This project is merged with skeleton. What is skeleton? It's the scaffolding of a Python project jaraco introduced in his blog. It seeks to provide a means to re-use techniques and inherit advances when managing projects for distribution.
While maintaining dozens of projects in PyPI, jaraco derives best practices for project distribution and publishes them in the skeleton repo, a git repo capturing the evolution and culmination of these best practices.
It's intended to be used by a new or existing project to adopt these practices and honed and proven techniques. Adopters are encouraged to use the project directly and maintain a small deviation from the technique, make their own fork for more substantial changes unique to their environment or preferences, or simply adopt the skeleton once and abandon it thereafter.
The primary advantage to using an SCM for maintaining these techniques is that those tools help facilitate the merge between the template and its adopting projects.
Another advantage to using an SCM-managed approach is that tools like GitHub recognize that a change in the skeleton is the same change across all projects that merge with that skeleton. Without the ancestry, with a traditional copy/paste approach, a commit like this would produce notifications in the upstream project issue for each and every application, but because it's centralized, GitHub provides just the one notification when the change is added to the skeleton.
To use skeleton for a new project, simply pull the skeleton into a new project:
$ git init my-new-project
$ cd my-new-project
$ git pull gh://jaraco/skeleton
Now customize the project to suit your individual project needs.
If you have an existing project, you can still incorporate the skeleton by merging it into the codebase.
$ git merge skeleton --allow-unrelated-histories
The --allow-unrelated-histories
is necessary because the history from the skeleton was previously unrelated to the existing codebase. Resolve any merge conflicts and commit to the master, and now the project is based on the shared skeleton.
Whenever a change is needed or desired for the general technique for packaging, it can be made in the skeleton project and then merged into each of the derived projects as needed, recommended before each release. As a result, features and best practices for packaging are centrally maintained and readily trickle into a whole suite of packages. This technique lowers the amount of tedious work necessary to create or maintain a project, and coupled with other techniques like continuous integration and deployment, lowers the cost of creating and maintaining refined Python projects to just a few, familiar git operations.
Thereafter, the target project can make whatever customizations it deems relevant to the scaffolding. The project may even at some point decide that the divergence is too great to merit renewed merging with the original skeleton. This approach applies maximal guidance while creating minimal constraints.
The features/techniques employed by the skeleton include:
- PEP 517/518 based build relying on setuptools as the build tool
- setuptools declarative configuration using setup.cfg
- tox for running tests
- A README.rst as reStructuredText with some popular badges, but with readthedocs and appveyor badges commented out
- A CHANGES.rst file intended for publishing release notes about the project
- Use of black for code formatting (disabled on unsupported Python 3.5 and earlier)
A pyproject.toml is included to enable PEP 517 and PEP 518 compatibility and declares the requirements necessary to build the project on setuptools (a minimum version compatible with setup.cfg declarative config).
The setup.cfg file implements the following features:
- Assumes universal wheel for release
- Advertises the project's LICENSE file (MIT by default)
- Reads the README.rst file into the long description
- Some common Trove classifiers
- Includes all packages discovered in the repo
- Data files in the package are also included (not just Python files)
- Declares the required Python versions
- Declares install requirements (empty by default)
- Declares setup requirements for legacy environments
- Supplies two 'extras':
- testing: requirements for running tests
- docs: requirements for building docs
- these extras split the declaration into "upstream" (requirements as declared by the skeleton) and "local" (those specific to the local project); these markers help avoid merge conflicts
- Placeholder for defining entry points
Additionally, the setup.py file declares use_scm_version
which relies on setuptools_scm to do two things:
- derive the project version from SCM tags
- ensure that all files committed to the repo are automatically included in releases
The skeleton assumes the developer has tox installed. The developer is expected to run tox
to run tests on the current Python version using pytest.
Other environments (invoked with tox -e {name}
) supplied include:
- a
build-docs
environment to build the documentation - a
release
environment to publish the package to PyPI
A pytest.ini is included to define common options around running tests. In particular:
- rely on default test discovery in the current directory
- avoid recursing into common directories not containing tests
- run doctests on modules and invoke flake8 tests
- in doctests, allow unicode literals and regular literals to match, allowing for doctests to run on Python 2 and 3. Also enable ELLIPSES, a default that would be undone by supplying the prior option.
- filters out known warnings caused by libraries/functionality included by the skeleton
Relies a .flake8 file to correct some default behaviors:
- disable mutually incompatible rules W503 and W504
- support for black format
The project is pre-configured to run tests in Travis-CI (.travis.yml). Any new project must be enabled either through their web site or with the travis enable
command. In addition to running tests, an additional deploy stage is configured to automatically release tagged commits. The username and password for PyPI must be configured for each project using the travis
command and only after the travis project is created. As releases are cut with twine, the two values are supplied through the TWINE_USERNAME
and TWINE_PASSWORD
. To configure the latter as a secret, run the following command:
echo "TWINE_PASSWORD={password}" | travis encrypt
Or disable it in the CI definition and configure it through the web UI.
Features include:
- test against Python 2 and 3
- run on Ubuntu Xenial
- correct for broken IPv6
Also provided is a minimal template for running under Appveyor (Windows).
Documentation is automatically built by Read the Docs when the project is registered with it, by way of the .readthedocs.yml file. To test the docs build manually, a tox env may be invoked as tox -e build-docs
. Both techniques rely on the dependencies declared in setup.cfg/options.extras_require.docs
.
In addition to building the sphinx docs scaffolded in docs/
, the docs build a history.html
file that first injects release dates and hyperlinks into the CHANGES.rst before incorporating it as history in the docs.
By default, tagged commits are released through the continuous integration deploy stage.