## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
This pull request updates the GitHub Actions workflow documentation to
use the latest version of the `actions/setup-python` action. This
ensures compatibility with recent improvements and bug fixes in the
action.
Workflow version updates:
* Updated the `uses: actions/setup-python` step from version `v5` to
`v6` in two separate workflow job examples in
`docs/guides/integration/github.md`.
[[1]](diffhunk://#diff-e864b910728c865e8e16ddb7892761fc2ef4838f2bf256eb1e20c35b24edd9fbL96-R96)
[[2]](diffhunk://#diff-e864b910728c865e8e16ddb7892761fc2ef4838f2bf256eb1e20c35b24edd9fbL119-R119)
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## Summary
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I am a new uv user and I was reading the docs to better understand the
project scope & best practices. The section on [signal
forwarding](https://docs.astral.sh/uv/concepts/projects/run/#signal-handling)
with `uv run` caught my eye because I've used tools that use SIGHUP to
trigger config reloads or SIGUSR1/2 to enable debugging/profiling/etc so
I was a little concerned about using a runner that might block those
signals. After some searching in issues/PRs, I found that this behavior
was actually [changed earlier this
year](https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/13017) to forward additional
signals (awesome!) and thought I would update the docs and save the next
person/llm from thinking their tool won't work as expected if it uses
custom signal handling.
Thanks for all your great work!
P.S. If you think it makes more sense to explicitly list all forwarded
signals as opposed to just the exclusions, I'm happy to edit.
Hello,
# Summary
This PR fixes the confusing error message when running `uv lock --check`
with an outdated lockfile.
Previously, the error message incorrectly stated that `--locked` was
provided, even when the user used `--check`.
Now, the error message correctly indicates which flag was used: either
`--check` or `--locked`.
This closes#14105.
# Test plan
- I updated the existing integration test (`check_outdated_lock` in
`lock.rs`) to verify the new error message includes the correct flag.
- I ran existing tests to ensure I have no introduced regressions for
other commands.
An opinionated write-up on why Python packaging needs metadata
consistency, and that we need to extend metadata to accommodate ML and
scientific users.
I didn't add a paragraph related to CUDA or accelerators in general and
wheel variants, as this is currently support neither by wheel tags nor
by PEP 508 markers, so it's not a strict metadata consistency concern,
plus this would get outdated quickly as wheel variants progress.
This PR enables `--torch-backend=auto` to automatically detect Intel
GPUs. It follows up on
[#14386](https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/14386).
On Windows, detection is implemented by querying the
`Win32_VideoController` class via the [WMI
crate](https://github.com/ohadravid/wmi-rs/tree/v0.16.0).
Currently, Intel GPUs (XPU) do not depend on specific driver or toolkit
versions to determine which PyTorch wheel to use.
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Closes#15312
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/16237
---------
Co-authored-by: pythonweb2 <32141163+pythonweb2@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Wade Roberts <wade.roberts@centralsquare.com>
## Summary
Adds the version for environment variables added in
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/16040 and
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/16125. as these were in-flight
before documentation versioning was added.
Adds ability to emit a compiler error when added in is missing for
improved reporting to the developer.
e.g. example for the ones fixed in this PR
```shell
error: missing #[attr_added_in("x.y.z")] on `UV_UPLOAD_HTTP_TIMEOUT`
note: env vars for an upcoming release should be annotated with `#[attr_added_in("next release")]`
--> crates\uv-static\src\env_vars.rs:593:15
|
593 | pub const UV_UPLOAD_HTTP_TIMEOUT: &'static str = "UV_UPLOAD_HTTP_TIMEOUT";
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
error: missing #[attr_added_in("x.y.z")] on `UV_WORKING_DIRECTORY`
note: env vars for an upcoming release should be annotated with `#[attr_added_in("next release")]`
--> crates\uv-static\src\env_vars.rs:1087:15
|
1087 | pub const UV_WORKING_DIRECTORY: &'static str = "UV_WORKING_DIRECTORY";
| ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
error: could not compile `uv-static` (lib) due to 2 previous errors
```
## Summary
- Move parsing `UV_HTTP_TIMEOUT`, `UV_REQUEST_TIMEOUT` and
`HTTP_TIMEOUT` to `EnvironmentOptions`
- Add new env varialbe `UV_UPLOAD_HTTP_TIMEOUT`
Relates https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/14720
## Test Plan
Tests with existing tests
We're regularly get questions about this. The DPO thread is the best
ressource, but it's also a long read, so I summarized some points for
uv's decision.
