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Python packages with pyproject.toml and nothing else

I've been using setuptools and setup.py for my Python packages for a long time: I like that it works without me having to think about installing and learning any additional tools such as Flit or pip-tools or Poetry or Hatch.

pyproject.toml is the new (or not so new, the PEP is dated June 2020) standard for Python packaging metadata.

Today I figured out how to package a project with a single pyproject.toml file, using just pip and build to install and build that package.

Update 17th January 2024: My python-lib cookiecutter template now implements this pattern, see Publish Python packages to PyPI with a python-lib cookiecutter template and GitHub Actions for details.

(Note that the approach described in this document likely only works for pure Python packages. If your package includes any binary compiled dependencies you likely need to use a different approach.)

Here's the simplest pyproject.toml file I could get to work:

[project]
name = "demo-package"
version = "0.1"

I put this in a folder called /tmp/demo-package and then added a file to that folder called demo_package.py containing just this:

def say_hello():
    print("Hello world")

When I'm working with packages there are really just two main things I do with them. I install them in "editable" development mode using pip install -e and I build packages for distribution using python -m build.

It turns out both of those commands now work on a folder containing just a pyproject.toml file, with no setup.py or setup.cfg or any of the other old packaging files!

It defaults to setuptools

The reason this works is that a pyproject.toml file without a [build-system] section defaults to using setuptools. Effectively it behaves the same as if you had added this block to the file:

[build-system]
requires = ["setuptools"]
build-backend = "setuptools.build_meta"

If you want to be explicit you can add that section - it does no harm, and likely makes the file easier to understand in the future. I was excited to find that it worked without this though.

Here's the relevant section from PEP 517:

If the pyproject.toml file is absent, or the build-backend key is missing, the source tree is not using this specification, and tools should revert to the legacy behaviour of running setup.py (either directly, or by implicitly invoking the setuptools.build_meta:__legacy__ backend).

Editable mode with pip install

To demonstrate, I'm going to create a virtual environment and install my package in editable mode.

I put my two files (pyproject.toml and demo_package.py) in a /tmp/demo-package folder.

Then I created a virtual environment elsewhere with:

python3 -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate

Then I used pip install -e to install an editable version of my new, minimal package:

pip install -e /tmp/demo-package 
Obtaining file:///tmp/demo-package
  Installing build dependencies ... done
  Checking if build backend supports build_editable ... done
  Getting requirements to build editable ... done
  Preparing editable metadata (pyproject.toml) ... done
Building wheels for collected packages: demo-package
  Building editable for demo-package (pyproject.toml) ... done
  Created wheel for demo-package: filename=demo_package-0.1-0.editable-py3-none-any.whl size=2307 sha256=0c023b20a46bf6e5566658df20866517d7bd9a692fcd2587bc95bf6382881563
  Stored in directory: /private/var/folders/x6/31xf1vxj0nn9mxqq8z0mmcfw0000gn/T/pip-ephem-wheel-cache-jh0fk5iu/wheels/a8/98/44/74568efecc0982a4601580062159e9b5c989ed6f0a697e5c9b
Successfully built demo-package
Installing collected packages: demo-package
Successfully installed demo-package-0.1

I can now import my package and run that function:

python
>>> import demo_package
>>> demo_package.say_hello()
Hello world

If I edit the demo_package.py file and change the message to say "Hello word, once more", I can run that again in the virtual environment:

>>> import demo_package
>>> demo_package.say_hello()
Hello world, once more

So I now have a package that I can actively develop, and I can install it into any environments that need it in a way that will reflect changes to my package.

Building a package with python -m build

With setup.py I used to run python setup.py sdist wheel to build source distribution and wheel files.

These days the build package is the recommended way to do that.

I can install that using:

python3 -m pip install build

Then run it in my /tmp/demo-package folder like this:

python3 -m build

Output (truncated):

* Creating venv isolated environment...
* Installing packages in isolated environment... (setuptools >= 40.8.0, wheel)
* Getting build dependencies for sdist...
running egg_info
...
Creating tar archive
removing 'demo-package-0.1' (and everything under it)
* Building wheel from sdist
...
adding 'demo_package.py'
adding 'demo_package-0.1.dist-info/METADATA'
adding 'demo_package-0.1.dist-info/WHEEL'
adding 'demo_package-0.1.dist-info/top_level.txt'
adding 'demo_package-0.1.dist-info/RECORD'
removing build/bdist.macosx-13-arm64/wheel
Successfully built demo-package-0.1.tar.gz and demo_package-0.1-py3-none-any.whl

These two files were created in /tmp/demo-package/dist:

ls dist
demo-package-0.1.tar.gz
demo_package-0.1-py3-none-any.whl

It finds the Python files for you

With setup.py I'm used to putting quite a bit of effort into telling Python which files should be included in the package - and making sure it doesn't include the tests/ and docs/ folder.

