This is a template project for creating a Python CLI app intended for distribution to PyPI (so that you can pip install
it later). It currently uses Python 3.8
and has been developed/tested on Ubuntu.
- 📦 Easily create a Python app that is distributed to PyPI and can be installed by anyone with
pip install
. - 💻 The package is configured with a
script
, so you can run it directly from a terminal once installed. - ✅ Added sample tests with
pytest
so you can keep your package well tested! - 💯 Automatic version increment.
To configure the project, modify publish/config.json
:
vi publish/config.json
Here is the default sample configuration:
{
"author": "Pixegami",
"package_name_override": "pixegami-my-app",
"email": "pixegami@gmail.com",
"description": "A template Python CLI app.",
"url": "https://github.com/pixegami/python-cli-template",
"python_version": "3.8",
"version": "0.0.8",
"scripts": [
"run-my-app = my_app:main"
]
}
This will be the information that is published to PyPI. Your scripts
array allows you to specify which commands will be available once you install this package.
For example, this configuration will let you execute run-my-app
as a command directly from terminal, which will call the main()
function in the my_app
package.
The package_name_override
will be what we attempt to publish the package as, so make sure it is unique on PyPI.
This will build the package, and install it directly into your current Python environment.
cd publish
sh ./publish_local.sh
Once installed, you should be able to test the script.
run-my-app
# Executing 'main()' from my app!
# Hello World
run-my-app --version
# Executing 'main()' from my app!
# 0.0.7
First, you will need to create an account on PyPI. Then you need to export your PyPI credentials in the environment variables of your terminal.
I like to do this by just adding the following exports to the ~/.bashrc
(or whichever file, depending on the terminal you are using).
export PYPI_REPO_USER="YOUR_USERNAME"
export PYPI_REPO_PASS="YOUR_PASSWORD"
The publish script will use these environment variables to upload your package to PyPI. Next, you can run the script:
cd publish
sh ./publish_remote.sh
This will build it into a package like so: https://pypi.org/project/pixegami-my-app/. Now you can install it directly with pip install
.
To run the tests, you need to install pytest
, which is already in the developer_requirements.txt
.
pip install pytest
From the project root, you can run this to test and print all output:
python -m pytest -s
Or to test a specific file or function:
# Test file tests/test_my_app.py
python -m pytest -s tests/test_my_app.py
# Test function test_app_main() in tests/test_my_app.py
python -m pytest -s tests/test_my_app.py::test_app_main
Every time you publish the package (either locally or remote), the version
field in publish/config.json
will go up (specifically, the last digit). So 1.2.3
will become 1.2.4
, etc. It will keep going up.
The major and minor versions (the first two digits) can only be changed manually. Change it directly in the file when you need to.
- Packaging Python projects: A guide explaining how to package Python projects using
setup.py
andsetuptools
(we use this here). - argparse: I use this to "understand" CLI arguments and sub-commands.
- pytest: Testing framework for this project.