PEP 633 – Dependency specification in pyproject.toml using an exploded TOML table | peps.python.org
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PEP 633 – Dependency specification in pyproject.toml using an exploded TOML table
PEP 633 – Dependency specification in pyproject.toml using an exploded TOML table
Author
:
Laurie Opperman <laurie_opperman at hotmail.com>,
Arun Babu Neelicattu <arun.neelicattu at gmail.com>
Sponsor
:
Brett Cannon <brett at python.org>
Discussions-To
:
Discourse thread
Status
:
Rejected
Type
:
Standards Track
Topic
:
Packaging
Created
:
02-Sep-2020
Post-History
:
02-Sep-2020
Resolution
:
Discourse message
Table of Contents
This PEP has been rejected in favour of PEP 631 due to its popularity,
consistency with the existing usage of PEP 508 strings, and compatibility
with existing packaging tool suites.
This PEP specifies how to write a project’s dependencies in a
pyproject.toml file for packaging-related tools to consume using the fields
defined in PEP 621, as an alternative to the PEP 508-based approach
defined in PEP 631.
There are multiple benefits to using TOML tables and other data-types to
represent requirements rather than PEP 508 strings:
- Easy initial validation via the TOML syntax.
- Easy secondary validation using a schema, for example a JSON Schema.
- Potential for users to guess the keys of given features, rather than
memorising a syntax.
- Users of multiple other popular languages may already be familiar with the
TOML syntax.
- TOML directly represents the same data structures as in JSON, and therefore a
sub-set of Python literals, so users can understand the hierarchy and type of
value
Most of this is taken from discussions in the PEP 621 dependencies topic.
This has elements from Pipfile, Poetry, Dart’s dependencies and
Rust’s Cargo. A comparison document shows advantages and disadvantages
between this format and PEP 508-style specifiers.
In the specification of multiple requirements with the same distribution name
(where environment markers choose the appropriate dependency), the chosen
solution is similar to Poetry’s, where an array of requirements is allowed.
The direct-reference keys closely align with and utilise PEP 610 and
PEP 440 as to reduce differences in the packaging ecosystem and rely on
previous work in specification.
As in PEP 621, if metadata is improperly specified then tools MUST raise an
error. The metadata MUST conform to the TOML specification.
To reduce confusion with this document being a specification for specifying
dependencies, the word “requirement” is used to mean a PEP 508 dependency
specification.
The following tables are added to the project table specified in
PEP 621.
Format: table
The keys inside this table are the names of the required distribution. The
values can have one of the following types:
- string: the requirement is defined only by a version requirement, with same
specification as version in the requirement table, except allowing the
empty string "" to place no restriction on the version.
- table: a requirement table.
- array: an array of requirement tables. It is an error to specify an empty
array [] as a value.
The keys of the requirement table are as follows (all are optional):
- version (string): a PEP 440 version specifier, which is a
comma-delimited list of version specifier clauses. The string MUST be
non-empty.
- extras (array of strings): a list of PEP 508 extras declarations for
the distribution. The list MUST be non-empty.
- markers (string): a PEP 508 environment marker expression. The string
MUST be non-empty.
- url (string): the URL of the artifact to install and satisfy the
requirement. Note that file:// is the prefix used for packages to be
retrieved from the local filesystem.
- git, hg, bzr or svn (string): the URL of a VCS repository
(as specified in PEP 440)
to clone, whose tree will be installed to satisfy the requirement. Further
VCS keys will be added via amendments to PEP 610, however tools MAY opt to
support other VCS’s using their command-line command prior to the acceptance
of the amendment.
- revision (string): the identifier for a specific revision of the
specified VCS repository to check-out before installation. Users MUST only
provide this when one of git, hg, bzr, svn, or another VCS
key is used to identify the distribution to install. Revision identifiers are
suggested in PEP 610.
At most one of the following keys can be specified simultaneously, as they
logically conflict with each other in the requirement: version, url,
git, hg, bzr, svn, and any other VCS key.
An empty requirement table {} places no restriction on the requirement, in
addition to the empty string "".
Any keys provided which are not specified in this document MUST cause an error
in parsing.
Format: table
The keys inside this table are the names of an extra’s required distribution.
