## Summary
If `--config-settings` are provided, we cache the built wheels under one
more subdirectory.
We _don't_ invalidate the actual source (i.e., trigger a re-download) or
metadata, though -- those can be reused even when `--config-settings`
change.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/7028.
Let's promote type hints!
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## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
The generated script now annotates the return type of the dummy function
`hello()`.
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
All existing tests have been synced with this update.
## Summary
This PR adds a more flexible cache invalidation abstraction for uv, and
uses that new abstraction to improve support for dynamic metadata.
Specifically, instead of relying solely on a timestamp, we now pass
around a `CacheInfo` struct which (as of now) contains
`Option<Timestamp>` and `Option<Commit>`. The `CacheInfo` is saved in
`dist-info` as `uv_cache.json`, so we can test already-installed
distributions for cache validity (along with testing _cached_
distributions for cache validity).
Beyond the defaults (`pyproject.toml`, `setup.py`, and `setup.cfg`
changes), users can also specify additional cache keys, and it's easy
for us to extend support in the future. Right now, cache keys can either
be instructions to include the current commit (for `setuptools_scm` and
similar) or file paths (for `hatch-requirements-txt` and similar):
```toml
[tool.uv]
cache-keys = [{ file = "requirements.txt" }, { git = true }]
```
This change should be fully backwards compatible.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6964.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6255.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6860.
## Summary
We now track the discovered `IndexCapabilities` for each `IndexUrl`. If
we learn that an index doesn't support range requests, we avoid doing
any batch prefetching.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/7221.
## Summary
We were only applying exclusions when discovering the root, apparently.
Our logic now matches the original intent, which is...
- `exclude` always post-filters `members`.
- We don't treat globs any differently than non-globs.
The one confusing setup that falls out of this is that given:
```toml
members = ["foo/bar/baz"]
exclude = ["foo/bar"]
```
`foo/bar/baz` **would** be included. To exclude it, you would need:
```toml
members = ["foo/bar/baz"]
exclude = ["foo/bar/*"]
```
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/7071.
## Summary
If we have a singleton `Range`, we don't need to iterate over the map of
available ranges; instead, we can just get the singleton directly.
Closes#6131.
## Summary
Use a path file (`.pth`) instead of `sitecustomize.py` for configuring
path in emphemeral virtualenvs, overlaying the ephemeral venv on top of
the base `.venv`.
`sitecustomize.py` is a module in the python installation and as such a
unique resource - homebrew pythons on macos already install such a file
and thus uv's `sitecustomize.py`, placed in the ephemeral env, did not
have any effect.
I don't find any documentation explicitly saying that addsitedir is
valid in `.pth` files but from trial it seems to be - and there is the
precedent of the existing _virtualenv.pth _virtualenv.py pair that do
nontrivial operations.
## Test Plan
- Testing on ephemeral venv, resolving to base venv including editable
install in base: done (py3.7, 3.12)
- Testing on homebrew python/macos: done (py3.11)
- tests: run_editable
Fixes#7152
## Summary
Fixes#7081
Treats source distribution `.tgz` the same as `.tar.gz` plans
## Test Plan
Quick Version
```bash
cd $(mktemp -d)
uv init
uv add --dev build
.venv/bin/python -m build -s .
mv -v dist/*tar.gz dist/"$(basename dist/*.tar.gz .tar.gz)".tgz
uv pip install dist/*.tgz
```
Can add a proper test to the branch if requested
Change the registry Python sorting implementation to be easier to
follow, making it clearer what it does and that it is a total order. No
functional changes.
## Summary
Explicitly list the formats and extensions that uv supports, based on
[this
list](86ee8d2c01/crates/distribution-filename/src/extension.rs (L70-L77)).
Not a huge fan of adding the section in `concepts/resolution.md`, but I
did not find a better place. Alternatively we could maybe add a
dedicated page that shortly explains Python package types (wheels,
sdists), where such a section could live?
## Test Plan
Local run of the documentation.
This finally gets rid of our hack for working around "hidden"
state. We no longer do a roundtrip marker serialization and
deserialization just to avoid the hidden state.
This adds new routines to `MarkerTree` for "simplifying" and
"complexifying" a tree with respect to lower and upper Python version
bounds.
In effect, "simplifying" a marker is what you do when you write it to a
lock file. Namely, since `uv.lock` includes a `requires-python` bound at
the top, one can say that it acts as a bound on the supported Python
versions. That is, it establishes a context in which one can assume that
bound is true. Therefore, the markers we write can be simplified using
this assumption.
