Commit graph

24 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
konsti
2f5a64a8b3
Unify cargo features (#9267)
When building only a single crate in the workspace to run its tests, we
often recompile a lot of other, unrelated crates. Whenever cargo has a
different set of crate features, it needs to recompile. By moving some
features (non-exhaustive for now) to the workspace level, we always
activate them an avoid recompiling.

The cargo docs mismatch the behavior of cargo around default-deps, so I
filed that upstream and left most `default-features` mismatches:
https://github.com/rust-lang/cargo/issues/14841.

Reference script:

```python
import tomllib
from collections import defaultdict
from pathlib import Path

uv = Path("/home/konsti/projects/uv")
skip_list = ["uv-trampoline", "uv-dev", "uv-performance-flate2-backend", "uv-performance-memory-allocator"]

root_feature_map = defaultdict(set)
root_default_features = defaultdict(bool)
cargo_toml = tomllib.loads(uv.joinpath("Cargo.toml").read_text())
for dep, declaration in cargo_toml["workspace"]["dependencies"].items():
    root_default_features[dep] = root_default_features[dep] or declaration.get("default-features", True)
    root_feature_map[dep].update(declaration.get("features", []))

feature_map = defaultdict(set)
default_features = defaultdict(bool)
for crate in uv.joinpath("crates").iterdir():
    if crate.name in skip_list:
        continue
    if not crate.joinpath("Cargo.toml").is_file():
        continue
    cargo_toml = tomllib.loads(crate.joinpath("Cargo.toml").read_text())
    for dep, declaration in cargo_toml.get("dependencies", {}).items():
        # If any item uses default features, they are used everywhere
        default_features[dep] = default_features[dep] or declaration.get("default-features", True)
        feature_map[dep].update(declaration.get("features", []))

for dep, features in sorted(feature_map.items()):
    features = features - root_feature_map.get(dep, set())
    if not features and default_features[dep] == root_default_features[dep]:
        continue
    print(dep, default_features[dep], sorted(features))
```
2024-11-20 16:11:24 +01:00
Charlie Marsh
e4fc875afa
Allow conflicting extras in explicit index assignments (#9160)
## Summary

This PR enables something like the "final boss" of PyTorch setups --
explicit support for CPU vs. GPU-enabled variants via extras:

```toml
[project]
name = "project"
version = "0.1.0"
requires-python = ">=3.13.0"
dependencies = []

[project.optional-dependencies]
cpu = [
    "torch==2.5.1+cpu",
]
gpu = [
    "torch==2.5.1",
]

[tool.uv.sources]
torch = [
    { index = "torch-cpu", extra = "cpu" },
    { index = "torch-gpu", extra = "gpu" },
]

[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "torch-cpu"
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu"
explicit = true

[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "torch-gpu"
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu124"
explicit = true

[tool.uv]
conflicts = [
    [
        { extra = "cpu" },
        { extra = "gpu" },
    ],
]
```

It builds atop the conflicting extras work to allow sources to be marked
as specific to a dedicated extra being enabled or disabled.

As part of this work, sources now have an `extra` field. If a source has
an `extra`, it means that the source is only applied to the requirement
when defined within that optional group. For example, `{ index =
"torch-cpu", extra = "cpu" }` above only applies to
`"torch==2.5.1+cpu"`.

The `extra` field does _not_ mean that the source is "enabled" when the
extra is activated. For example, this wouldn't work:

```toml
[project]
name = "project"
version = "0.1.0"
requires-python = ">=3.13.0"
dependencies = ["torch"]

[tool.uv.sources]
torch = [
    { index = "torch-cpu", extra = "cpu" },
    { index = "torch-gpu", extra = "gpu" },
]

[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "torch-cpu"
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu"
explicit = true

[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "torch-gpu"
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu124"
explicit = true
```

In this case, the sources would effectively be ignored. Extras are
really confusing... but I think this is correct? We don't want enabling
or disabling extras to affect resolution information that's _outside_ of
the relevant optional group.
2024-11-19 01:06:25 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
5bff2ba243
Include extras and dependency groups in derivation chains (#9113)
## Summary

Displays extras and dependency groups when explaining inclusion.
2024-11-15 15:37:18 -05:00
Charlie Marsh
8dd095cab8
Include version constraints in derivation chains (#9112)
## Summary

Derivation chains can now include the versions at which a package was
requested.
2024-11-15 15:06:24 -05:00
Charlie Marsh
fe477c3417
Show full derivation chain when encountering build failures (#9108)
## Summary

This PR adds context to our error messages to explain _why_ a given
package was included, if we fail to download or build it.

