Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: setuptools-scm
Version: 4.1.2
Summary: the blessed package to manage your versions by scm tags
Home-page: https://github.com/pypa/setuptools_scm/
Author: Ronny Pfannschmidt
Author-email: opensource@ronnypfannschmidt.de
License: MIT
Description: setuptools_scm
        ===============
        
        ``setuptools_scm`` handles managing your Python package versions
        in SCM metadata instead of declaring them as the version argument
        or in a SCM managed file.
        
        Additionally ``setuptools_scm`` provides setuptools with a list of files that are managed by the SCM
        (i.e. it automatically adds all of the SCM-managed files to the sdist).
        Unwanted files must be excluded by discarding them via ``MANIFEST.in``.
        
        .. image:: https://travis-ci.org/pypa/setuptools_scm.svg?branch=master
            :target: https://travis-ci.org/pypa/setuptools_scm
        
        .. image:: https://tidelift.com/badges/package/pypi/setuptools-scm
           :target: https://tidelift.com/subscription/pkg/pypi-setuptools-scm?utm_source=pypi-setuptools-scm&utm_medium=readme
        
        
        ``pyproject.toml`` usage
        ------------------------
        
        The preferred way to configure ``setuptools_scm`` is to author
        settings in a ``tool.setuptools_scm`` section of ``pyproject.toml``.
        
        This feature requires Setuptools 42 or later, released in Nov, 2019.
        If your project needs to support build from sdist on older versions
        of Setuptools, you will need to also implement the ``setup.py usage``
        for those legacy environments.
        
        First, ensure that ``setuptools_scm`` is present during the project's
        built step by specifying it as one of the build requirements.
        
        .. code:: toml
        
            # pyproject.toml
            [build-system]
            requires = ["setuptools>=42", "wheel", "setuptools_scm[toml]>=3.4"]
        
        Note that the ``toml`` extra must be supplied.
        
        That will be sufficient to require ``setuptools_scm`` for projects
        that support PEP 518 (`pip <https://pypi.org/project/pip>`_ and
        `pep517 <https://pypi.org/project/pep517/>`_). Many tools,
        especially those that invoke ``setup.py`` for any reason, may
        continue to rely on ``setup_requires``. For maximum compatibility
        with those uses, consider also including a ``setup_requires`` directive
        (described below in ``setup.py usage`` and ``setup.cfg``).
        
        To enable version inference, add this section to your pyproject.toml:
        
        .. code:: toml
        
            # pyproject.toml
            [tool.setuptools_scm]
        
        Including this section is comparable to supplying
        ``use_scm_version=True`` in ``setup.py``. Additionally,
        include arbitrary keyword arguments in that section
        to be supplied to ``get_version()``. For example:
        
        .. code:: toml
        
            # pyproject.toml
        
            [tool.setuptools_scm]
            write_to = "pkg/version.py"
        
        
        ``setup.py`` usage
        ------------------
        
        The following settings are considered legacy behavior and
        superseded by the ``pyproject.toml`` usage, but for maximal
        compatibility, projects may also supply the configuration in
        this older form.
        
        To use ``setuptools_scm`` just modify your project's ``setup.py`` file
        like this:
        
        * Add ``setuptools_scm`` to the ``setup_requires`` parameter.
        * Add the ``use_scm_version`` parameter and set it to ``True``.
        
        For example:
        
        .. code:: python
        
            from setuptools import setup
            setup(
                ...,
                use_scm_version=True,
                setup_requires=['setuptools_scm'],
                ...,
            )
        
        Arguments to ``get_version()`` (see below) may be passed as a dictionary to
        ``use_scm_version``. For example:
        
        .. code:: python
        
            from setuptools import setup
            setup(
                ...,
                use_scm_version = {
                    "root": "..",
                    "relative_to": __file__,
                    "local_scheme": "node-and-timestamp"
                },
                setup_requires=['setuptools_scm'],
                ...,
            )
        
        You can confirm the version number locally via ``setup.py``:
        
        .. code-block:: shell
        
            $ python setup.py --version
        
        .. note::
        
           If you see unusual version numbers for packages but ``python setup.py
           --version`` reports the expected version number, ensure ``[egg_info]`` is
           not defined in ``setup.cfg``.
        