The reverse is "complexifying" a marker, and it's what you do when you
read a marker from the lock file. Namely, once a marker is read, it can
be very difficult in code to keep the corresponding requires-python
context from the lock file. If you lose track of it and decide to
operate on the "simplified" marker, then it's trivial for that to
produce an incorrect result.
I split this change into its own commit because I'm hoping it
crystalizes what it means when we say "a `MarkerTree` has hidden state."
That is, it isn't so much that there is some explicit member of a
`MarkerTree` that is omitted, but rather, the lower and upper version
bounds on `python_full_version` are are rewritten as "unbounded" when
traversing the ADD for display.
We will actually retain this functionality, but rejigger it so that it's
explicit when we do this. In particular, this simplification has been
problematic for us because it fundamentally changes the truth tables of
a marker expression *unless* you are extremely careful to interpret it
only under the original context in which it was simplified. This is
quite difficult to do generally, and in prior work in #6268, we
completed a refactor where we worked around this type of simplification
and moved it to the edges of uv.
In subsequent commits, we'll re-implement this form of simplification as
a more explicit step.
## Summary
I think a better tradeoff here is to skip fetching metadata, even though
we can't validate the extras.
It will help with situations like
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/5073#issuecomment-2334235588 in
which, otherwise, we have to download the wheels twice.
(This is part of #5711)
## Summary
@BurntSushi and I spotted that the `derivative` crate is only used for
one enum in the entire codebase — however, it's a proc macro, and we pay
for the cost of (re)compiling it in many different contexts.
This replaces it with a private `Inner` core which uses the regular std
derive macros — inlining and optimizations should make this equivalent
to the other implementation, and not too hard to maintain hopefully
(versus a manual impl of `PartialEq` and `Hash` which have to be kept in
sync.)
## Test Plan
Trust CI?
This PR revives #6129, but is less bold:
* It doesn't rename anything. (I think the rename is probably right
though.)
* It doesn't change the _default_ `Debug` impl. Instead, it offers this
as a new `MarkerTree::debug_graph` method.
I found this pretty useful for debugging since it gives a display format
that is more faithful to the internal representation of a `MarkerTree`.
So I think it's worth having around. But making it available in `Debug`
is perhaps a bridge too far since it isn't as familiar as the typical
PEP 508 representation and isn't as succinct.
I did consider printing this when using `{:#?}` (i.e., the "alternate"
debug representation), but too many things use that (like `insta` I
think) to make it practical.
Closes#6129
## Summary
This has bothered me for a while and should be fairly impactful for
users. It requires a weird implementation, since the
distribution-building crate depends on the cache, and so the prune
operation can't live in the cache, since it needs to access internals of
the distribution-building crate.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/7096.
## Summary
Like `uv sync`, you can omit the current project (`--no-emit-project`),
a specific package (`--no-emit-package`), or the entire workspace
(`--no-emit-workspace`).
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6960.
Closes#6995.
Follow-up to #6959 and #6961: Use the reachability computation instead
of `propagate_markers` everywhere.
With `marker_reachability`, we have a function that computes for each
node the markers under which it is (`requirements.txt`, no markers
provided on installation) or can be (`uv.lock`, depending on the markers
provided on installation) included in the installation. Put differently:
If the marker computed by `marker_reachability` is not fulfilled for the
current platform, the package is never required on the current platform.
We compute the markers for each package in the graph, this includes the
virtual extra packages and the base packages. Since we know that each
virtual extra package depends on its base package (`foo[bar]` implied
`foo`), we only retain the base package marker in the `requirements.txt`
graph.
In #6959/#6961 we were only using it for pruning packages in `uv.lock`,
now we're also using it for the markers in `requirements.txt`.
I think this closes#4645, CC @bluss.
## Summary
We need to prioritize hashes for the distribution over hashes for the
related packages.
I think this needs to be redone entirely though. I can see other issues
with the current approach.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/7059.
## Summary
With #6917, there are a lot more PyPy downloads in `uv python list
--all-versions`. I find it clearer to have all the CPython downloads
listed, then all the PyPy downloads, rather than interspersing them. But
this is subjective, feel free to push back!
## 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.
In the `lock_redact_https` test specifically, it prompts a link mode
warning from `uv` on my system. Debugging seems to suggest it is
provoked by attempting to hardlink between `/tmp` and `~/.local`. Since
these are on different file systems for me (with `/tmp` being a
ramdisk), it provokes the warning, and this turn spoils the snapshot
when running tests locally.