As far as I can tell, the default behaviour now is to find all *.py files and all */*.py files and include those - but to exclude common patterns such as tests/ and docs/ and tests.py and test_*.py.

This behaviour is defined by setuptools. The Automatic Discovery section of the setuptools documentation describes these rules in detail.

Adding metadata

I can add metadata to my package directly in that pyproject.toml.

description = can add a short description, and readme = "filename" can add a long description imported from a README file.

[project]
name = "demo-package"
version = "0.1"
description = "This is a demo package"
readme = "README.md"
requires-python = ">=3.8"

Note also the requires-python = ">=3.8" line to specify the minimum supported Python version.

Then save a README.md file in the same directory containing markdown describing the project:

# demo-package

This is a demonstration package.

## Usage

>>> import demo_package
>>> demo_package.say_hello()

I also like to include an author, a homepage URL and project URLs for things like my issue tracker in my projects. Here's what that would look like:

[project]
name = "demo-package"
version = "0.1"
description = "This is a demo package"
readme = "README.md"
authors = [{name = "Simon Willison"}]
license = {text = "Apache-2.0"}
classifiers = [
    "Development Status :: 4 - Beta"
]

[project.urls]
Homepage = "https://github.com/simonw/demo-package"
Changelog = "https://github.com/simonw/demo-package/releases"
Issues = "https://github.com/simonw/demo-package/issues"

Here's a list of the available classifiers.

Adding dependencies

Dependencies can be added in a dependencies= list like this:

[project]
# ...
dependencies = [
    "httpx"
]

These can use version specifiers, for example httpx>=0.18.0 or httpx~=0.18.

Test dependencies

I like being able to run pip install -e '.[test]' to install test dependencies - things like pytest, which are needed to run the project tests but shouldn't be bundled with the project itself when it is installed.

Those can be added in a section like this:

[project.optional-dependencies]
test = ["pytest"]

I added that to my /tmp/demo-package/pyproject.toml file, then ran this in my elsewhere virtual environment:

pip install -e '/tmp/demo-package[test]'

The result was an installation of pytest, visible when I ran pip freeze.

Package data

The build script will automatically find all Python files, but if you have other assets such as static CSS ond JavaScript, or templates with a .html extension, you need to specify package data. This works for adding everything in the demo_package/static/ and demo_package/templates/ directories:

[tool.setuptools.package-data]
demo_package = ["static/*", "templates/*"]

Command-line scripts

I often build tools which include command-line scripts. These can be defined by adding a scripts= section to the [project] block, like this:

[project]
# ... previous configuration
scripts = { demo_package_hello = "demo_package:say_hello" }

Or use this alternative syntax (here borrowed from my db-build Click app):

[project.scripts]
db-build = "db_build.cli:cli"

Now run this again:

pip install -e '/tmp/demo-package'

Typing demo_package_hello runs that function:

demo_package_hello
Hello world, once more

We can see how that works with the following commands:

type demo_package_hello
demo_package_hello is /private/tmp/my-new-environment/venv/bin/demo_package_hello
cat $(which demo_package_hello)
#!/private/tmp/my-new-environment/venv/bin/python3
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import re
import sys
from demo_package import say_hello
if __name__ == '__main__':
    sys.argv[0] = re.sub(r'(-script\.pyw|\.exe)?$', '', sys.argv[0])
    sys.exit(say_hello())

Entry points for Pluggy plugins

I use Pluggy to provide a plugins mechanism for my Datasette and LLM projects.

Plugins require entry points to be configured in their packaging. The recipe for doing that for an LLM plugin (with this feature) looks like this:

[project.entry-points.llm]
markov = "llm_markov"

For a Datasette plugin that would look like this:

[project.entry-points.datasette]
cluster_map = "datasette_cluster_map"

These packages work with pipx

Having built my new package (with the scripts= section) using python3 -m build, I then tried installing it in a brand new terminal window using pipx:

pipx install /tmp/demo-package/dist/demo_package-0.1-py3-none-any.whl
  installed package demo-package 0.1, installed using Python 3.11.4
  These apps are now globally available
    - demo_package_hello
done! ✨ 🌟 ✨

And now I can run this command anywhere on my computer:

demo_package_hello
Hello world, once more

I can see where it was installed using this:

which demo_package_hello
/Users/simon/.local/bin/demo_package_hello

pip and build both depend on tomli

One thing that puzzled me about this: TOML support was only added to the Python standard library in Python 3.11 - how come the pip and build packages are able to use it?

It turns out pip vendors tomli:

And build lists it as a dependency for versions of Python prior to 3.11:

dependencies = [
  # ...
  'tomli >= 1.1.0; python_version < "3.11"',
]