        
        ``setup.cfg`` usage
        -------------------
        
        If using `setuptools 30.3.0
        <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#configuring-setup-using-setup-cfg-files>`_
        or greater, you can store ``setup_requires`` configuration in ``setup.cfg``.
        However, ``use_scm_version`` must still be placed in ``setup.py``. For example:
        
        .. code:: python
        
            # setup.py
            from setuptools import setup
            setup(
                use_scm_version=True,
            )
        
        .. code:: ini
        
            # setup.cfg
            [metadata]
            ...
        
            [options]
            setup_requires =
              setuptools_scm
            ...
        
        .. important::
        
            Ensure neither the ``[metadata]`` ``version`` option nor the ``[egg_info]``
            section are defined, as these will interfere with ``setuptools_scm``.
        
        You may also need to define a ``pyproject.toml`` file (`PEP-0518
        <https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0518>`_) to ensure you have the required
        version of ``setuptools``:
        
        .. code:: ini
        
            # pyproject.toml
            [build-system]
            requires = ["setuptools>=30.3.0", "wheel", "setuptools_scm"]
        
        For more information, refer to the `setuptools issue #1002
        <https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/1002>`_.
        
        
        Programmatic usage
        ------------------
        
        In order to use ``setuptools_scm`` from code that is one directory deeper
        than the project's root, you can use:
        
        .. code:: python
        
            from setuptools_scm import get_version
            version = get_version(root='..', relative_to=__file__)
        
        See `setup.py Usage`_ above for how to use this within ``setup.py``.
        
        
        Retrieving package version at runtime
        -------------------------------------
        
        If you have opted not to hardcode the version number inside the package,
        you can retrieve it at runtime from PEP-0566_ metadata using
        ``importlib.metadata`` from the standard library
        or the `importlib_metadata`_ backport:
        
        .. code:: python
        
            from importlib.metadata import version, PackageNotFoundError
        
            try:
                __version__ = version(__name__)
            except PackageNotFoundError:
                # package is not installed
               pass
        
        Alternatively, you can use ``pkg_resources`` which is included in
        ``setuptools``:
        
        .. code:: python
        
           from pkg_resources import get_distribution, DistributionNotFound
        
           try:
               __version__ = get_distribution(__name__).version
           except DistributionNotFound:
                # package is not installed
               pass
        
        This does place a runtime dependency on ``setuptools``.
        
        .. _PEP-0566: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0566/
        .. _importlib_metadata: https://pypi.org/project/importlib-metadata/
        
        
        Usage from Sphinx
        -----------------
        
        It is discouraged to use ``setuptools_scm`` from Sphinx itself,
        instead use ``pkg_resources`` after editable/real installation:
        
        .. code:: python
        
            # contents of docs/conf.py
            from pkg_resources import get_distribution
            release = get_distribution('myproject').version
            # for example take major/minor
            version = '.'.join(release.split('.')[:2])
        
        The underlying reason is, that services like *Read the Docs* sometimes change
        the working directory for good reasons and using the installed metadata
        prevents using needless volatile data there.
        
        Notable Plugins
        ----------------
        
        `setuptools_scm_git_archive <https://pypi.python.org/pypi/setuptools_scm_git_archive>`_
            Provides partial support for obtaining versions from git archives that
            belong to tagged versions. The only reason for not including it in
            ``setuptools_scm`` itself is Git/GitHub not supporting sufficient metadata
            for untagged/followup commits, which is preventing a consistent UX.
        