This PR adds a test specific filter rule to fix this.
## Summary
The error handlers now happen one level higher, matching on _any_ `Err`
that's returned from the lock-and-sync operations.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/7011.
`_virtualenv.py` doesn't need to import `__future__.annotations`, as it
has none.
Removing the import:
* Restores the action of the VIRTUALENV_PATCH on Python 3.6
* Eliminates 24 lines of error messages displayed by Python 3.6 when it
starts in an environment created by uv:
```plaintext
Error processing line 1 of /tmp/tmp.ENwqZ0oeyb/lib/python3.6/site-packages/_virtualenv.pth:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "~/.pyenv/versions/3.6.15/lib/python3.6/site.py", line 168, in addpackage
exec(line)
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
File "/tmp/tmp.ENwqZ0oeyb/lib/python3.6/site-packages/_virtualenv.py", line 3
from __future__ import annotations
^
SyntaxError: future feature annotations is not defined
Remainder of file ignored
```
(Python displays the errors above twice.)
I appreciate the Python team no longer support Python 3.6, but
RedHat-style Linux distributions will support Python 3.6 in their
`/usr/libexec/platform-python` until [releasever 8 expires in
2029](https://access.redhat.com/support/policy/updates/errata#RHEL8_Planning_Guide).
I'm happy for the community to move on, in general, but don't see the
harm in helping those who can't.
I'm not yet sure what in the “remainder of file ignored” is necessary
for my project's build, as I haven't yet finished digging that from
under Hatch. I'll follow up on #6426 when I do, so we can concentrate on
getting to the happy cow.
## Test Plan
```sh
( set -eu
export VIRTUAL_ENV="$(mktemp -d)"
./target/release/uv venv "$VIRTUAL_ENV" --python=python3.6
./target/release/uv pip install cowsay
$VIRTUAL_ENV/bin/python -m cowsay --text 'Look, a talking cow!' )
```
Happy output:
```plaintext
Using Python 3.6.15 interpreter at: ~/.local/bin/python3.6
Creating virtualenv at: /tmp/tmp.VHl4XNi3oI
Activate with: source /tmp//tmp.VHl4XNi3oI/bin/activate
Resolved 1 package in 929ms
Installed 1 package in 17ms
+ cowsay==6.0
____________________
| Look, a talking cow! |
====================
\
\
^__^
(oo)\_______
(__)\ )\/\
||----w |
|| ||
```
---------
Co-authored-by: Zanie Blue <contact@zanie.dev>
## Summary
Resolves issues mentioned in comments
* https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6699#issuecomment-2322515962
* https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6866#issuecomment-2322785906
Further investigation on the comments revealed that the pointer
arithmethic being performed in `let handle_start = unsafe {
crt_magic.offset(1 + handle_count) };` from [posy
trampoline](dda22e6f90/src/trampolines/windows-trampolines/posy-trampoline/src/bounce.rs (L146))
had some slight errors. Since `crt_magic` was a `*const u32`, doing an
offset by `1 + handle_count` would offset by too much, with some
possible out of bounds reads or attempts to call CloseHandle on garbage.
We needed to offset differently since we want to offset by
`handle_count` bytes after the initial offset as seen in
[launcher.c](888c48b568/PC/launcher.c (L578)).
Similarly, we needed to skip the first 3 handles, otherwise we'd still
be attempting to close standard I/O handles of the parent (in this case
the shell from `busybox.exe sh -l`).
I also added a few extra checks available from `launcher.c` which checks
if the handle value is `-2` just to match the distlib implementation
more closely and minimize differences.
## Test Plan
Manually compiled distlib's launcher with additional logging and
replaced `Lib/site-packages/pip/_vendor/distlib/t64.exe` with the
compiled one to log pointers. As a result, I was able to verify the
retrieved handle memory addresses in this function actually match in
both uv and distlib's implementation from within busybox.exe nested
shell where this behavior can be observed and manually tested.
I was also able to confirm this fixes the issues mentioned in the
comments, at least with busybox's shell, but I assume this would fix the
case with cmake.
## Open areas
`launcher.c` also [checks the
size](888c48b568/PC/launcher.c (L573-L576))
of `cbReserved2` before retrieving `handle_start` which this function
currently doesn't do. If we wanted to, we could add the additional check
here as well, but I wasn't fully sure why it wasn't added in the first
place. Thoughts?