The values can have one of the following types:
- table: a requirement table.
- array: an array of requirement tables.
These requirement tables have
the same specification as above, with the addition of
the following required key:
- for-extra (string): the name of the PEP 508 extra that this
requirement is required for.
Tools will need to convert this format to PEP 508 requirement strings. Below
is an example implementation of that conversion (assuming validation is already
performed):
def convert_requirement_to_pep508(name, requirement):
if isinstance(requirement, str):
requirement = {"version": requirement}
pep508 = name
if "extras" in requirement:
pep508 += " [" + ", ".join(requirement["extras"]) + "]"
if "version" in requirement:
pep508 += " " + requirement["version"]
if "url" in requirement:
pep508 += " @ " + requirement["url"]
for vcs in ("git", "hg", "bzr", "svn"):
if vcs in requirement:
pep508 += " @ " + vcs + "+" + requirement[vcs]
if "revision" in requirement:
pep508 += "@" + requirement["revision"]
extra = None
if "for-extra" in requirement:
extra = requirement["for-extra"]
if "markers" in requirement:
markers = requirement["markers"]
if extra:
markers = "extra = '" + extra + "' and (" + markers + ")"
pep508 += "; " + markers
return pep508, extra
def convert_requirements_to_pep508(dependencies):
pep508s = []
extras = set()
for name, req in dependencies.items():
if isinstance(req, list):
for sub_req in req:
pep508, extra = convert_requirement_to_pep508(name, sub_req)
pep508s.append(pep508)
if extra:
extras.add(extra)
else:
pep508, extra = convert_requirement_to_pep508(name, req)
pep508s.append(pep508)
if extra:
extras.add(extra)
return pep508s, extras
def convert_project_requirements_to_pep508(project):
reqs, _ = convert_requirements_to_pep508(project.get("dependencies", {}))
optional_reqs, extras = convert_requirements_to_pep508(
project.get("optional-dependencies", {})
)
reqs += optional_reqs
return reqs, extras
For initial validation, a JSON-schema can be used. Not only does this help
tools have a consistent validation, but it allows code editors to highlight
validation errors as users are building the dependencies list.
{
"$id": "spam",
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#",
"title": "Project metadata",
"type": "object",
"definitions": {
"requirementTable": {
"title": "Full project dependency specification",
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"extras": {
"title": "Dependency extras",
"type": "array",
"items": {
"title": "Dependency extra",
"type": "string"
}
},
"markers": {
"title": "Dependency environment markers",
"type": "string"
}
},
"propertyNames": {
"enum": [
"extras",
"markers",
"version",
"url",
"git",
"hg",
"bzr",
"svn",
"for-extra"
]
},
"oneOf": [
{
"title": "Version requirement",
"properties": {
"version": {
"title": "Version",
"type": "string"
}
}
},
{
"title": "URL requirement",
"properties": {
"url": {
"title": "URL",
"type": "string",
"format": "uri"
}
},
"required": [
"url"
]
},
{
"title": "VCS requirement",
"properties": {
"revision": {
"title": "VCS repository revision",
"type": "string"
}
},
"oneOf": [
{
"title": "Git repository",
"properties": {
"git": {
"title": "Git URL",
"type": "string",
"format": "uri"
}
},
"required": [
"git"
]
},
{
"title": "Mercurial repository",
"properties": {
"hg": {
"title": "Mercurial URL",
"type": "string",
"format": "uri"
}
},
"required": [
"hg"
]
},
{
"title": "Bazaar repository",
"properties": {
"bzr": {
"title": "Bazaar URL",
"type": "string",
"format": "uri"
}
},
"required": [
"bzr"
]
},
{
"title": "Subversion repository",
"properties": {
"svn": {
"title": "Subversion URL",
"type": "string",
"format": "uri"
}
},
"required": [
"svn"
]
}
]
}
]
},
"requirementVersion": {
