## Summary
Discovered while working on https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/9516.
In the linked repo, the root uses a `../dependency` path for the
workspace member, which we weren't normalizing.
## Summary
If a Git repository uses a `path` dependency (rather than a
`workspace`), we need to expand the path to make it relative to the Git
root.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/9516.
## Summary
Include the `git_member` when fetching metadata from cache.
h/t to @PhilipVinc for the suggested fix
Resolves#8887
## Test Plan
Pending
---------
Co-authored-by: Charlie Marsh <charlie.r.marsh@gmail.com>
This pull request is best viewed with [whitespace
hidden](https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/8650/files?diff=unified&w=1)
Adds a `--default` flag to `uv python install` in preview. This includes
a `python` and `python{major}` executable in addition to the
`python{major}.{minor}` executable. We will replace uv-managed
executables, but externally managed executables require the `--force`
flag to overwrite.
If you run `uv python install` (without arguments), we include the
`--default` flag implicitly to populate `python` and `python3` for the
"default" install version.
In the future, we should add a warning if the installed executable isn't
at the front of the PATH.
## Summary
Fixes#9027
Minor enhancement on top of #8531 that makes the CLI parameter
`--check-url` also available as the setting `check-url` in configuration
files.
## Test Plan
Updates existing tests to take the new setting into account.
Within publish command testing I didn't see existing tests covering
settings from toml files (instead of from CLI params), so I didn't add
anything of that sort.
## Summary
On Windows, non-virtual environments put the `python.exe` in the
top-level of the installation directory, rather than in `Scripts`. This
PR adds those paths to `PATH` in `uv run` and `uv tool run`.
Closes
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/9574#issuecomment-2512217110.
This _partially_ unwinds the optimization in #9540 by adding back the
base package dependency as a sibling to the extra package dependency
in some cases. Specifically, this occurs when _any_ of the extras are
declared as conflicting.
This is believed to be necessary (until another method is found) to
handle the forking logic based on conflicts. Namely, the forking logic
depends on the base and extra packages being sibling dependencies. If
only the extra is present, then it won't be included in the fork that
excludes all conflicting extras. And that means the base package won't
either, even though it should be included in that fork in some cases. If
the base package dependency is deferred, then it will never be reached.
This also adds another test and updates the snapshots that would have
caught the regression in #9540 if the conflict tests had been enabled.
Embarrassingly, PR #9474 moved the conflicting extras/groups tests into
their own module, but never actually included the module in
`it/main.rs`.
This adds `lock_conflict` to `main.rs` and fixes the fallout.
For listing files, we first use a directory writer for source dists,
which we will use for collecting the filenames instead of writing the
archive in the future. I've split breaking `lib.rs` of uv-build-backend
into modules into the next PR.
No logic changes, only restructuring.
Best reviewed commit-by-commit
Going through PEP 517 to build a package is slow, so when building a
package with the uv build backend, we can call into the uv build backend
directly. This is the basis for the `uv build --list`.
This does not enable the fast path for general source dependencies.
There is a possible difference in execution if the latest uv version is
newer than the one currently running: The PEP 517 path would use the
latest version, while the fast path uses the current version.
Please review commit-by-commit
### Benchmark
`built_with_uv`, using the fast path:
```
$ hyperfine "~/projects/uv/target/profiling/uv build"
Time (mean ± σ): 9.2 ms ± 1.1 ms [User: 4.6 ms, System: 4.6 ms]
Range (min … max): 6.4 ms … 12.7 ms 290 runs
```
`hatcling_editable`, with hatchling being optimized for fast startup
times:
```
$ hyperfine "~/projects/uv/target/profiling/uv build"
Time (mean ± σ): 270.5 ms ± 18.4 ms [User: 230.8 ms, System: 44.5 ms]
Range (min … max): 250.7 ms … 298.4 ms 10 runs
```
In the course of working on #9289, I've had to devise
some additions to our markers. While we are still staying
strictly compatible with the PEP 508 format, we will be
abusing the `extra` expression to carry a lot more
information.
Specifically, we want the following additional
operations:
* Simplify `extra != 'foo'`
* Remove all extra expressions
* Remove everything except extra expressions
My work on #9289 requires all of these (which will be
in a future in PR).
## Summary
This proposes adding the command line option `uv pip uninstall --dry-run
...`, complementing the existing `uv pip install --dry-run ...` added
for #1244 in #1436.
This option does not exist in PyPA's `pip uninstall`, if adopted it
would be unique to `uv pip`. The code should be considered PoC, it is
baby's first Rust.
The initial motivation was while investigating
https://github.com/moreati/ansible-uv/issues/2 - to allow Ansible module
`moreati.uv.pip` to work with`state: absent` in "check_mode" (Ansible's
equivalent of a dry run), without requiring `packaging` or `setuptools`.