```rust
// Verify the buffer is large enough
if si.cbReserved2 < (size_of::<u32>() as isize + handle_count + size_of::<HANDLE>() as isize * handle_count) as u16 {
return;
}
```
---------
Co-authored-by: konstin <konstin@mailbox.org>
When a package is included under a platform-specific marker, we know
that wheels that mismatch this marker can never be installed, so we drop
them from the lockfile.
In transformers, we have:
* `tensorflow-text`: `tensorflow-macos; python_full_version >= '3.13'
and platform_machine == 'arm64' and platform_system == 'Darwin'`
* `tensorflow-macos`: `tensorflow-cpu-aws; (python_full_version < '3.10'
and platform_machine == 'aarch64' and platform_system == 'Linux') or
(python_full_version >= '3.13' and platform_machine == 'aarch64' and
platform_system == 'Linux') or (python_full_version >= '3.13' and
platform_machine == 'arm64' and platform_system == 'Linux')`
* `tensorflow-macos`: `tensorflow-intel; python_full_version >= '3.13'
and platform_system == 'Windows'`
This means that `tensorflow-cpu-aws` and `tensorflow-intel` can never be
installed, and we can drop them from the lockfile.
## 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.
The key change here is to use raw strings so that we don't need to
double-escape things like `\d`. And in particular, we rely on the fact
that `"\n"` and `r"\n"` are precisely equivalent when fed to
`Regex::new` in the `regex` crate.
Previously we were using `[+-~]`, but this includes the full range of
characters from `+` to `~`. Incidentally, this does include `-`. We
instead rewrite this as `[-+~]`, which probably matches the intent.
Unlike the previous update, this message is specifically referring to a
fork's markers inside the resolver. We probably *could* massage the
message to be simplified with respect to requires-python, but it's not
obvious to me that that is the right thing to do.
It is not clear whether this update is correct or not. Moreover, it's
not clear whether the status quo is correct or not. The problem is that
`transformers` is so big that it's very hard to understand what the
right output is without a deeper investigation.
One thing that is interesting is if fork prioritization is removed in
this PR *and* on `main`, then the differences in this ecosystem test go
away.
We've decided for now to move forward with this update even though we're
uncertain because this PR fixes a few outstanding correctness issues.
This update changes the error message to one that is worse than the
status quo, but it is still correct because `datasets >= 2.19` doesn't
actually exist given our `EXCLUDE_NEWER` in tests at present.
The underlying cause here seems to be in how PubGrub deals with
reporting incompatibilities. Namely, when it has `foo < 1` and
`foo >= 1`, it reports an incompatibility immediately before looking for
versions. But when it has `foo < 1` and `foo >= 1 ; marker`, then
because they aren't both pubgrub "packages," it starts requesting
versions first and hits the "not available" error path instead of the
"incompatible" error path.
Since this is more of an underlying issue with how we setup
`PubGrubPackage` and our interaction with pubgrub, we ended up deciding
to move forward here with the regression since this PR is fixing a
correctness issue. In particular, if one changes the `requires-python`
to `>=3.8`, then both `main` and this PR produce similarly bad error
messages.
This commit refactors how deal with `requires-python` so that instead of
simplifying markers of dependencies inside the resolver, we do it at the
edges of our system. When writing markers to output, we simplify when
there's an obvious `requires-python` context. And when reading markers
as input, we complexity markers with the relevant `requires-python`
constraint.
When I first wrote this routine, it was intended to only emit a trace
for the final "unioned" resolution. But we actually moved that semantic
operation to the construction of the resolution *graph*. So there is no
unioned `Resolution` any more.
But this is still useful to see. So I changed this to just emit a trace
of *every* resolution right before constructing the graph.
It might be nice to also emit a trace of the unioned graph too. Or
perhaps we should do that instead if this proves too noisy. (Although
this is only emitted at TRACE level.)
These are regression tests for #6269, #6412 and #6836. In this commit,
their test outputs are all wrong. We'll update these snapshots after
fixing the underlying bug by refactoring how `requires-python`
simplification works.
- 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
Allows configuration of the (currently hard-coded) path to the virtual
environment in projects using the `UV_PROJECT_ENVIRONMENT` environment
variable.
If empty, we'll ignore it. If a relative path, it will be resolved
relative to the workspace root. If an absolute path, we'll use that.
This feature targets use in Docker images and CI. The variable is
intended to be set once in an isolated system and used for all uv
operations.
We do not expose a CLI option or configuration file setting — we may
pursue those later but I see them as lower priority. I think a
system-level environment variable addresses the most pressing use-cases
here.
