A simple template of Python projects, with a rigid file structure, and predisposition for unit testing and release on PyPi.
- All your project code into a single main package (
skilang/
) - All your project tests into a single test package (
test/
) - Unit testing support via
unittest
- Automatic testing on all branches via GitHub Actions
- Semi-automatic versioning via Git
- Packaging support via
setuptools
- Automatic release on PyPi via GitHub Actions and
semantic-release
- Automatic dependencies updates via Renovate
Overview:
<root directory>
├── skilang/ # main package (should be named after your project)
│ ├── __init__.py # python package marker
│ └── __main__.py # application entry point
├── tests/ # test package (should contain unit tests)
├── .github/ # configuration of GitHub CI
│ └── workflows/ # configuration of GitHub Workflows
│ ├── check.yml # runs tests on multiple OS and versions of Python
│ └── deploy.yml # if check succeeds, and the current branch is one of {main, master}, triggers automatic releas on PyPi
├── LICENSE # license file (Apache 2.0 by default)
├── pyproject.toml # project configuration file as prescribed by Poetry
├── renovate.json # configuration of Renovate bot, for automatic dependency updates
├── requirements.txt # only declares a dependency on Poetry. DO NOT EDIT THIS FILE
└── release.config.js # script to release on PyPi, and GitHub via semantic-release
-
Use this template to create a new GitHub repository, say
skilang
- this name will also be used to identify the package on PyPi
- so, we suggest choosing a name which has not been used on PyPi, yet
- we also suggest choosing a name which is a valid Python package name (i.e.
using_snake_case
)
- this name will also be used to identify the package on PyPi
-
Clone the
skilang
repository -
Open a shell into your local
skilang
directory and run./rename-template.sh skilang
This will coherently rename the template's project name with the one chosen by you (i.e.
skilang
, in this example) -
Commit & push
-
Ensure you like the Apache 2.0 License. If you don't, change the content of the
LICENSE
file -
Ensure the versions-range of Python reported in
pyproject.toml
fits the versions you want to support- currently defaults to
>= 3.9
- if you change this, please also change the versions of Python tests should be run on in CI, by looking the file
.github/workflows/check.yml
- currently defaults to
-
Check the Python version and OS tests should be run on in CI, by looking the file
.github/workflows/check.yml
-
Add your runtime, development, and build dependencies to
pyproject.toml
-
Check the other metadata in
pyproject.toml
-
Change the assignee for pull-requests for automatic dependency updates by editing
renovate.json
- currently defaults to @gciatto
-
Add your PyPi credentials as secrets of the GitHub repository
PYPI_USERNAME
(resp.PYPI_PASSWORD
) for your username (resp. password)- this may require you to register on PyPi first
-
Generate a GitHub token and add it as a secret of the GitHub repository, named
RELEASE_TOKEN
- cf. https://docs.github.com/en/authentication/keeping-your-account-and-data-secure/managing-your-personal-access-tokens#creating-a-personal-access-token-classic
- the token must allow pushing to the repository
-
Put your main (resp. test) code in
skilang/
(resp.test/
)
-
Install Poetry if you don't have it yet
pip install -r requirements.txt
-
Install the project's dependencies
poetry install
poetry run poe test
Tests are automatically run in CI, on all pushes on all branches. There, tests are executed on multiple OS (Win, Mac, Ubuntu) and on multiple Python versions.
This will execute the __main__.py
file in the skilang
package:
python -m skilang
or alternatively:
skilang
the latter is possible because of the script defined in the pyproject.toml
file.
New versions are automatically released on PyPi via GitHub Actions, when a push is made on the main
or master
branch.
The version number is updated automatically by the semantic-release
tool, which uses the commit messages to infer the type of the release (major, minor, patch).
It is paramount that the commit messages follow the Conventional Commits specification,
in order for semantic-release
to compute version numbers correctly.