Currently, the entry for a package+version+source table is called `distribution`. That is incorrect, the `sdist` and `wheel` fields inside of that table are distributions, the table itself is for a package. We also align ourselves closer with PEP 751. I went through `lock.rs` and renamed all occurrences of "distribution" that actually referred to a "package". This change invalidates all existing lockfiles. Bikeshedding: Do we call it `package` or `packages`? See also https://github.com/python/peps/pull/3877 `package` is nice because it looks like a header: ```toml [[package]] name = "anyio" version = "4.3.0" source = { registry = "https://pypi.org/simple" } dependencies = [ { name = "idna" }, { name = "sniffio" }, ] sdist = { url = "3970183622/anyio-4.3.0.tar.gz", hash = "sha256:f75253795a87df48568485fd18cdd2a3fa5c4f7c5be8e5e36637733fce06fed6", size = 159642 } wheels = [ { url = "2f20c40b45/anyio-4.3.0-py3-none-any.whl", hash = "sha256:048e05d0f6caeed70d731f3db756d35dcc1f35747c8c403364a8332c630441b8", size = 85584 }, ] ``` `packages` is nice because the field is not a single entry, but a list. 2/3 for https://github.com/astral-sh/uv/issues/4893 --------- Co-authored-by: Charlie Marsh <charlie.r.marsh@gmail.com>
Crates
bench
Functionality for benchmarking uv.
cache-key
Generic functionality for caching paths, URLs, and other resources across platforms.
distribution-filename
Parse built distribution (wheel) and source distribution (sdist) filenames to extract structured metadata.
distribution-types
Abstractions for representing built distributions (wheels) and source distributions (sdists), and the sources from which they can be downloaded.
install-wheel-rs
Install built distributions (wheels) into a virtual environment.]
once-map
A waitmap-like concurrent hash map for executing tasks
exactly once.
pep440-rs
Utilities for interacting with Python version numbers and specifiers.
pep508-rs
Utilities for interacting with PEP 508 dependency specifiers.
platform-host
Functionality for detecting the current platform (operating system, architecture, etc.).
platform-tags
Functionality for parsing and inferring Python platform tags as per PEP 425.
uv
Command-line interface for the uv package manager.
uv-build
A PEP 517-compatible build frontend for uv.
uv-cache
Functionality for caching Python packages and associated metadata.
uv-client
Client for interacting with PyPI-compatible HTTP APIs.
uv-dev
Development utilities for uv.
uv-dispatch
A centralized struct for resolving and building source distributions in isolated environments.
Implements the traits defined in uv-types.
uv-distribution
Client for interacting with built distributions (wheels) and source distributions (sdists). Capable of fetching metadata, distribution contents, etc.
uv-extract
Utilities for extracting files from archives.
uv-fs
Utilities for interacting with the filesystem.
uv-git
Functionality for interacting with Git repositories.
uv-installer
Functionality for installing Python packages into a virtual environment.
uv-python
Functionality for detecting and leveraging the current Python interpreter.
uv-normalize
Normalize package and extra names as per Python specifications.
uv-package
Types and functionality for working with Python packages, e.g., parsing wheel files.
uv-requirements
Utilities for reading package requirements from pyproject.toml and requirements.txt files.
uv-resolver
Functionality for resolving Python packages and their dependencies.
uv-shell
Utilities for detecting and manipulating shell environments.
uv-types
Shared traits for uv, to avoid circular dependencies.
pypi-types
General-purpose type definitions for types used in PyPI-compatible APIs.
uv-virtualenv
A venv replacement to create virtual environments in Rust.
uv-warnings
User-facing warnings for uv.
uv-workspace
Workspace abstractions for uv.
requirements-txt
Functionality for parsing requirements.txt files.