uv itself is a large package with many dependencies and lots of
features. To build a package using the uv build backend, you shouldn't
have to download and install the entirety of uv. For platform where we
don't provide wheels, it should be possible and fast to compile the uv
build backend. To that end, we're introducing a python package that
contains a trimmed down version of uv that only contains the build
backend, with a minimal dependency tree in rust.
The `uv_build` package is publish from CI just like uv itself. It is
part of the workspace, but has much less dependencies for its own
binary. We're using cargo deny to enforce that the network stack is not
part of the dependencies. A new build profile ensure we're getting the
minimum possible binary size for a rust binary.
---------
Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>
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## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
Fix invalid links in [configuring
projects](https://docs.astral.sh/uv/concepts/projects/config/#entry-points)
doc.
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
Replaces https://github.com/astral-sh/puffin/pull/1068 and #1070 which
were more complicated than I wanted.
- Introduces a `.python-versions` file which defines the Python versions
needed for development
- Adds a Bash script at `scripts/bootstrap/install` which installs the
required Python versions from `python-build-standalone` to `./bin`
- Checks in a `versions.json` file with metadata about available
versions on each platform and a `fetch-version` Python script derived
from `rye` for updating the versions
- Updates CI to use these Python builds instead of the `setup-python`
action
- Updates to the latest packse scenarios which require Python 3.8+
instead of 3.7+ since we cannot use 3.7 anymore and includes new test
coverage of patch Python version requests
- Adds a `PUFFIN_PYTHON_PATH` variable to prevent lookup of system
Python versions for isolation during development
Tested on Linux (via CI) and macOS (locally) — presumably it will be a
bit more complicated to do proper Windows support.
This crate started off as generic caching utilities, but we started
adding a lot of Puffin-specific stuff (like the cache buckets
abstraction that knows about Git vs. direct URL vs. indexes and so on).
This PR moves the generic stuff into a new `cache-key` crate.
Filter out source dists and wheels whose `requires-python` from the
simple api is incompatible with the current python version.
This change showed an important problem: When we use a fake python
version for resolving, building source distributions breaks down because
we can only build with versions we actually have.
This change became surprisingly big. The tests now require python 3.7 to
be installed, but changing that would mean an even bigger change.
Fixes#388
This docker container provides isolation of source distribution builds,
whether [intended to be
helpful](https://pypi.org/project/nvidia-pyindex/) or other more or less
malicious forms of host system modification.
Fixes#194
---------
Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>
This PR massively speeds up the case in which you need to install wheels
that already exist in the global cache.
The new strategy is as follows:
- Download the wheel into the content-addressed cache.
- Unzip the wheel into the cache, but ignore content-addressing. It
turns out that writing to `cacache` for every file in the zip added a
ton of overhead, and I don't see any actual advantages to doing so.
Instead, we just unzip the contents into a directory at, e.g.,
`~/.cache/puffin/django-4.1.5`.
- (The unzip itself is now parallelized with Rayon.)
- When installing the wheel, we now support unzipping from a directory
instead of a zip archive. This required duplicating and tweaking a few
functions.
- When installing the wheel, we now use reflinks (or copy-on-write
links). These have a few fantastic properties: (1) they're extremely
cheap to create (on macOS, they are allegedly faster than hard links);
(2) they minimize disk space, since we avoid copying files entirely in
the vast majority of cases; and (3) if the user then edits a file
locally, the cache doesn't get polluted. Orogene, Bun, and soon pnpm all
use reflinks.
Puffin is now ~15x faster than `pip` for the common case of installing
cached data into a fresh environment.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/puffin/issues/21.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/puffin/issues/39.