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What is this?

You have a few choices:

  • Me messing around in Rust for fun (just a hobby, won't be big and serious like pip)

  • An incomplete but functional implementation of Python's packaging standards in Rust, including a full resolver based on the PubGrub algorithm (as provided by pubgrub.

  • A draft spec for "PyBi" files, which are like wheels but for Python interpreters.

Someday:

  • A project-oriented Python workflow manager, designed to make it easy for beginners to write their first Python script or notebook, and then grow with you to developing complex standalone apps and libraries with many contributors.

  • A combined replacement for pyenv, deadsnakes, tox, venv, pip, pip-compile/pipenv, and PEP 582, all in a single-file executable with zero system requirements (not even Python).

  • An 🐘 elephant 🐘

The Vision

The goal is for posy to act as a kind of high-level frontend to python: you install posy, then run posy [args] some_python.py and it takes care of everything up until entering the python interpreter. That includes:

  • installing Python (posy is a pure-rust single-file binary; it doesn't assume you have anything else installed)
  • installing dependencies from wheels/sdists (it's a PEP 517 build "frontend")
  • environment management
  • (cross-platform) locking (for both the interpreter + packages)
  • run commands in environment, or export a self-contained redistributable environment (e.g. to drop in a docker image)
  • nice UX for setting this stuff up and managing it, hopefully

(NOTE: not all of these are implemented yet!)

But the following is not in scope:

  • a PEP 517 build backend: use setuptools, flit, meson-python, py-build-cmake, ...or whatever build framework you want. Or none at all, if you're not creating a redistributable package.

    [XX TODO: insert link to pypi search once we have a classifier so we don't have to play favorites on which projects we list here.]

  • a testing framework, a code formatter, a linter, ... Python already has good tools for all that stuff, and we don't plan to duplicate them. But posy can set up the environment they need and run them for you!

Packaging features I don't (currently) plan to implement

===

PEP 440 defines a === operator, for comparing non-PEP 440-compliant versions. Posy only supports PEP 440-compliant versions.

The platform_release and platform_version environment marker variables

These are values like:

 'platform_release': '5.19.0-23-generic',
 'platform_version': '#24-Ubuntu SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Fri Oct 14 15:39:57 UTC 2022',

Technically, you're supposed to be able to make dependencies vary depending on these strings. But these are so quirky and machine-specific that I don't see how to implement that in posy's model, or why anyone would want them.

Prereleases in specifiers

According to PEP 440, specifiers like >= 2.0a1 are supposed to change meaning depending on whether or not the literal version contains a prerelease marker. So like, >= 2.0 doesn't match 2.1a1, because that's a prerelease, and regular specifiers never match prereleases. But >= 2.0a1 does match 2.1a1, because the presence of a prerelease in the specifier makes it legal for prerelease versions to match.

I don't think I can actually implement this using the pubgrub system, since it collapses multiple specifiers for the same package into a single set of valid ranges, and there's no way to preserve the information about which ranges were derived from specifiers that included prerelease suffixes, and which ranges weren't.

And if you think about it... that's actually because while this rule is well-defined for a specifier in isolation, it doesn't really make sense when you're talking about multiple packages with their own dependencies. E.g., if package A depends on foo == 2.0a1, and package B depends on foo >= 1.0, then is it valid to install foo v2.0a1? It feels like it ought to match all the requirements, but technically it doesn't... according to a strict reading of PEP 440, once any package says foo >= 1.0, it becomes impossible to ever use a foo pre-release anywhere in the dependency tree, no matter what other packages say. Pre-release validity is just inherently a global property, not a property of individual specifiers.

So I'm thinking we should use the rule:

  • If all available versions are pre-releases, then pre-releases are valid
  • If we're updating a set of pins that already contain a pre-release, then pre-releases are valid (or at least that specific pre-release is)
  • Otherwise, to get pre-releases, you have to set some environment-level config like allow-prerelease = ["foo"].

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