It's quite a large change, but it motivated some good refactors and
improvements along the way.

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/8962.
2024-11-14 15:48:26 -05:00
Charlie Marsh
a552f74308
Refactor Resolution type to retain dependency graph (#9106)
## Summary

This PR should not contain any user-visible changes, but the goal is to
refactor the `Resolution` type to retain a dependency graph. We want to
be able to explain _why_ a given package was excluded on error (see:
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/8962), which in turn requires
that at install time, we can go back and figure out the dependency
chain. At present, `Resolution` is just a map from package name to
distribution; this PR remodels it as a graph in which each node is a
package, and the edges contain markers plus extras or dependency groups.
2024-11-14 15:25:34 -05:00
Charlie Marsh
8c663d2a3f
Convert to RequirementSource rather than Requirement (#9107)
## Summary

This seems like a vestige left over from a refactor.
2024-11-13 20:00:13 -05:00
Charlie Marsh
9339e55a11
Add version to ResolvedDist (#9102)
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## Summary

I need this for the derivation chain work
(https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/8962), but it just seems
generally useful. You can't always get a version from a `Dist` (it could
be URL-based!), but when we create a `ResolvedDist`, we _do_ know the
version (and not just the URL). This PR preserves it.
2024-11-13 19:06:16 -05:00
Charlie Marsh
ac9ce853cf
Remove some unused public methods (#8993)
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## Summary

Notice these in an unrelated refactor.
2024-11-10 22:55:22 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
744a9091a2
Allow default indexes to be marked as explicit (#8990)
## Summary

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/8985.
2024-11-10 18:05:39 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
8a3e5d43e6
Fix references to --resolution-strategy in error message output (#8971)
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Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/8967.
2024-11-09 13:54:49 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
bf79d985ee
Allow incompatible requires-python for source distributions with static metadata (#8768)
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## Summary

At present, when we have a Python requirement and we see a wheel, we
verify that the Python requirement is compatible with the wheel. For
source distributions, though, we verify that both the Python requirement
_and_ the currently-installed version are compatible, because we assume
that we'll need to build the source distribution in order to get
metadata. However, we can often extract source distribution metadata
_without_ building (e.g., if there's a `pyproject.toml` with no dynamic
keys).

This PR thus modifies the source distribution handling to defer that
incompatibility ("We couldn't get metadata for this project, because it
has no static metadata and requires a higher Python version to run /
build") until we actually try to build the package. As a result, you can
now resolve source distribution-only packages using Python versions
below their `requires-python`, as long as they include static metadata.

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/8767.
2024-11-03 19:03:55 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
cc734ea2b6
Allow dependency metadata entries for direct URL requirements (#7846)
## Summary

This is part of making
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/7299#issuecomment-2385286341
better. You can now use `tool.uv.dependency-metadata` for direct URL
requirements. Unfortunately, you _must_ include a version, since we need
one to perform resolution.
2024-10-22 22:01:23 -04:00
Charlie Marsh
ff3ed3b797
Add type-based validation for index names (#8464)
## Summary

Also documents the normalization scheme.
2024-10-22 16:10:20 +00:00
Zanie Blue
fff2094a35
Use a dedicated message for incompatible Python versions in wheel ABI tags (#8363)
Part of https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/2777

I noticed we're seeing "Python ABI" _a lot_ in error messages which I
did not expect. This improves a common case by being a little more
specific.
2024-10-20 12:14:11 -04:00
Vini Brasil
69d5e084d5
Allow dashes and underscores in custom index names (#8339)
Previously, `uv add --index` command threw an error when the index name
included characters like hyphens or underscores.

Closes #8315
2024-10-18 13:24:16 -04:00
Charlie Marsh
4ca158931a
Show hint in resolution failure on Forbidden (403) or Unauthorized (401) (#8264)
## Summary

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/8167.
2024-10-16 17:34:29 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
5e05a62004
Respect index priority when storing credentials (#8256)
## Summary

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/8248.
2024-10-16 15:52:26 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
2153c6ac0d
Respect named --index and --default-index values in tool.uv.sources (#7910)
## Summary

If you pass a named index via the CLI, you can now reference it as a
named source. This required some surprisingly large refactors, since we
now need to be able to track whether a given index was provided on the
CLI vs. elsewhere (since, e.g., we don't want users to be able to
reference named indexes defined in global configuration).

Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/7899.
2024-10-15 23:56:24 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
a034a8b83b
Remove the flat index types (#7759)
## Summary

I think these really don't pull their weight.
2024-10-15 23:30:37 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
1925922770
Enable environment variable authentication for named indexes (#7741)
## Summary

This PR enables users to provide index credentials via named environment
variables.

For example, given an index named `internal` that requires a username
(`public`) and password
(`koala`), you can define the index (without credentials) in your
`pyproject.toml`:

```toml
[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "internal"
url = "https://pypi-proxy.corp.dev/simple"
```

Then set the `UV_INDEX_INTERNAL_USERNAME` and
`UV_INDEX_INTERNAL_PASSWORD`
environment variables, where `INTERNAL` is the uppercase version of the
index name:

```sh
export UV_INDEX_INTERNAL_USERNAME=public
export UV_INDEX_INTERNAL_PASSWORD=koala
```
2024-10-15 22:35:07 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
5b391770df
Add support for named and explicit indexes (#7481)
## Summary

This PR adds a first-class API for defining registry indexes, beyond our
existing `--index-url` and `--extra-index-url` setup.

Specifically, you now define indexes like so in a `uv.toml` or
`pyproject.toml` file:

```toml
[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "pytorch"
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu121"
```

You can also provide indexes via `--index` and `UV_INDEX`, and override
the default index with `--default-index` and `UV_DEFAULT_INDEX`.

### Index priority

Indexes are prioritized in the order in which they're defined, such that
the first-defined index has highest priority.

Indexes are also inherited from parent configuration (e.g., the
user-level `uv.toml`), but are placed after any indexes in the current
project, matching our semantics for other array-based configuration
values.

You can mix `--index` and `--default-index` with the legacy
`--index-url` and `--extra-index-url` settings; the latter two are
merely treated as unnamed `[[tool.uv.index]]` entries.

### Index pinning

If an index includes a name (which is optional), it can then be
referenced via `tool.uv.sources`:

```toml
[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "pytorch"
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu121"

[tool.uv.sources]
torch = { index = "pytorch" }
```

If an index is marked as `explicit = true`, it can _only_ be used via
such references, and will never be searched implicitly:

```toml
[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "pytorch"
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu121"
explicit = true

[tool.uv.sources]
torch = { index = "pytorch" }
```

Indexes defined outside of the current project (e.g., in the user-level
`uv.toml`) can _not_ be explicitly selected.

(As of now, we only support using a single index for a given
`tool.uv.sources` definition.)

### Default index

By default, we include PyPI as the default index. This remains true even
if the user defines a `[[tool.uv.index]]` -- PyPI is still used as a
fallback. You can mark an index as `default = true` to (1) disable the
use of PyPI, and (2) bump it to the bottom of the prioritized list, such
that it's used only if a package does not exist on a prior index:

```toml
[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "pytorch"
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu121"
default = true
```

### Name reuse

If a name is reused, the higher-priority index with that name is used,
while the lower-priority indexes are ignored entirely.

For example, given:

```toml
[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "pytorch"
url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu121"

[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "pytorch"
url = "https://test.pypi.org/simple"
```

The `https://test.pypi.org/simple` index would be ignored entirely,
since it's lower-priority than `https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu121`
but shares the same name.

Closes #171.

## Future work

- Users should be able to provide authentication for named indexes via
environment variables.
- `uv add` should automatically write `--index` entries to the
`pyproject.toml` file.
- Users should be able to provide multiple indexes for a given package,
stratified by platform:
```toml
[tool.uv.sources]
torch = [
  { index = "cpu", markers = "sys_platform == 'darwin'" },
  { index = "gpu", markers = "sys_platform != 'darwin'" },
]
```
- Users should be able to specify a proxy URL for a given index, to
avoid writing user-specific URLs to a lockfile:
```toml
[[tool.uv.index]]
name = "test"
url = "https://private.org/simple"
proxy = "http://<omitted>/pypi/simple"
```
2024-10-15 18:24:23 -04:00
Amos Wenger
715f28fd39
chore: Move all integration tests to a single binary (#8093)
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).
2024-10-11 16:41:35 +02:00
Charlie Marsh
14507a1793
Add uv- prefix to all internal crates (#7853)
## Summary

Brings more consistency to the repo and ensures that all crates
automatically show up in `--verbose` logging.
2024-10-01 20:15:32 -04:00