## Test Plan
One new unit test has been added. I pedge to add more if the feature is
desired/accepted
Example usage
```console
➜ uv git:(pip-uninstall--dry-run) rm -rf .venv
➜ uv git:(pip-uninstall--dry-run) ./target/debug/uv venv
Using CPython 3.13.0
Creating virtual environment at: .venv
Activate with: source .venv/bin/activate
➜ uv git:(pip-uninstall--dry-run) ./target/debug/uv pip install httpx
Resolved 7 packages in 178ms
Prepared 5 packages in 60ms
Installed 7 packages in 15ms
+ anyio==4.6.2.post1
+ certifi==2024.8.30
+ h11==0.14.0
+ httpcore==1.0.7
+ httpx==0.28.0
+ idna==3.10
+ sniffio==1.3.1
➜ uv git:(pip-uninstall--dry-run) ./target/debug/uv pip uninstall --dry-run httpx
Would uninstall 1 package
- httpx==0.28.0
➜ uv git:(pip-uninstall--dry-run) ./target/debug/uv pip list
Package Version
-------- -----------
anyio 4.6.2.post1
certifi 2024.8.30
h11 0.14.0
httpcore 1.0.7
httpx 0.28.0
idna 3.10
sniffio 1.3.1
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Charlie Marsh <charlie.r.marsh@gmail.com>
Fixes#9531
## Context
While working with [uv](https://github.com/astral-sh/uv), I encountered
issues with a python dependency, [httpx](https://www.python-httpx.org/)
unable to be installed because of a **os error 5 permission denied**.
The error occur when we try to persist a **.exe file** from a temporary
folder into a persistent one.
I only reproduce the issue in an enterprise **Windows** Jenkins Runner.
In my virtual machines, I don't have any issues. So I think this is most
probably coming from the system configuration. This windows runner
**contains an AV/EDR**. And the fact that the file locked occured only
once for an executable make me think that it's most probably the cause.
While doing some research and speaking with some colleagues (hi
@vmeurisse), it seems that the issue is a very recurrent one on Windows.
In the Javascript ecosystem, there is this package, created by the
@isaacs, `npm` inventor: https://www.npmjs.com/package/graceful-fs, used
inside `npm`, allowing its package installations to be more resilient to
filesystem errors:
> The improvements are meant to normalize behavior across different
platforms and environments, and to make filesystem access more resilient
to errors.
One of its core feature is this one:
> On Windows, it retries renaming a file for up to one second if EACCESS
or EPERM error occurs, likely because antivirus software has locked the
directory.
So I tried to implement the same algorithm on `uv`, **and it fixed my
issue**! I can finally install `httpx`.
Then, [as I mentionned in this
issue](https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/9531#issuecomment-2508981316),
I saw that you already implemented exactly the same algorithm in an
asynchronous function for renames 😄22fd9f7ff1/crates/uv-fs/src/lib.rs (L221)
## Summary of changes
- I added a similar function for `persist` (was not easy to have the
benediction of the borrow checker 😄)
- I added a `sync` variant of `rename_with_retry`
- I edited `install_script` to use the function including retries on
Windows
Let me know if I should change anything 🙂
Thanks!!
## Test Plan
This pull-request should be totally iso-functional, so I think it should
be covered by existing tests in case of regression.
All tests are still passing on my side.
Also, of course validated that my windows machines (windows 10 & windows
11) containing AV/EDR software are now able to install `httpx.exe`
script.
However, if you think any additional test is needed, feel free to tell
me!
When looking at the build frontend code, I noticed that we always pass
every single field of the shared state to the build dispatch:
```rust
let build_dispatch = BuildDispatch::new(
...
&state.index,
&state.git,
&state.capabilities,
&state.in_flight,
...
);
```
We can abstract this by moving `SharedState` into the build dispatch.
The `BuildDispatch` then has only immutable fields and the
`SharedState`. Since the `SharedState` is all `Arc`s, we can clone it
freely.
## Summary
After #9524, I noticed two other dependencies were misaligned.
Since the previous PR has been merged, I was thinking I could submit
those two misses.
Of course, open to any comments/decline!
Thanks!! 🙂
## Test Plan
All units tests are still passing on my side. Let's see with the
pull-request CI again 😄
## Summary
Previously, when we encountered `foo[bar]`, we'd add a dependency on
`PubGrubPackage::Package` for `foo`, and then `PubGrubPackage::Extra`
for `foo[bar]`.
Later, when we ask for the dependencies of the `PubGrubPackage::Extra`,
we add `PubGrubPackage::Package` for `foo`, and
`PubGrubPackage::Package` for `foo[bar]`. This is an intentional
strategy because it ensures that PubGrub "knows" that these have to be
solved to the same version as early as possible.
It turns out that the first part here ("add a dependency on
`PubGrubPackage::Package` for `foo`") is suboptimal, because it means
PubGrub might try to solve _just_ `foo` without realizing that it also
has to accommodate all the constraints from the extra.
Instead, we now add _just_ `PubGrubPackage::Extra` for `foo[bar]`, and
defer adding the base package. It looks like this leads to a far more
efficient solve for Airflow.
When adding excludes, we usually don't want to include python cache
files. On the contrary, I haven't seen any project in my ecosystem
research that would want any of `__pycache__`, `*.pyc`, `*.pyo` to be
included. By moving them behind a `default-excludes` toggle, they are
always active even when defining custom excludes, but can be deactivated
if the user so chooses.