This doesn't special-case the system environment. Which means that you
can use this to write to the system Python environment. I would
generally strongly recommend against doing so. The insightful comment
from @edmorley at
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/5229#issuecomment-2312702902
provides some context on why. More generally, `uv sync` will remove
packages from the environment by default. This means that if the system
environment contains any packages relevant to the operation of the
system (that are not dependencies of your project), `uv sync` will break
it. I'd only use this in Docker or CI, if anywhere. Virtual environments
have lots of benefits, and it's only [one line to "activate"
them](https://docs.astral.sh/uv/guides/integration/docker/#using-the-environment).
If you are considering using this feature to use Docker bind mounts for
developing in containers, I would highly recommend reading our [Docker
container development
documentation](https://docs.astral.sh/uv/guides/integration/docker/#developing-in-a-container)
first. If the solutions there do not work for you, please open an issue
describing your use-case and why.
We do not read `VIRTUAL_ENV` and do not have plans to at this time.
Reading `VIRTUAL_ENV` is high-risk, because users can easily leave an
environment active and use the uv project interface today. Reading
`VIRTUAL_ENV` would be a breaking change. Additionally, uv is
intentionally moving away from the concept of "active environments" and
I don't think syncing to an "active" environment is the right behavior
while managing projects. I plan to add a warning if `VIRTUAL_ENV` is
set, to avoid confusion in this area (see
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/6864).
This does not directly enable centrally managed virtual environments. If
you set `UV_PROJECT_ENVIRONMENT` to an absolute path and use it across
multiple projects, they will clobber each other's environments. However,
you could use this with something like `direnv` to achieve "centrally
managed" environments. I intend to build a prototype of this eventually.
See #1495 for more details on this use-case.
Lots of discussion about this feature in:
- https://github.com/astral-sh/rye/issues/371
- https://github.com/astral-sh/rye/pull/1222
- https://github.com/astral-sh/rye/issues/1211
- https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/5229
- https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6669
- https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6612
Follow-ups:
- #6835
- https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/6864
- Document this in the project concept documentation (can probably
re-use some of this post)
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6669
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/5229
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6612
## Summary
Http headers are supposed to be case-insensitive (RFC 2616), but there
are some implementations that don't normalize them.
I noticed it while migrating to `uv`, calls to an internal registry
failed. A man in the middle server helped me to find that `pip` uses
Title-Case while `uv pip` uses lowercase.
## Test Plan
I tested `uv` with the same server and now it works fine.
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## Summary
Separate exceptions for different timeouts to make it easier to debug
issues like #6105.
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
## Test Plan
<!-- How was it tested? -->
Not tested at all.
## Summary
Closes#6319.
## Test Plan
I tested with `file:///mirror`, `file://localhost/mirror`, and
`http://mirror` to confirm that it was working as expected.
``` shell-session
/private/tmp/mirror-local 07:08:18
:) tree mirror
mirror/
└── 20240814/
└── cpython-3.12.5+20240814-aarch64-apple-darwin-install_only_stripped.tar.gz
```
<img width="626" alt="image"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/9c04224d-305c-47ee-a524-4a6abeb79da4">
## Summary
Right now, we have slightly different `requires-python` semantics for
`-p 3.11` vs. `-p 3.11 --universal`, and slightly different (wrong)
semantics for how we compare against the _installed_ Python version
(which doesn't ignore upper bounds, but should).
This PR rips it all out and replaces it with consistent semantics across
`uv lock`, `uv pip compile -p 3.11`, and `uv pip compile -p 3.11
--universal`. We now always ignore upper bounds.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6859.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/5045.
Forward an error for missing temp directories:
```
$ env TMPDIR=.tmp uv-debug pip install httpx
error: No such file or directory (os error 2) at path "/home/konsti/projects/uv/.tmp/.tmpgIBhhh"
```
Fixes#6878
## Summary
A few of these should use `absolute` instead of `canonicalize`; and
apparently we no longer need to strip the `CANONICAL_CWD` to get tests
passing.
## Summary
This PR addresses an issue on Windows where `std::fs::canonicalize` can
fail or panic when resolving paths on mapped network drives. By
replacing it with `Simplified::simple_canonicalize`, we aim to improve
the robustness and cross-platform compatibility of path resolution.
### Changes
* Updated `CANONICAL_CWD` in `path.rs` to use
`Simplified::simple_canonicalize` instead of `std::fs::canonicalize`.