        
        Default versioning scheme
        --------------------------
        
        In the standard configuration ``setuptools_scm`` takes a look at three things:
        
        1. latest tag (with a version number)
        2. the distance to this tag (e.g. number of revisions since latest tag)
        3. workdir state (e.g. uncommitted changes since latest tag)
        
        and uses roughly the following logic to render the version:
        
        no distance and clean:
            ``{tag}``
        distance and clean:
            ``{next_version}.dev{distance}+{scm letter}{revision hash}``
        no distance and not clean:
            ``{tag}+dYYYYMMDD``
        distance and not clean:
            ``{next_version}.dev{distance}+{scm letter}{revision hash}.dYYYYMMDD``
        
        The next version is calculated by adding ``1`` to the last numeric component of
        the tag.
        
        For Git projects, the version relies on `git describe <https://git-scm.com/docs/git-describe>`_,
        so you will see an additional ``g`` prepended to the ``{revision hash}``.
        
        Semantic Versioning (SemVer)
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        Due to the default behavior it's necessary to always include a
        patch version (the ``3`` in ``1.2.3``), or else the automatic guessing
        will increment the wrong part of the SemVer (e.g. tag ``2.0`` results in
        ``2.1.devX`` instead of ``2.0.1.devX``). So please make sure to tag
        accordingly.
        
        .. note::
        
            Future versions of ``setuptools_scm`` will switch to `SemVer
            <http://semver.org/>`_ by default hiding the the old behavior as an
            configurable option.
        
        
        Builtin mechanisms for obtaining version numbers
        --------------------------------------------------
        
        1. the SCM itself (git/hg)
        2. ``.hg_archival`` files (mercurial archives)
        3. ``PKG-INFO``
        
        .. note::
        
            Git archives are not supported due to Git shortcomings
        
        
        File finders hook makes most of MANIFEST.in unnecessary
        -------------------------------------------------------
        
        ``setuptools_scm`` implements a `file_finders
        <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#adding-support-for-revision-control-systems>`_
        entry point which returns all files tracked by your SCM. This eliminates
        the need for a manually constructed ``MANIFEST.in`` in most cases where this
        would be required when not using ``setuptools_scm``, namely:
        
        * To ensure all relevant files are packaged when running the ``sdist`` command.
        
        * When using `include_package_data <https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/setuptools.html#including-data-files>`_
          to include package data as part of the ``build`` or ``bdist_wheel``.
        
        ``MANIFEST.in`` may still be used: anything defined there overrides the hook.
        This is mostly useful to exclude files tracked in your SCM from packages,
        although in principle it can be used to explicitly include non-tracked files
        too.
        
        
        Configuration parameters
        ------------------------
        
        In order to configure the way ``use_scm_version`` works you can provide
        a mapping with options instead of a boolean value.
        
        The currently supported configuration keys are:
        
        :root:
            Relative path to cwd, used for finding the SCM root; defaults to ``.``
        
        :version_scheme:
            Configures how the local version number is constructed; either an
            entrypoint name or a callable.
        
        :local_scheme:
            Configures how the local component of the version is constructed; either an
            entrypoint name or a callable.
        
        :write_to:
            A path to a file that gets replaced with a file containing the current
            version. It is ideal for creating a ``version.py`` file within the
            package, typically used to avoid using `pkg_resources.get_distribution`
            (which adds some overhead).
        
            .. warning::
        
              Only files with :code:`.py` and :code:`.txt` extensions have builtin
              templates, for other file types it is necessary to provide
              :code:`write_to_template`.
        
        :write_to_template:
            A newstyle format string that is given the current version as
            the ``version`` keyword argument for formatting.
        
        :relative_to:
            A file from which the root can be resolved.
            Typically called by a script or module that is not in the root of the
            repository to point ``setuptools_scm`` at the root of the repository by
            supplying ``__file__``.
        
        :tag_regex:
           A Python regex string to extract the version part from any SCM tag.
            The regex needs to contain either a single match group, or a group
            named ``version``, that captures the actual version information.
        
