How do control what files are included in a wheel? It appears MANIFEST.in
isn't used by python setup.py bdist_wheel
.
UPDATE:
I was wrong about the difference between installing from a source tarball vs a wheel. The source distribution includes files specified in MANIFEST.in
, but the installed package only has python files. Steps are needed to identify additional files that should be installed, whether the install is via source distribution, egg, or wheel. Namely, package_data is needed for additional package files, and data_files for files outside your package like command line scripts or system config files.
I have a project where I've been using python setup.py sdist
to build my package, MANIFEST.in
to control the files included and excluded, and pyroma and check-manifest to confirm my settings.
I recently converted it to dual Python 2 / 3 code, and added a setup.cfg with
[bdist_wheel]
universal = 1
I can build a wheel with python setup.py bdist_wheel
, and it appears to be a universal wheel as desired. However, it doesn't include all of the files specified in MANIFEST.in
.
I dug deeper, and now know more about packaging and wheel. Here's what I learned:
I upload two package files to the multigtfs project on PyPi:
multigtfs-0.4.2.tar.gz
- the source tar ball, which includes all the files in MANIFEST.in
.multigtfs-0.4.2-py2.py3-none-any.whl
- The binary distribution in question.I created two new virtual environments, both with Python 2.7.5, and installed each package (pip install multigtfs-0.4.2.tar.gz
). The two environments are almost identical. They have different .pyc
files, which are the "compiled" Python files. There are log files which record the different paths on disk. The install from the source tar ball includes a folder multigtfs-0.4.2-py27.egg-info
, detailing the installation, and the wheel install has a multigtfs-0.4.2.dist-info
folder, with the details of that process. However, from the point of view of code using the multigtfs project, there is no difference between the two installation methods.
Explicitly, neither has the .zip files used by my test, so the test suite will fail:
$ django-admin startproject demo
$ cd demo
$ pip install psycopg2 # DB driver for PostGIS project
$ createdb demo # Create PostgreSQL database
$ psql -d demo -c "CREATE EXTENSION postgis" # Make it a PostGIS database
$ vi demo/settings.py # Add multigtfs to INSTALLED_APPS,
# Update DATABASE to set ENGINE to django.contrib.gis.db.backends.postgis
# Update DATABASE to set NAME to test
$ ./manage.py test multigtfs.tests # Run the tests
...
IOError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: u'/Users/john/.virtualenvs/test/lib/python2.7/site-packages/multigtfs/tests/fixtures/test3.zip'
Using the suggestions from the answers, I added some additional directives to setup.py
:
from __future__ import unicode_literals
# setup.py now requires some funky binary strings
...
setup(
name='multigtfs',
packages=find_packages(),
package_data={b'multigtfs': ['test/fixtures/*.zip']},
include_package_data=True,
...
)
This installs the zip files (as well as the README) to the folder, and tests now run correctly. Thanks for the suggestions!
Have you tried using package_data
in your setup.py
? MANIFEST.in
seems targetted for python versions <= 2.6, I'm not sure if higher versions even look at it.
After exploring https://github.com/pypa/sampleproject, their MANIFEST.in
says:
# If using Python 2.6 or less, then have to include package data, even though
# it's already declared in setup.py
include sample/*.dat
which seems to imply this method is outdated. Meanwhile, in setup.py
they declare:
setup(
name='sample',
...
# If there are data files included in your packages that need to be
# installed, specify them here. If using Python 2.6 or less, then these
# have to be included in MANIFEST.in as well.
package_data={
'sample': ['package_data.dat'],
},
...
)
(I'm not sure why they chose a wildcard in MANIFEST.in
and a filename in setup.py
. They refer to the same file)
Which, along with being simpler, again seems to imply that the package_data
route is superior to the MANIFEST.in
method. Well, unless you have to support 2.6 that is, in which case my prayers go out to you.