"title": "Version project dependency specification",
"type": "string"
},
"requirement": {
"title": "Project dependency specification",
"oneOf": [
{
"$ref": "#/definitions/requirementVersion"
},
{
"$ref": "#/definitions/requirementTable"
},
{
"title": "Multiple specifications",
"type": "array",
"items": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/requirementTable"
},
"minLength": 1
}
]
},
"optionalRequirementTable": {
"title": "Project optional dependency specification table",
"allOf": [
{
"$ref": "#/definitions/requirementTable"
},
{
"properties": {
"for-extra": {
"title": "Dependency's extra",
"type": "string"
}
},
"required": [
"for-extra"
]
}
]
},
"optionalRequirement": {
"title": "Project optional dependency specification",
"oneOf": [
{
"$ref": "#/definitions/optionalRequirementTable"
},
{
"title": "Multiple specifications",
"type": "array",
"items": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/optionalRequirementTable"
},
"minLength": 1
}
]
}
},
"properties": {
"dependencies": {
"title": "Project dependencies",
"type": "object",
"additionalProperties": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/requirement"
}
},
"optional-dependencies": {
"title": "Project dependencies",
"type": "object",
"additionalProperties": {
"$ref": "#/definitions/optionalRequirement"
}
}
}
}
Full artificial example:
[project.dependencies]
flask = { }
django = { }
requests = { version = ">= 2.8.1, == 2.8.*", extras = ["security", "tests"], markers = "python_version < '2.7'" }
pip = { url = "https://github.com/pypa/pip/archive/1.3.1.zip" }
sphinx = { git = "ssh://git@github.com/sphinx-doc/sphinx.git" }
numpy = "~=1.18"
pytest = [
{ version = "<6", markers = "python_version < '3.5'" },
{ version = ">=6", markers = "python_version >= '3.5'" },
]
[project.optional-dependencies]
pytest-timout = { for-extra = "dev" }
pytest-mock = [
{ version = "<6", markers = "python_version < '3.5'", for-extra = "dev" },
{ version = ">=6", markers = "python_version >= '3.5'", for-extra = "dev" },
]
In homage to PEP 631, the following is an equivalent dependencies
specification for docker-compose:
[project.dependencies]
cached-property = ">= 1.2.0, < 2"
distro = ">= 1.2.0, < 2"
docker = { extras = ["ssh"], version = ">= 4.2.2, < 5" }
docopt = ">= 0.6.1, < 1"
jsonschema = ">= 2.5.1, < 4"
PyYAML = ">= 3.10, < 6"
python-dotenv = ">= 0.13.0, < 1"
requests = ">= 2.20.0, < 3"
texttable = ">= 0.9.0, < 2"
websocket-client = ">= 0.32.0, < 1"
# Conditional
"backports.shutil_get_terminal_size" = { version = "== 1.0.0", markers = "python_version < '3.3'" }
"backports.ssl_match_hostname" = { version = ">= 3.5, < 4", markers = "python_version < '3.5'" }
colorama = { version = ">= 0.4, < 1", markers = "sys_platform == 'win32'" }
enum34 = { version = ">= 1.0.4, < 2", markers = "python_version < '3.4'" }
ipaddress = { version = ">= 1.0.16, < 2", markers = "python_version < '3.3'" }
subprocess32 = { version = ">= 3.5.4, < 4", markers = "python_version < '3.2'" }
[project.optional-dependencies]
PySocks = { version = ">= 1.5.6, != 1.5.7, < 2", for-extra = "socks" }
ddt = { version = ">= 1.2.2, < 2", for-extra = "tests" }
pytest = { version = "< 6", for-extra = "tests" }
mock = { version = ">= 1.0.1, < 4", markers = "python_version < '3.4'", for-extra = "tests" }
The authors of this PEP recognise that various tools need to both read
from and write to this format for dependency specification. This section
aims to provide direct comparison with and examples for translating to/from
the currently used standard, PEP 508.
Note
For simplicity and clarity, various ways in which TOML allows you to specify each
specification is not represented. These examples use the standard inline representation.