            Defaults to the value of ``setuptools_scm.config.DEFAULT_TAG_REGEX``
            (see `config.py <src/setuptools_scm/config.py>`_).
        
        :parentdir_prefix_version:
            If the normal methods for detecting the version (SCM version,
            sdist metadata) fail, and the parent directory name starts with
            ``parentdir_prefix_version``, then this prefix is stripped and the rest of
            the parent directory name is matched with ``tag_regex`` to get a version
            string.  If this parameter is unset (the default), then this fallback is
            not used.
        
            This is intended to cover GitHub's "release tarballs", which extract into
            directories named ``projectname-tag/`` (in which case
            ``parentdir_prefix_version`` can be set e.g. to ``projectname-``).
        
        :fallback_version:
            A version string that will be used if no other method for detecting the
            version worked (e.g., when using a tarball with no metadata). If this is
            unset (the default), setuptools_scm will error if it fails to detect the
            version.
        
        :parse:
            A function that will be used instead of the discovered SCM for parsing the
            version.
            Use with caution, this is a function for advanced use, and you should be
            familiar with the ``setuptools_scm`` internals to use it.
        
        :git_describe_command:
            This command will be used instead the default ``git describe`` command.
            Use with caution, this is a function for advanced use, and you should be
            familiar with the ``setuptools_scm`` internals to use it.
        
            Defaults to the value set by ``setuptools_scm.git.DEFAULT_DESCRIBE``
            (see `git.py <src/setuptools_scm/git.py>`_).
        
        To use ``setuptools_scm`` in other Python code you can use the ``get_version``
        function:
        
        .. code:: python
        
            from setuptools_scm import get_version
            my_version = get_version()
        
        It optionally accepts the keys of the ``use_scm_version`` parameter as
        keyword arguments.
        
        Example configuration in ``setup.py`` format:
        
        .. code:: python
        
            from setuptools import setup
        
            setup(
                use_scm_version={
                    'write_to': 'version.py',
                    'write_to_template': '__version__ = "{version}"',
                    'tag_regex': r'^(?P<prefix>v)?(?P<version>[^\+]+)(?P<suffix>.*)?$',
                }
            )
        
        Environment variables
        ---------------------
        
        :SETUPTOOLS_SCM_PRETEND_VERSION:
            when defined and not empty,
            its used as the primary source for the version number
            in which case it will be a unparsed string
        
        :SETUPTOOLS_SCM_DEBUG:
            when defined and not empty,
            a lot of debug information will be printed as part of ``setuptools_scm``
            operating
        
        Extending setuptools_scm
        ------------------------
        
        ``setuptools_scm`` ships with a few ``setuptools`` entrypoints based hooks to
        extend its default capabilities.
        
        Adding a new SCM
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        ``setuptools_scm`` provides two entrypoints for adding new SCMs:
        
        ``setuptools_scm.parse_scm``
            A function used to parse the metadata of the current workdir
            using the name of the control directory/file of your SCM as the
            entrypoint's name. E.g. for the built-in entrypoint for git the
            entrypoint is named ``.git`` and references ``setuptools_scm.git:parse``
        
          The return value MUST be a ``setuptools_scm.version.ScmVersion`` instance
          created by the function ``setuptools_scm.version:meta``.
        
        ``setuptools_scm.files_command``
          Either a string containing a shell command that prints all SCM managed
          files in its current working directory or a callable, that given a
          pathname will return that list.
        
          Also use then name of your SCM control directory as name of the entrypoint.
        
        Version number construction
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        ``setuptools_scm.version_scheme``
            Configures how the version number is constructed given a
            ``setuptools_scm.version.ScmVersion`` instance and should return a string
            representing the version.
        
