## 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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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.
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
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## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
Upgrade checkout action to v5 --
https://github.com/actions/checkout/releases
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
This PR adds a new integrations doc page for using uv with
[Coiled](https://coiled.io/). It's a slightly adapted version of this
blog post https://docs.coiled.io/blog/uv-coiled-cloud-scripts.html
Side note: it's been really pleasant using uv and Coiled together
recently
cc @zanieb for visibility
---------
Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>
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## Summary
Closes#15586
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## Summary
i noticed some of the line highlights are wrong in the docs
## Test Plan
visual verification
## Summary
Follow up to
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/15269#issuecomment-3194000772
Enables the following additional images to be published
* buildpack-deps:trixie
* debian:trixie-slim
* alpine:3.22
## Test Plan
Existing Tests. The newly added images were checked manually.
Close#6314
## Summary
Continuing from #7592. Created a new PR to rebase the old branch with
`main`, cleaned up test errors, and improved readability.
## Test Plan
Same test cases as in #7592.
---------
Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>
I updated the Github Actions integration guide to run Github's
`setup-python` before Astral's `setup-uv`, as `setup-uv`'s
`activate-environment: true` doesn't work with the original ordering.
There is a discussion about this behavior in the `setup-uv` repo
[here](https://github.com/astral-sh/setup-uv/issues/479).
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## Summary
Update the documentation for the Github Actions integration. Caveat: I'm
unsure if there are any other reasons where the original ordering (that
is,`setup-uv` before `setup-python`) might be preferred.
## Test Plan
Tested in a private Github Actions push, as documented in the
aforementioned discussion on `setup-uv`'s repo. Confirmed that removing
`source .venv/bin/activate` and replacing it with `activate-environment:
true` now works in this ordering (but didn't work with the original
ordering where `uv` installs before Github's `python`).
Closes#13057
Sets `UV_TOOL_BIN_DIR` to `/usr/local/bin` for all derived images to
allow `uv tool install` to work out of the box.
Note, when the default image user is overwritten (e.g. `USER <UID>`) by
a less privileged one, an alternative writable location would now need
to be set by downstream consumers to prevent issues, hence I'm labeling
this as a breaking change for 0.8.x release.
Relates to https://github.com/astral-sh/uv-docker-example/pull/55
Each image was tested to work with uv tool with `UV_TOOL_BIN_DIR` set to
`/usr/local/bin` with the default root user and alternative non-root
users to confirm breaking nature of the change.
This adds `alpha`, `beta`, `rc`, `stable`, `post`, and `dev` modes to
`uv version --bump`.
The components that `--bump` accepts are ordered as follows:
major > minor > patch > stable > alpha > beta > rc > post > dev
Bumping a component "clears" all lesser component (`alpha`, `beta`, and
`rc` all overwrite each other):
* `--bump minor` on `1.2.3a4.post5.dev6` => `1.3.0`
* `--bump alpha` on `1.2.3a4.post5.dev6` => `1.2.3a5`
* `--bump dev ` on `1.2.3a4.post5.dev6` => `1.2.3a4.post5.dev7`
In addition, `--bump` can now be repeated. The primary motivation of
this is "bump stable version and also enter a prerelease", but it
technically lets you express other things if you want them:
* `--bump patch --bump alpha` on `1.2.3` => `1.2.4a1` ("bump patch
version and go to alpha 1")
* `--bump minor --bump patch` on `1.2.3` => `1.3.1` ("bump minor version
and got to patch 1")
* `--bump minor --bump minor` on `1.2.3` => `1.4.0` ("bump minor version
twice")
The `--bump` flags are sorted by their priority, so that you don't need
to remember the priority yourself. This ordering is the only "useful"
one that preserves every `--bump` you passed, so there's no concern
about loss of expressiveness. For instance `--bump minor --bump major`
would just be `--bump major` if we didn't sort, as the major bump clears
the minor version. The ordering of `beta` after `alpha` means `--bump
alpha --bump beta` will just result in beta 1; this is the one case
where a bump request will effectively get overwritten.
The `stable` mode "bumps to the next stable release", clearing the pre
(`alpha`, `beta`, `rc`), `dev`, and `post` components from a version
(`1.2.3a4.post5.dev6` => `1.2.3`). The choice to clear `post` here is a
bit odd, in that `1.2.3.post4` => `1.2.3` is actually a version
decrease, but I think this gives a more intuitive model (as preserving
`post5` in the previous example is definitely wrong), and also
post-releases are extremely obscure so probably no one will notice. In
the cases where this behaviour isn't useful, you probably wanted to pass
`--bump patch` or something anyway which *should* definitely clear the
`post5` (putting it another way: the only cases where `--bump stable`
has dubious behaviour is when you wanted it to do a noop, which, is a
command you could have just not written at all).
In all cases we preserve the "epoch" and "local" components of a
version, so the `7!` and `+local` in `7!1.2.3+local` will never be
modified by `--bump` (you can use the raw version set mode if you want
to touch those). The preservation of `local` is another slightly odd
choice, but it's a really obscure feature (so again it mostly won't come
up) and when it's used it seems to mostly be used for referring to
variant releases, in which case preserving it tends to be correct.
Fixes#13223
---------
Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>
## Summary
This PR intends to enable `--torch-backend=auto` to detect Intel GPUs
automatically:
- On Linux, detection is performed using the `lspci` command via
`Display controller` id.
- On Windows, ~~detection is done via a `powershell` query to
`Win32_VideoController`~~. Skip support for now—revisit once a better
solution is available.
Currently, Intel GPUs (XPU) do not rely on specific driver or toolkit
versions to distribute different PyTorch wheels.
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
On Linux:

~~On Windows:
~~
---------
Co-authored-by: Charlie Marsh <charlie.r.marsh@gmail.com>