The macro already checks if pyproject.toml exists and echoes the dependency
on python3dist(toml) early. This adds an else branch to echo the default backend.
For projects without pyproject.toml, the number of installation rounds
is reduced. Previously:
1. (python3-devel +) pip + packaging
2. setuptools + wheel
3. ...
Now:
1. (python3-devel +) pip + packaging + setuptools + wheel
2. ...
This duplicates the information about the default build backend,
because the script still needs to handle projects with pyproject.toml without
an explicit build backend option.
Hence, the script was not adapted (except a comment).
The macro checks if pyproject.toml exists and echoes the dependency early.
For projects with pyproject.toml, this saves one installation round.
Previously, the installation steps by %generate_buildrequires were:
1. (python3-devel +) pip + packaging
2. toml
3. parsed dependencies from pyproject.toml
4. ...
Now they are:
1. (python3-devel +) pip + packaging + toml
2. parsed dependencies from pyproject.toml
3. ...
For projects without pyproject.toml, the number of rounds remains the same:
1. (python3-devel +) pip + packaging
2. setuptools + wheel
3. ...
This is also more consistent:
The Python script now only outputs dependencies of the probed project,
it no longer partially outputs dependencies for itself.
This is done to avoid troubles with %lang files listed as duplicated.
1. It gets rid of a warning
2. It fixes a problem described in:
http://lists.rpm.org/pipermail/rpm-list/2020-November/002041.html
This is a backwards incompatible change,
packages that rename or remove the installed files after %pyproject_install
might no longer be compatible with %pyproject_save_files.
Previously, we have used `grep -v` to assert something is *not* there.
However, that doesn't work. See for example this file:
$ cat TEST
line1
line2
line3
$ grep -v line4 TEST
line1
line2
line3
$ echo $?
0
This gives a false sense of correctness, however it exits will 0 with anything:
$ grep -v line3 TEST
line1
line2
$ echo $?
0
Instead, we use `! grep` now:
$ ! grep line4 TEST
$ echo $?
0
$ ! grep line3 TEST
line3
$ echo $?
1
Additionally, remove a trailing slash from one of the checks to match both cases
(with or without the slash).
The PEP 517 shows an example backend-path like this:
[build-system]
# Defined by PEP 518:
requires = ["flit"]
# Defined by this PEP:
build-backend = "local_backend"
backend-path = ["backend"]
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0517/#source-trees
See that backend-path is a list. Our code previously only supported string path.
Obviously a string path is wrong, but we keep it to support projects that have
made the mistake, such as flit-core.
Add a small integration test for both cases.
Note that the new spec files deliberately don't do much, to save CI time.
An empty line happens when there are not deps:
Handling from tox --print-deps-only: <toxname>
WARNING: Skipping invalid requirement:
Parse error at "''": Expected W:(abcd...)
According to PEP 627, the RECORD file is optional and
doesn't make sense to keep it for system packages. Moreover,
its absence should indicate to other tools like pip that
they should not touch such packages.
Now, we process content of all RECORD files to one
pyproject-record (JSON) which is then used in
%pyproject_save_files. That way, we can remove the original
files in %pyproject_install and keep their content for
later.
PEP 627: https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0627/#optional-record-file
If not checked, installing runtime requirements might fail.
When a requirement is specified in setuptools' setup_requires:
setup(
...
setup_requires=["pytest-runner"],
)
It is part of the get_requires_for_build_wheel hook output.
When runtime requirements are parsed with setuptools without all setup_requires
present, it tries to get them from the internet (at least on Fedora 33).
By checking the requirements after installing "requires_for_build_wheel",
we make sure all setup_requires are already installed.
When runtime requirements are not installed, this adds an unneeded check,
but the script would end at that point anyway, so there is no real difference.
This change introduces code from pyreq2rpm, a tested set of
requirement conversion functions used in pyp2rpm and rpm's
pythondistdeps.
This adds support for the '~=' operator and wildcards.
Pros:
- projects without pyproject.toml will have 1 less dependency
- toml will be buildable with pyproject-rpm-macros out of the box
- easier bootstrap sequence (in theory)
Cons:
- projects with pyproject.toml will have 1 more %generate_buildrequires round
In %pyproject_buildrequires, don't run python with -I but -s.
This allows projects used by the script itself, such as packaging or toml,
to be packaged using the macros, using "self" -- i.e. the code from $PWD.
%pyproject_install currently has:
`pathfix%{python3_version}.py -pni "%{__python3}" -k%{?py3_shbang_opts: -a%{py3_shbang_opts_nodash}} %{buildroot}%{_bindir}/*`
We should replace it with `%py3_shebang_fix %{buildroot}%{_bindir}/*` which expands to:
~~~~
if [ -f /usr/bin/pathfix%{python3_version}.py ]; then
pathfix=/usr/bin/pathfix%{python3_version}.py
else
# older versions of Python don't have it and must BR /usr/bin/pathfix.py from python3-devel explicitly
pathfix=/usr/bin/pathfix.py
fi
$pathfix -pni %{__python3} -k%{?py3_shebang_flags:a %py3_shebang_flags}} %{buildroot}%{_bindir}/*
~~~~
Mainly so that we:
- switch to %py3_shebang_flags
- have only one place to fix the invocation
Fixes: rhbz#1868347