With includes and excludes being this small again, we can roll back the
include-exclude anchored difference to always using anchored globs (i.e.
you would need to use `**/build-*.h` below).
A pyproject.toml with custom settings with the change applied:
```toml
[project]
name = "foo"
version = "0.1.0"
readme = "README.md"
license-files = ["LICENSE*", "third-party-licenses/*"]
[tool.uv.build-backend]
# A file we need for the source dist -> wheel step, but not in the wheel itself (currently unused)
source-include = ["data/build-script.py"]
# A temporary or generated file we want to ignore
source-exclude = ["/src/foo/not-packaged.txt"]
# Headers are build-only
wheel-exclude = ["build-*.h"]
[tool.uv.build-backend.data]
scripts = "scripts"
data = "assets"
headers = "header"
[build-system]
requires = ["uv>=0.5.5,<0.6"]
build-backend = "uv"
```
When building the source distribution, we always need to include
`pyproject.toml` and the module, when building the wheel, we always
include the module but nothing else at top level. Since we only allow a
single module per wheel, that means that there are no specific wheel
includes. This means we have source includes, source excludes, wheel
excludes, but no wheel includes: This is defined by the module root,
plus the metadata files and data directories separately.
Extra source dist includes are currently unused (they can't end up in
the wheel currently), but it makes sense to model them here, they will
be needed for any sort of procedural build step.
This results in the following fields being relevant for inclusions and
exclusion:
* `pyproject.toml` (always included in the source dist)
* project.readme: PEP 621
* project.license-files: PEP 639
* module_root: `Path`
* source_include: `Vec<Glob>`
* source_exclude: `Vec<Glob>`
* wheel_exclude: `Vec<Glob>`
* data: `Map<KnownDataName, Path>`
An opinionated choice is that that wheel excludes always contain the
source excludes: Otherwise you could have a path A in the source tree
that gets included when building the wheel directly from the source
tree, but not when going through the source dist as intermediary,
because A is in source excludes, but not in the wheel excludes. This has
been a source of errors previously.
In the process, I fixed a bug where we would skip directories and only
include the files and were missing license due to absolute globs.
## Summary
When we serialize and deserialize the lockfile, we remove the conflict
markers. So in the linked case, the edges for the `tqdm` entries are
like:
```
complexified_marker: UniversalMarker {
pep508_marker: python_full_version >= '3.9.0',
conflict_marker: true,
},
```
However... when we evaluate in-memory, the conflict markers are still
there...
```
complexified_marker: UniversalMarker {
pep508_marker: true,
conflict_marker: extra == 't1' and extra != 't2',
},
```
So if `uv run` creates the lockfile, we evaluate this as `false`.
We should make this consistent, and I expect @BurntSushi is aware. But
for now, it's reasonable / correct to pass the extra when evaluating at
this specific point, since we know the dependency was enabled by the
marker.
Closes
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/9533#issuecomment-2508908591.
When changing something about the settings,
`invalid_pyproject_toml_option_unknown_field` would fail unexpectedly
because the exact list of possible options had changed. Since we're
already testing this list in the settings-related test
`resolve_config_file`, i'm stubbing the exact output here.
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## Summary
While working on potential bug fixes with temporary files on Windows (I
think I am currently ecountering the same issue as #2810)
I noticed that sub-workspaces were not all having the same `tempfile`
version. And they were not relying on the cargo root project dependency.
I don't know at all if it was done on purpose or not.
(I also wanted to override the root dependency with a local source but
it was not possible due to sub-workspaces not relying on the same).
The root lockfile already pinned to the `3.14.0`. Some sub-workspaces
were depending on the `3.12.0`, some others on the `3.14.0`. So I
updated the root `Cargo.toml` to the `3.14.0`.
Feel free to decline if it was done on purpose! No worries at all
🙂
Thanks!
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
## Test Plan
All units tests are still passing on my side. Let's see with the
pull-request CI 😄
## Summary
A lot of good new lints, and most importantly, error stabilizations. I
tried to find a few usages of the new stabilizations, but I'm sure there
are more.
IIUC, this _does_ require bumping our MSRV.
## Summary
When you pass a system drive to `Path::join`, Rust doesn't insert a
backslash between the drive and the path itself, so our lookups for
system configuration were failing.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/9416.
When trying to upload without a password but with the keyring, check
that the keyring has a password for the upload URL and username and warn
if it doesn't.
Fixes#8781
There are already a fair number and I'm planning to add more. And
`lock.rs` is already quite big.
There aren't any new tests or other changes here. This is just moving
tests and trimming down the function names to avoid redundancy in the
names.
## Summary
With `uv pip install --target` and `--prefix`, we (1) should allow
managed Pythons, and (2) should show a different message that's focused
on the interpreter we selected, rather than the environment.
## Summary
We still only respect overrides and constraints in the workspace root --
which we may want to change -- but overrides and constraints are now
correctly lowered.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/8148.