="57bd3cf1-7477-4bb8-a8e9-802a00d772cb">
The snapshot filtering situation has gotten way out of hand, with each
test hand-rolling it's own filters on top of copied cruft from previous
tests.
I've attempted to address this holistically:
- `TestContext.filters()` has everything you should need
- This was introduced a while ago, but needed a few more filters for it
to be generalized everywhere
- Using `INSTA_FILTERS` is **not recommended** unless you do not want
the context filters
- It is okay to extend these filters for things unrelated to paths
- If you have to write a custom path filter, please highlight it in
review so we can address it in the common module
- `TestContext.site_packages()` gives cross-platform access to the
site-packages directory
- Do not manually construct the path to site-packages from the venv
- Do not turn off tests on Windows because you manually constructed a
Unix path to site-packages
- `TestContext.workspace_root` gives access to uv's repository directory
- Use this for installing from `scripts/packages/`
- If you need coverage for relative paths, copy the test package into
the `temp_dir` don't change the working directory of the test fixture
There is additional work that can be done here, such as:
- Auditing and removing additional uses of `INSTA_FILTERS`
- Updating manual construction of `Command` instances to use a utility
- The `venv` tests are particularly frightening in their lack of a test
context and could use some love
- Improving the developer experience i.e. apply context filters to
snapshots by default
Add a single job for for fast lint tools. Rustfmt for rust, ruff for
python formatting and linting, prettier avoids inconsistent formatter
changes between pycharm and vscode.
## Summary
This PR adds limited support for PEP 440-compatible local version
testing. Our behavior is _not_ comprehensively in-line with the spec.
However, it does fix by _far_ the biggest practical limitation, and
resolves all the issues that've been raised on uv related to local
versions without introducing much complexity into the resolver, so it
feels like a good tradeoff for me.
I'll summarize the change here, but for more context, see [Andrew's
write-up](https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/1855#issuecomment-1967024866)
in the linked issue.
Local version identifiers are really tricky because of asymmetry.
`==1.2.3` should allow `1.2.3+foo`, but `==1.2.3+foo` should not allow
`1.2.3`. It's very hard to map them to PubGrub, because PubGrub doesn't
think of things in terms of individual specifiers (unlike the PEP 440
spec) -- it only thinks in terms of ranges.
Right now, resolving PyTorch and friends fails, because...
- The user provides requirements like `torch==2.0.0+cu118` and
`torchvision==0.15.1+cu118`.
- We then match those exact versions.
- We then look at the requirements of `torchvision==0.15.1+cu118`, which
includes `torch==2.0.0`.
- Under PEP 440, this is fine, because `torch @ 2.0.0+cu118` should be
compatible with `torch==2.0.0`.
- In our model, though, it's not, because these are different versions.
If we change our comparison logic in various places to allow this, we
risk breaking some fundamental assumptions of PubGrub around version
continuity.
- Thus, we fail to resolve, because we can't accept both `torch @ 2.0.0`
and `torch @ 2.0.0+cu118`.
As compared to the solutions we explored in
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/1855#issuecomment-1967024866, at
a high level, this approach differs in that we lie about the
_dependencies_ of packages that rely on our local-version-using package,
rather than lying about the versions that exist, or the version we're
returning, etc.
In short:
- When users specify local versions upfront, we keep track of them. So,
above, we'd take note of `torch` and `torchvision`.
- When we convert the dependencies of a package to PubGrub ranges, we
check if the requirement matches `torch` or `torchvision`. If it's
an`==`, we check if it matches (in the above example) for
`torch==2.0.0`. If so, we _change_ the requirement to
`torch==2.0.0+cu118`. (If it's `==` some other version, we return an
incompatibility.)
In other words, we selectively override the declared dependencies by
making them _more specific_ if a compatible local version was specified
upfront.
The net effect here is that the motivating PyTorch resolutions all work.
And, in general, transitive local versions work as expected.
The thing that still _doesn't_ work is: imagine if there were _only_
local versions of `torch` available. Like, `torch @ 2.0.0` didn't exist,
but `torch @ 2.0.0+cpu` did, and `torch @ 2.0.0+gpu` did, and so on.
`pip install torch==2.0.0` would arbitrarily choose one one `2.0.0+cpu`
or `2.0.0+gpu`, and that's correct as per PEP 440 (local version
segments should be completely ignored on `torch==2.0.0`). However, uv
would fail to identify a compatible version. I'd _probably_ prefer to
fix this, although candidly I think our behavior is _ok_ in practice,
and it's never been reported as an issue.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/1855.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/2080.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/2328.