Distribution Types

The fundamental abstraction provided by this pacakge is the Distribution base class. Implementations exist for specific cases: source distributions, binary distributions, installed pakcages, and development checkouts.

>>> from pkginfo import Distribution
>>> from pkginfo import SDist
>>> assert issubclass(SDist, Distribution)
>>> from pkginfo import UnpackedSDist
>>> assert issubclass(UnpackedSDist, SDist)
>>> from pkginfo import BDist
>>> assert issubclass(BDist, Distribution)
>>> from pkginfo import Wheel
>>> assert issubclass(Wheel, Distribution)
>>> from pkginfo import Installed
>>> assert issubclass(Installed, Distribution)
>>> from pkginfo import Develop
>>> assert issubclass(Develop, Distribution)

Introspecting Source Distributions

SDist objects are created from a filesystem path to the corresponding archive, which should have been created via the sdist command from distutils:

>>> mypackage = SDist('docs/examples/mypackage-0.1.tar.gz')

After creation, the SDist instance will have attributes corrsponding the the fields defined in the PEP corresponding to the metadata version, lower-cased and transliterated into valid Python identifiers by mapping hyphens to underscores. E.g.:

>>> print mypackage.metadata_version
1.0
>>> print mypackage.name
mypackage
>>> print mypackage.version
0.1

Fields which are optional under the PEP, and which have no value set in their PKG-INFO, will map to the value None:

>>> print mypackage.keywords
None

Fields which are marked “multiple use” under the PEP map onto sequences; their names are pluralized to indicate the sequence. “Multiple use” fields with no occurences in the PKG-INFO file will map onto an empty sequence:

>>> print list(mypackage.supported_platforms)
[]

See Metadata Versions for an example with a non-empty, “multiple-use” field.

Introspecting Unpacked Source Distributions

You can also introspect a previously-unpacked package with UnpackedSDist either by passing it the path to the unpacked package, or by passing it the setup.py at the top level:

>>> mypackage = UnpackedSDist('docs/examples/mypackage-0.1')
>>> print mypackage.name
mypackage
>>> myotherpackage = UnpackedSDist('docs/examples/mypackage-0.1/setup.py')
>>> print myotherpackage.name
mypackage

UnpackedSDist objects are most useful in conjuction with distutils to produce sdists that want complex behavior for determining what metadata to use; these sdists normally break when installed with pip, because metadata in an sdist is regenerated when pip installed. You can achieve this in your setup.py as follows:

>>> from setuptools import dist, setup
>>> dist.Distribution(dict(setup_requires='pkginfo'))
>>> from pkginfo import UnpackedSDist

>>> try:
...     d = UnpackedSDist(__file__)
...     VERSION = d.version
... except ValueError:
...     VERSION = (version_from_source_control() or
...                os.getenv('VERSION', '1.0'))
>>> setup(name='mypackage', version=VERSION)

Introspecting Binary Distributions

BDist objects are created from the filename, which should have been generated via setup.py bdist_egg.

>>> mypackage = BDist('docs/examples/mypackage-0.1-py2.6.egg')

After that, they have the same metadata as other Distribution objects,

Introspecting Wheels

Wheel objects are created from the filename, which should have been generated via setup.py bdist_wheel.

>>> mypackage = Wheel('docs/examples/mypackage-0.1-cp26-none-linux_x86_64.whl')

After that, they have the same metadata as other Distribution objects,

Introspecting Installed Packages

Installed objects are created from either a module object or its dotted name. Note that this feature only works in Python 2.6 or later: earlier Python versions did not record PKG-INFO for installed packages.

>>> import sys
>>> if sys.version_info >= (2,6):
...    dotted = Installed('pkginfo')
...    import pkginfo
...    direct = Installed(pkginfo)

After that, they have the same metadata as other Distribution objects, assuming that the package on which they were based has a discoverable ‘.egg-info’ file / directory. To be discoverable, the ‘.egg-info’ must either be located inside the package (e.g., created via setup.py develop under setuptools), or adjacent to the package (e.g., created via setup.py instlall).

Introspecting Development Checkouts

Develop objects are created from a path to a checkout containing a PKG-iNFO file, e.g., created by running setup.py develop under setuptools.

>>> develop = Develop('.')

After that, they have the same metadata as other Distribution objects.