            Available implementations:
        
            :guess-next-dev: Automatically guesses the next development version (default).
                Guesses the upcoming release by incrementing the pre-release segment if present,
                otherwise by incrementing the micro segment. Then appends :code:`.devN`.
            :post-release: generates post release versions (adds :code:`.postN`)
            :python-simplified-semver: Basic semantic versioning. Guesses the upcoming release
                by incrementing the minor segment and setting the micro segment to zero if the
                current branch contains the string ``'feature'``, otherwise by incrementing the
                micro version. Then appends :code:`.devN`. Not compatible with pre-releases.
            :release-branch-semver: Semantic versioning for projects with release branches. The
                same as ``guess-next-dev`` (incrementing the pre-release or micro segment) if on
                a release branch: a branch whose name (ignoring namespace) parses as a version
                that matches the most recent tag up to the minor segment. Otherwise if on a
                non-release branch, increments the minor segment and sets the micro segment to
                zero, then appends :code:`.devN`.
        
        ``setuptools_scm.local_scheme``
            Configures how the local part of a version is rendered given a
            ``setuptools_scm.version.ScmVersion`` instance and should return a string
            representing the local version.
            Dates and times are in Coordinated Universal Time (UTC), because as part
            of the version, they should be location independent.
        
            Available implementations:
        
            :node-and-date: adds the node on dev versions and the date on dirty
                            workdir (default)
            :node-and-timestamp: like ``node-and-date`` but with a timestamp of
                                 the form ``{:%Y%m%d%H%M%S}`` instead
            :dirty-tag: adds ``+dirty`` if the current workdir has changes
            :no-local-version: omits local version, useful e.g. because pypi does
                               not support it
        
        
        Importing in ``setup.py``
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        To support usage in ``setup.py`` passing a callable into ``use_scm_version``
        is supported.
        
        Within that callable, ``setuptools_scm`` is available for import.
        The callable must return the configuration.
        
        
        .. code:: python
        
            # content of setup.py
            import setuptools
        
            def myversion():
                from setuptools_scm.version import get_local_dirty_tag
                def clean_scheme(version):
                    return get_local_dirty_tag(version) if version.dirty else '+clean'
        
                return {'local_scheme': clean_scheme}
        
            setup(
                ...,
                use_scm_version=myversion,
                ...
            )
        
        
        Note on testing non-installed versions
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        While the general advice is to test against a installed version,
        some environments require a test prior to install,
        
        .. code::
        
          $ python setup.py egg_info
          $ PYTHONPATH=$PWD:$PWD/src pytest
        
        
        Interaction with Enterprise Distributions
        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        
        Some enterprise distributions like RHEL7 and others
        ship rather old setuptools versions due to various release management details.
        
        On such distributions one might observe errors like:
        
        :code:``setuptools_scm.version.SetuptoolsOutdatedWarning: your setuptools is too old (<12)``
        
        In those case its typically possible to build by using a sdist against ``setuptools_scm<2.0``.
        As those old setuptools versions lack sensible types for versions,
        modern setuptools_scm is unable to support them sensibly.
        
        In case the project you need to build can not be patched to either use old setuptools_scm,
        its still possible to install a more recent version of setuptools in order to handle the build
        and/or install the package by using wheels or eggs.
        
        
        
        
        Code of Conduct
        ---------------
        
        Everyone interacting in the ``setuptools_scm`` project's codebases, issue
        trackers, chat rooms, and mailing lists is expected to follow the
        `PyPA Code of Conduct`_.
        
        .. _PyPA Code of Conduct: https://www.pypa.io/en/latest/code-of-conduct/
        
        Security Contact
        ================
        
        To report a security vulnerability, please use the
        `Tidelift security contact <https://tidelift.com/security>`_.
        Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure.
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Version Control
Classifier: Topic :: System :: Software Distribution
Classifier: Topic :: Utilities
Requires-Python: !=3.0.*,!=3.1.*,!=3.2.*,!=3.3.*,!=3.4.*,>=2.7
Provides-Extra: toml
