This PR updates documentation to explicitly mention how to update a
specific package with a locked version to a different version.
Fixes: https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/7019
---------
Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>
## Summary
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/7027
* When displaying the file structure of a uv-managed project show the
`.python-version` file which is now created by default.
* Mention the purpose of the `.python-version` file in `Guides/Working
on projects/Project structure`
* In `Concepts/Python versions/Project python versions`, changed
sentence about `.python-version` file to reflect the fact it is included
by default so is likely to be present.
## Summary
Add a note in the documentation to clarify that `uv.toml` files take
precedence over `[tool.uv]` section in `pyproject.toml`, based on the
warning shown in the CLI:
```console
$ uv version
warning: Found both a `uv.toml` file and a `[tool.uv]` section in an adjacent `pyproject.toml`. The `[tool.uv]` section will be ignored in favor of the `uv.toml` file.
uv 0.4.2 (Homebrew 2024-09-01)
```
## Summary
This PR adds `--package` support to `uv build`, such that you can use
`--package` from anywhere in a workspace to build any member.
If a source directory is provided, we use that as the workspace root.
If a file is provided, we error.
For now, `uv build` only builds the current package, making it
semantically identical to `uv sync`.
## Summary
This PR allows users to run `uv build --wheel ./path/to/source.tar.gz`
to build a wheel from a source distribution. This is also the default
behavior if you run `uv build ./path/to/source.tar.gz`. If you pass
`--sdist`, we error.
## Summary
This PR exposes uv's PEP 517 implementation via a `uv build` frontend,
such that you can use `uv build` to build source and binary
distributions (i.e., wheels and sdists) from a given directory.
There are some TODOs that I'll tackle in separate PRs:
- [x] Support building a wheel from a source distribution (rather than
from source) (#6898)
- [x] Stream the build output (#6912)
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/1510
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/1663.
## Summary
I'm not convinced that the behavior is correct as-implemented. When the
user passes a `--python >=3.8` or we discover a `requires-python` from
the workspace, we're currently writing that request out to
`.python-version`. I would probably rather that we write the resolved
patch version?
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6821.
- Respect `UV_PROJECT_ENVIRONMENT` when in project root
- Add `--no-project` and `--no-workspace` to opt-out of above and
`requires-python` detection
- Rename `[NAME]` to `[PATH]` in CLI
## Summary
Update the extended docker example to use bind mounts and avoid creating
extra layers and avoid copying files into layers
This is in line with the official Docker templates for Python
applications (you can try them out using `docker init`. I found them
very helpful!)
## Summary
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/5610
This PR introduces additional images with the uv/uvx binaries from
scratch for both amd64/arm64 and make the mapping easy to configure by
generating the Dockerfile on the fly. This approach focuses on
minimizing CI time by taking advantage of dedicating a worker per
mapping (20-30s~ per job).
This PR also fixes `org.opencontainers.image.version` for all tags
(including the one from `scratch) to contain the right release version
instead of branch name `main` (default when no tag patterns are
specified).
For example, on release `x.y.z`, this will publish the following image
tags with format `ghcr.io/astral-sh/uv:{tag}` with manifests for both
amd64/arm64. This also include `x.y` tags for each respective additional
tag.
