PEP 365 – Adding the pkg_resources module
- Author:
- Phillip J. Eby <pje at telecommunity.com>
- Status:
- Rejected
- Type:
- Standards Track
- Topic:
- Packaging
- Created:
- 30-Apr-2007
- Post-History:
- 30-Apr-2007
Table of Contents
Abstract
This PEP proposes adding an enhanced version of the pkg_resources
module to the standard library.
pkg_resources
is a module used to find and manage Python
package/version dependencies and access bundled files and resources,
including those inside of zipped .egg
files. Currently,
pkg_resources
is only available through installing the entire
setuptools
distribution, but it does not depend on any other part
of setuptools; in effect, it comprises the entire runtime support
library for Python Eggs, and is independently useful.
In addition, with one feature addition, this module could support
easy bootstrap installation of several Python package management
tools, including setuptools
, workingenv
, and zc.buildout
.
Proposal
Rather than proposing to include setuptools
in the standard
library, this PEP proposes only that pkg_resources
be added to the
standard library for Python 2.6 and 3.0. pkg_resources
is
considerably more stable than the rest of setuptools, with virtually
no new features being added in the last 12 months.
However, this PEP also proposes that a new feature be added to
pkg_resources
, before being added to the stdlib. Specifically, it
should be possible to do something like:
python -m pkg_resources SomePackage==1.2
to request downloading and installation of SomePackage
from PyPI.
This feature would not be a replacement for easy_install
;
instead, it would rely on SomePackage
having pure-Python .egg
files listed for download via the PyPI XML-RPC API, and the eggs would
be placed in the $PYTHON_EGG_CACHE
directory, where they would
not be importable by default. (And no scripts would be installed.)
However, if the download egg contains installation bootstrap code, it
will be given a chance to run.
These restrictions would allow the code to be extremely simple, yet
still powerful enough to support users downloading package management
tools such as setuptools
, workingenv
and zc.buildout
,
simply by supplying the tool’s name on the command line.
Rationale
Many users have requested that setuptools
be included in the
standard library, to save users needing to go through the awkward
process of bootstrapping it. However, most of the bootstrapping
complexity comes from the fact that setuptools-installed code cannot
use the pkg_resources
runtime module unless setuptools is already
installed. Thus, installing setuptools requires (in a sense) that
setuptools already be installed.
Other Python package management tools, such as workingenv
and
zc.buildout
, have similar bootstrapping issues, since they both
make use of setuptools, but also want to provide users with something
approaching a “one-step install”. The complexity of creating bootstrap
utilities for these and any other such tools that arise in future, is
greatly reduced if pkg_resources
is already present, and is also
able to download pre-packaged eggs from PyPI.
(It would also mean that setuptools would not need to be installed in order to simply use eggs, as opposed to building them.)
Finally, in addition to providing access to eggs built via setuptools
or other packaging tools, it should be noted that since Python 2.5,
the distutils install package metadata (aka PKG-INFO
) files that
can be read by pkg_resources
to identify what distributions are
already on sys.path
. In environments where Python packages are
installed using system package tools (like RPM), the pkg_resources
module provides an API for detecting what versions of what packages
are installed, even if those packages were installed via the distutils
instead of setuptools.
Implementation and Documentation
The pkg_resources
implementation is maintained in the Python
SVN repository under /sandbox/trunk/setuptools/
; see
pkg_resources.py
and pkg_resources.txt
. Documentation for the
egg format(s) supported by pkg_resources
can be found in
doc/formats.txt
. HTML versions of these documents are available
at:
- http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/PkgResources and
- http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/EggFormats
(These HTML versions are for setuptools 0.6; they may not reflect all
of the changes found in the Subversion trunk’s .txt
versions.)
Copyright
This document has been placed in the public domain.
Source: https://github.com/python/peps/blob/main/pep-0365.txt
Last modified: 2022-06-14 21:22:20 GMT