### Why
* `std::fs::canonicalize` has known issues with resolving paths on
mapped network drives on Windows, which can lead to panics or incorrect
path resolution.
* `Simplified::simple_canonicalize` internally uses
`dunce::canonicalize`, which handles these cases more gracefully,
ensuring better stability and reliability.
## Test Plan
Since `simple_canonicalize` has already been tested in a prior PR, this
change is expected to work without introducing any new issues. No
additional tests are necessary beyond ensuring existing tests pass,
which will confirm the correctness of the change.
## Summary
- The change relates to #6635 is to include compiled python files (.pyc)
in the uv run command.
- After this change `uv run foo.pyc` should spawn `python foo.pyc`.
## Test Plan
- There is a test that uses TestContext to compile and run a simple
python file that prints "Hello World".
- I built the project locally and tried the same with a simple python
file that I had compiled.
## Summary
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6840.
## Test Plan
```
❯ ~/workspace/uv/target/debug/uv pip list --verbose
DEBUG uv 0.4.0
DEBUG Searching for Python interpreter in system path
DEBUG Found `cpython-3.12.3-macos-aarch64-none` at `/Users/crmarsh/.local/share/rtx/installs/python/3.12.3/bin/python3` (search path)
DEBUG Using Python 3.12.3 environment at /Users/crmarsh/.local/share/rtx/installs/python/3.12.3/bin/python3
```
As suggested by @samypr100 on #6680:
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/pull/6680#issuecomment-2313607984
## Summary
Instead of using `UV_INTERNAL__TEST_DIR`, it simply exports `TEMP` when
running Windows jobs.
## Test Plan
I'm going to run this manually under ProcMon on my Windows machine and
see where uv writes temp files, hopefully to the dev drive and not
`%(LOCAL)APPDATA%` or something.
I'm going to commit a dummy code change and look at build time changes
in CI.
## Summary
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6699
On cases like the ones described in
https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6699, `lpReserved2` somehow seems
to report multiple file descriptors that were not tied to any valid
handles. The previous implementation was faulting as it would try to
dereference these invalid handles. This change moves to using `HANDLE`
directly and check if its is_invalid instead before attempting to close
them.
## Test Plan
Manually tested and verified using `busybox-w32` like described in the
issue.
---------
Co-authored-by: konstin <konstin@mailbox.org>
We currently normalize package and extra names and drop the whitespace
from version specifiers, but we were not normalizing the order of the
specifiers. By sorting them we match the behavior of `packaging` and
become independent of build backends reordering specifiers (#6332).
Surprisingly, the snapshot diff isn't large - most people were already
writing sorted specifiers. Still, this will lead to observable
differences in lockfiles between releases in cases where there are
entries in `requires-dist` that were not previously sorted (while the
total number of `requires-dist` is already small compared to the overall
lockfile).
Microsoft Store Pythons do not always register themselves in the
registry, so we port
<58ce131037/PC/launcher2.c (L1744)>
and look them up on the filesystem in known locations.
## Test Plan
So far I've confirmed that we find a store Python when I use `cargo run
python list`, can we make this a part of any of the platform tests
maybe?
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
Most times we compile with `cargo build`, we don't actually need
`uv-dev`. By making `uv-dev` dependent on a new `dev` feature, it
doesn't get built by default anymore, but only when passing `--features
dev`.
Hopefully a small improvement for compile times or at least system load.
## Summary
We now respect the user-provided upper-bound in for `requires-python`.
So, if the user has `requires-python = "==3.11.*"`, we won't explore
forks that have `python_version >= '3.12'`, for example.
However, we continue to _only_ compare the lower bounds when assessing
whether a dependency is compatible with a given Python range.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6150.
Previously, we were always asking Cargo to rebuild `uv-cli` if
`.git/HEAD` had changed. But in a worktree, `.git` is a file, not a
directory. And the file contains the path to git's internal worktree
state, which also has its own `HEAD` file. So in the case of a worktree,
we read the file and tell Cargo to watch the worktree-specific `HEAD`
file instead of `.git/head`.
The main thing this fixes is that, previously, in a worktree, `cargo
build` would *always* re-compile `uv` even if nothing changed.
This doesn't impact or fix anything in "typical" clones of uv though.
Only in worktrees.
Closes#6196, Closes#6197
## 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.
## Summary
resolves https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/6203
## Test Plan
added a test fixing the bug described in the issue.
---------
Co-authored-by: konstin <konstin@mailbox.org>