---------
Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>
## Summary
As new environment variables get introduced (e.g. `UV_EDITABLE`) I
thought it would useful to start tracking which release they were
introduced. I think its a common workflow to navigate to the [env var
documentation](https://docs.astral.sh/uv/reference/environment) to know
what the env var for something is but then end up in a situation where
one is using an environment variable with the wrong version of uv and
not notice immediately that its not compatible and therefore ignored.
## Test Plan
Existing tests.
The versions in `since` have all been manually reviewed to the best of
my ability for correctness.
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## Summary
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This pull request enables the `--directory` option to accept environment
variable: `UV_DIRECTORY`
### Motivation
Currently, the `--project` option already supports environment
variables, but --directory does not.
The motivation for this change is the same as for the --project option.
When using this option, it’s likely that the project root and the
directory containing the uv project differ. In such cases, allowing
environment variables makes it easier to avoid repeatedly specifying the
directory in commands or task runners.
### Other PRs
- PR for create `--project` option:
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/12327
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
### no auto testing
As with the --project option, no auto tests are included for this
change.
This is because the implementation relies on Clap’s built-in attribute
functionality, and testing such behavior would effectively mean testing
a third-party crate, which would be redundant.
As long as the compiler accepts it, things should work as expected.
### testing manually
i tested manually like [previous pull
request](https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/12327)
```shell
$ cargo build --locked
./target/debug/uv init uv_directory
$ mkdir uv_directory
$ UV_DIRECTORY=uv_directory ./target/debug/uv sync
Using CPython 3.14.0rc3
Creating virtual environment at: .venv
Resolved 1 package in 15ms
Audited in 0.04ms
$ UV_DIRECTORY=uv_directory ./target/debug/uv run main.py
Hello from uv-directory!
$ ./target/debug/uv run main.py
error: Failed to spawn: `main.py`
Caused by: No such file or directory (os error 2)
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>
## Summary
Tentative PR to drop the `-rc` suffix from the published images.
Do not merge this yet until the formal release
[upstream](https://hub.docker.com/_/python) :)
## Summary
Semi related to https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/15270, except
there's no removal.
Makes Alpine 3.22 and debian trixie the default tags instead of removing
bookworm and alpine 3.21 to minimize churn.
~~This PR is pending https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/15351 merged
first.~~ Merged
## Test Plan
No functional changes made besides changing tag pointers.
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## Summary
Corrects example command for generating pylock.toml from requirements.in
## Test Plan
Local preview
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Fixes#16131
## Summary
Fix error in example documentation for bumping version.
## Test Plan
I viewed the markdown on the branch in my fork. Looked good.
Windows arm64 and Linux RISC-V64 are supported. Windows arm64 is special
because you can also use the x86_64 stack, which may even be a better
experience.
## Summary
This PR enables users to mark a URL as an S3 endpoint, at which point uv
will sign requests to that URL by detecting credentials from the
standard AWS environment variables, configuration files, etc.
Signing is handled by the
[reqsign](https://docs.rs/reqsign/latest/reqsign/) crate, which we can
also use in the future to sign requests for other providers.
Add a complete example for the most common publishing workflow, GitHub
Actions to PyPI, with screenshots for settings and a standalone
companion repo.
Closes#14398