Switch Djblets's packaging to pyproject.toml.
Review Request #14137 — Created Sept. 3, 2024 and submitted — Latest diff uploaded
Djblets has historically been a setuptools-based project, relying
heavily on the dynamic ability ofsetup.py. Over the years, the Python
ecosystem has moved topyproject.tomlfiles, with pluggable build
backends. This has reached a point of maturity, andpipwill soon
remove support for installing either production or editable installs
from a legacy source tree.In theory, modernization requires just providing a
pyproject.tomlthat
specifiessetuptoolsas a build backend. A project can still use
setup.pyfor the project definition and dynamic capabilities. However,
since packages are also now built in a virtualenv, it's become clear
that we needed to address about our packaging.We now use
pyproject.tomlto define most of the metadata of the
package. The build backend is then a specialization of
setuptools.build_meta, living inbuild-backend.pyat the root of the
tree. This specializes a few things about our build process:
It uses all of Djblets's dependencies as build-system dependencies,
needed in order to build static media for the package.It builds the static media, including them in both sdist and wheel
distributions.It writes out a
package-requirements.txtat build time with the
dependencies fromdjblets/dependencies.py, which setuptools can
then consume. This is also bundled in the sdist.With this, we no longer need
setup.py, and constrain all custom logic
tobuild-backend.py.Some things to note:
python -m build .will default to building an sdist and then a
wheel from that sdist, whereasbuild . -wwill build a wheel
straight from the tree. Due to differences in the prep stages, and
what's built from what, we need to micromanage some state (like
package-requirements.txt) in different places.Other build backends (hatch, PDM, flit, and poetry) were evaluated
and discarded. These are great backends, but don't solve the core
problems we've had to work around out of the box, and sort of want to
manage more of the development and build process.setuptoolsis a
known entity for us, and will be needed for extension packaging
anyway, so we're sticking with it.
Makefileinstalls the package in editable-compat mode. This uses
standard.pthfiles instead of newersetuptools-based import
hooks, in order to allowmypyandpyrightto find type
definitions. See https://github.com/python/mypy/issues/13392 and
https://github.com/pypa/setuptools/issues/3518.
Tested isolated builds in the following setups:
python -m build .(builds sdist, then a wheel from the sdist)python -m build . -s(builds sdist)python -m build . -w(builds wheel)
Tested isolated editable installs using pip install -e . and
non-isolated editable installs using pip install -e --no-build-isolation
and with make develop.
Performed full tree diffs of generated wheels from ./setup.py bdist_wheel
(prior to this change) and both wheel-producing python -m build methods.
Verified that all content was identical, with the exception of differences
in source map paths and some modern metadata for the package.