Twine is a utility for interacting with PyPI.
Currently it only supports registering projects and uploading distributions.
The biggest reason to use twine is that it securely authenticates you to PyPI
over HTTPS using a verified connection while python setup.py upload
only
recently stopped using HTTP in Python
2.7.9+ and Python 3.2+. This means anytime you use python setup.py upload
with an older Python version, you expose your username and password to being
easily sniffed. Twine uses only verified TLS to upload to PyPI protecting your
credentials from theft.
Secondly it allows you to precreate your distribution files.
python setup.py upload
only allows you to upload something that you've
created in the same command invocation. This means that you cannot test the
exact file you're going to upload to PyPI to ensure that it works before
uploading it.
Finally it allows you to pre-sign your files and pass the .asc files into
the command line invocation
(twine upload twine-1.0.1.tar.gz twine-1.0.1.tar.gz.asc
). This enables you
to be assured that you're typing your gpg passphrase into gpg itself and not
anything else since you will be the one directly executing
gpg --detach-sign -a <filename>
.
- Verified HTTPS Connections
- Uploading doesn't require executing setup.py
- Uploading files that have already been created, allowing testing of distributions before release
- Supports uploading any packaging format (including wheels).
$ pip install twine
Create some distributions in the normal way:
$ python setup.py sdist bdist_wheel
Upload with twine [#]_:
$ twine upload dist/*
Done!
$ twine upload -h
usage: twine upload [-h] [-r REPOSITORY] [--repository-url REPOSITORY_URL]
[-s] [--sign-with SIGN_WITH] [-i IDENTITY] [-u USERNAME]
[-p PASSWORD] [-c COMMENT] [--config-file CONFIG_FILE]
[--skip-existing] [--cert path] [--client-cert path]
dist [dist ...]
positional arguments:
dist The distribution files to upload to the repository,
may additionally contain a .asc file to include an
existing signature with the file upload
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-r REPOSITORY, --repository REPOSITORY
The repository to upload the package to. Should be a
section in the config file (default: pypi). (Can also
be set via TWINE_REPOSITORY environment variable)
--repository-url REPOSITORY_URL
The repository URL to upload the package to. This
overrides --repository.(Can also be set via
TWINE_REPOSITORY_URL environment variable.)
-s, --sign Sign files to upload using gpg
--sign-with SIGN_WITH
GPG program used to sign uploads (default: gpg)
-i IDENTITY, --identity IDENTITY
GPG identity used to sign files
-u USERNAME, --username USERNAME
The username to authenticate to the repository as (can
also be set via TWINE_USERNAME environment variable)
-p PASSWORD, --password PASSWORD
The password to authenticate to the repository with
(can also be set via TWINE_PASSWORD environment
variable)
-c COMMENT, --comment COMMENT
The comment to include with the distribution file
--config-file CONFIG_FILE
The .pypirc config file to use
--skip-existing Continue uploading files if one already exists. (Only
valid when uploading to PyPI. Other implementations
may not support this.)
--cert path Path to alternate CA bundle (can also be set via
TWINE_CERT environment variable)
--client-cert path Path to SSL client certificate, a single file
containing the private key and the certificate in PEM
format
Twine also supports configuration via environment variables. Options passed on the command line will take precedence over options set via environment variables. Definition via environment variable is helpful in environments where it is not convenient to create a .pypirc file, such as a CI/build server, for example.
TWINE_USERNAME
- the username to use for authentication to the repositoryTWINE_PASSWORD
- the password to use for authentication to the repositoryTWINE_REPOSITORY
- the repository configuration, either defined as a section in .pypirc or provided as a full URLTWINE_REPOSITORY_URL
- the repository URL to useTWINE_CERT
- custom CA certificate to use for repositories with self-signed or untrusted certificates
- IRC
(
#pypa
- irc.freenode.net) - GitHub repository
- Python Packaging User Guide
- Fork the repository on GitHub.
- Make a branch off of master and commit your changes to it.
- Run the tests with
tox
- Either use
tox
to build against all supported Python versions (if you have them installed) or usetox -e py{version}
to test against a specific version, e.g.,tox -e py27
ortox -e py34
. - Always run
tox -e pep8
- Either use
- Ensure that your name is added to the end of the AUTHORS file using the
format
Name <[email protected]> (url)
, where the(url)
portion is optional. - Submit a Pull Request to the master branch on GitHub.
If you'd like to have a development environment for twine, you should create a
virtualenv and then do pip install -e .
from within the directory.
Everyone interacting in the twine project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms, and mailing lists is expected to follow the PyPA Code of Conduct.