* From **scratch**: `latest`, `x.y.z`, `x.y` (currently being published)
* From **alpine:3.20**: `alpine`, `alpine3.20`, `x.y.z-alpine`,
`x.y.z-alpine3.20`
* From **debian:bookworm-slim**: `debian-slim`, `bookworm-slim`,
`x.y.z-debian-slim`, `x.y.z-bookworm-slim`
* From **buildpack-deps:bookworm**: `debian`, `bookworm`,
`x.y.z-debian`, `x.y.z-bookworm`
* From **python:3.12-alpine**: `python3.12-alpine`,
`x.y.z-python3.12-alpine`
* From **python:3.11-alpine**: `python3.11-alpine`,
`x.y.z-python3.11-alpine`
* From **python:3.10-alpine**: `python3.10-alpine`,
`x.y.z-python3.10-alpine`
* From **python:3.9-alpine**: `python3.9-alpine`,
`x.y.z-python3.9-alpine`
* From **python:3.8-alpine**: `python3.8-alpine`,
`x.y.z-python3.8-alpine`
* From **python:3.12-bookworm**: `python3.12-bookworm`,
`x.y.z-python3.12-bookworm`
* From **python:3.11-bookworm**: `python3.11-bookworm`,
`x.y.z-python3.11-bookworm`
* From **python:3.10-bookworm**: `python3.10-bookworm`,
`x.y.z-python3.10-bookworm`
* From **python:3.9-bookworm**: `python3.9-bookworm`,
`x.y.z-python3.9-bookworm`
* From **python:3.8-bookworm**: `python3.8-bookworm`,
`x.y.z-python3.8-bookworm`
* From **python:3.12-slim-bookworm**: `python3.12-slim-bookworm`,
`x.y.z-python3.12-slim-bookworm`
* From **python:3.11-slim-bookworm**: `python3.11-slim-bookworm`,
`x.y.z-python3.11-slim-bookworm`
* From **python:3.10-slim-bookworm**: `python3.10-slim-bookworm`,
`x.y.z-python3.10-slim-bookworm`
* From **python:3.9-slim-bookworm**: `python3.9-slim-bookworm`,
`x.y.z-python3.9-slim-bookworm`
* From **python:3.8-slim-bookworm**: `python3.8-slim-bookworm`,
`x.y.z-python3.8-slim-bookworm`
## Summary
Noticed that running `cargo dev generate-all` on `main` produced changes
and saw that that the command is not run on the CI nor as a pre-commit
hook.
Not sure if having the command running as a pre-commit hook is something
we want, so I can remove it if you prefer. I find that nice to have as
it's probably easy to forget to run it, especially for new contributors
(and it will only run if there are changes in `uv_cli` or `uv_settings`
crates).
## Test Plan
- Added `cargo dev generate-all --mode check` on the CI, which produced
[this failing
job](https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/actions/runs/10648055597/job/29516699393)
- Ran `cargo dev generate-all` locally and committed the changes, which
produced [this succeeding
job](https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/actions/runs/10648076910/job/29516744942)
## Summary
- Fixed the directory structure and commands for the second scenario
#6833
- Added a headline "Migrating an existing FastAPI project" because the
first part looks like a migration scenario, but didn't have its own
section before.
- Added explicit `--app` flags to commands to emphasize that the
commands create an Application project. Although maybe unnecessary
considering that `--app` is now default.
- Added instructions for testing that the dev server and Docker image
work correctly
- Took the liberty of adding a `project` at the root of all directory
structures and appropriate commands.
- With explicitly defined root directory it is easier to differentiate
between the `project` root directory and FastAPI's `app` directory.
- Without it it could be less obvious for developers less familiar with
FastAPI. Had a similar issue when started using Django several years
ago.
- If I left `app` in the command, then after copying the **app
directory** from https://github.com/astral-sh/uv-fastapi-example the
path would be `app/app/...`.
- Cleaned up glyphs in tree sctructures that were copied from FastAPI
docs.
## Caveats
- On project initialization `hello.py` is created. It is not reflected
in directory structure trees in this PR and may be slightly confusing
for developers less familiar with uv.
- I believe it will be soon addressed in #6750 and after that the docs
will reflect actual directory structure.
Our current strategy of parsing the output of `py --list-paths` to get
the installed python versions on windows is brittle (#6524, missing
`py`, etc.) and it's slow (10ms last time i measured).
Instead, we should behave spec-compliant and read the python versions
from the registry following PEP 514.
It's not fully clear which errors we should ignore and which ones we
need to raise.
We're using the official rust-for-windows crates for accessing the
registry.
Fixes#1521Fixes#6524
## Summary
The interface here is intentionally a bit more limited than `uv pip
compile`, because we don't want `requirements.txt` to be a system of
record -- it's just an export format. So, we don't write annotation
comments (i.e., which dependency is requested from which), we don't
allow writing extras, etc. It's just a flat list of requirements, with
their markers and hashes.
Closes#6007.
Closes#6668.
Closes#6670.
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## Summary
This adds explicit information about using `uv` with AWS CodeArtifact
(both as an extra index to fetch private packages and also to publish
packages using `twine`).
## Test Plan
I'm currently using this setup with several private projects that use
CodeArtifact.
---------
Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>