For example, while following are considered equivalent in TOML, we choose the
second form for the examples in this section.
aiohttp.version = "== 3.6.2"
aiohttp = { version = "== 3.6.2" }
No Version Constraint
Simple Version Constraint
aiohttp >= 3.6.2, < 4.0.0
aiohttp = { version = ">= 3.6.2, < 4.0.0" }
Note
This can, for conciseness, be also represented as a string.
aiohttp = ">= 3.6.2, < 4.0.0"
URL Dependency
aiohttp @ https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/97/d1/1cc7a1f84097d7abdc6c09ee8d2260366f081f8e82da36ebb22a25cdda9f/aiohttp-3.6.2-cp35-cp35m-macosx_10_13_x86_64.whl
aiohttp = { url = "https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/97/d1/1cc7a1f84097d7abdc6c09ee8d2260366f081f8e82da36ebb22a25cdda9f/aiohttp-3.6.2-cp35-cp35m-macosx_10_13_x86_64.whl" }
VCS Dependency
aiohttp @ git+ssh://git@github.com/aio-libs/aiohttp.git@master
aiohttp = { git = "ssh://git@github.com/aio-libs/aiohttp.git", revision = "master" }
aiohttp >= 3.6.1; python_version >= '3.8'
aiohttp = { version = ">= 3.6.1", markers = "python_version >= '3.8'" }
A slightly extended example of the above, where a particular version of aiohttp is required based on the interpreter version.
aiohttp >= 3.6.1; python_version >= '3.8'
aiohttp >= 3.0.0, < 3.6.1; python_version < '3.8'
aiohttp = [
{ version = ">= 3.6.1", markers = "python_version >= '3.8'" },
{ version = ">= 3.0.0, < 3.6.1", markers = "python_version < '3.8'" }
]
Specifying dependency for a package extra
aiohttp >= 3.6.2; extra == 'http'
aiohttp = { version = ">= 3.6.2", for-extra = "http" }
Using extras from a dependency
aiohttp [speedups] >= 3.6.2
aiohttp = { version = ">= 3.6.2", extras = ["speedups"] }
Version Constraint
aiohttp [speedups] >= 3.6.2; python_version >= '3.8' and extra == 'http'
aiohttp = { version = ">= 3.6.2", extras = ["speedups"], markers = "python_version >= '3.8'", for-extra = "http" }
Direct Reference (VCS)
aiohttp [speedups] @ git+ssh://git@github.com/aio-libs/aiohttp.git@master ; python_version >= '3.8' and extra == 'http'
aiohttp = { git = "ssh://git@github.com/aio-libs/aiohttp.git", revision = "master", extras = ["speedups"], markers = "python_version >= '3.8'", for-extra = "http" }
Use an array instead of a table in order to have each element only be a table
(with a name key) and no arrays of requirement tables. This was very
verbose and restrictive in the TOML format, and having multiple requirements
for a given distribution isn’t very common.
Remove the optional-dependencies table in favour of both including an
optional key in the requirement and an extras table which specifies
which (optional) requirements are needed for a project’s extra. This reduces
the number of table with the same specification (to 1) and allows for
requirements to be specified once but used in multiple extras, but distances
some of the requirement’s properties (which extra(s) it belongs to), groups
required and optional dependencies together (possibly mixed), and there may not
be a simple way to choose a requirement when a distribution has multiple
requirements. This was rejected as optional-dependencies has already been
used in the PEP 621 draft.
Include the direct-reference keys in a direct table, have the VCS specified
as the value of a vcs key. This was more explicit and easier to include in
a JSON-schema validation, but was decided to be too verbose and not as
readable.
Include hash in direct-reference requirements. This was only for package
lock-files, and didn’t really have a place in the project’s metadata.
Have the optional-dependencies be a table of dependency tables for each
extra, with the table name being the extra’s name. This made
optional-dependencies a different type (table of tables of requirements)
from dependencies (table of requirements), which could be jarring for users
and harder to parse.
Make each PEP 508 environment marker as a key (or child-table key) in
the requirement. This arguably increases readability and ease of parsing.
The markers key would still be allowed for more advanced specification,
with which the key-specified environment markers are and’d with the
result of. This was deferred as more design needs to be undertaken.
Replace the for-extra key with for-extras, with the value being an
array of extras which the requirement satisfies. This reduces some
duplication, but in this case that duplication makes explicit which extras
have which dependencies.
This document is placed in the public domain or under the
CC0-1.0-Universal license, whichever is more permissive.
Contents
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Last modified: 2025-02-01 08:55:40 UTC