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Getting the right files into your wheel is tricky, and sometimes we mess up and
publish a wheel containing __pycache__
directories or tests/
. Do we
have to manually check the contents of every wheel we build before uploading it
to PyPI? How about letting this program check for you? Just run
check-wheel-contents
on your wheel, and it'll fail and notify you if any of
several common errors & mistakes are detected. The errors are described below,
along with common causes and corresponding fixes.
check-wheel-contents
requires Python 3.8 or higher. Just use pip for Python 3 (You have pip, right?) to install
check-wheel-contents
and its dependencies:
python3 -m pip install check-wheel-contents
check-wheel-contents [<options>] <wheel or directory> ...
check-wheel-contents
takes zero or more paths as arguments, each pointing
to either a wheel to analyze or a directory that will be traversed for wheels
to analyze. If a given wheel fails any checks, a message will be printed for
each check along with (if applicable) a list of filepaths in the wheel causing
the check to fail, and the command will exit with a nonzero status. If a wheel
passes all checks, the program will print {path_to_wheel}: OK
.
-c FILE, --config FILE | |
Read configuration from the given file; see below for more information | |
--no-config | Disable reading from the configuration file |
-h, --help | Display a usage message and exit |
-V, --version | Display the program version and exit |
The remaining options can be given either on the command line or in the configuration file; see "Configuration Options" for more information.
If a configuration file is specified on the command line with the --config
option, check-wheel-contents
reads its configuration from the given file.
Files with a .toml
extension are parsed as TOML files, and the
configuration is read from the tool.check-wheel-contents
table. All other
files are parsed as INI files, and their configuration is read from the
[check-wheel-contents]
section (unless the file is named setup.cfg
, in
which case the section [tool:check-wheel-contents]
is used instead).
If no configuration file is specified on the command line, the program begins
searching for a file named pyproject.toml
, tox.ini
, setup.cfg
,
check-wheel-contents.cfg
, or .check-wheel-contents.cfg
, starting in the
current directory and going up. The files are read using the same rules as for
the --config
option, and the first file in the list that contains the
appropriate section is used. Searching stops once a directory containing any
of the named files is found, even if none of them contain the relevant section.
The following options may be set either on the command line or in the configuration file. Settings given on the command line override those in the configuration file. Unknown keys in configuration files are ignored.
--select <checks>
/select = <checks>
Select/enable only the given checks.
<checks>
is a comma-separated list of check IDs and/or check ID prefixes (to select all checks beginning with the given prefixes).In a TOML file,
<checks>
may alternatively be given as a list of strings.By default, all checks are selected (though some checks are no-ops when certain other options are/aren't given).
--ignore <checks>
/ignore = <checks>
Ignore/skip the given checks.
<checks>
is a comma-separated list of check IDs and/or check ID prefixes (to ignore all checks beginning with the given prefixes).In a TOML file,
<checks>
may alternatively be given as a list of strings.By default, no checks are ignored.
--toplevel <names>
/toplevel = <names>
Tell
check-wheel-contents
to check that the toplevel library entries of the wheel equal the set of names in the comma-separated list<names>
; e.g.,--toplevel foo.py,bar/
checks thatfoo.py
,bar
, and nothing else is at the top level of your wheel. Trailing slashes on directory names are optional.In a TOML file,
<names>
may alternatively be given as a list of strings.This option disables check W009 and enables checks W201 and W202. It is also used by check W005 to prevent failure on common names that are intentionally used as toplevel names.
--package <path>
/package = <paths>
Tell
check-wheel-contents
to check that the wheel's library sections contain the file tree rooted at<path>
.Paths given on the command line are resolved relative to the current working directory. Paths given in a configuration file are resolved relative to the directory containing the configuration file.
On the command line, multiple paths can be specified by supplying
--package
multiple times. In a configuration file, multiple paths can be specified by settingpackage
to a comma-separated list of paths. In a TOML file,<paths>
may alternatively be given as a list of strings.This option disables check W009 and enables checks W101 and W102.
--src-dir <path>
/src_dir = <paths>
- The same as
--package
, except that only the contents of<path>
(which must be a directory) and not<path>
itself are checked against the wheel's contents. --package-omit <patterns>
/package_omit = <patterns>
Ignore files & directories inside
--package
or--src-dir
arguments that match any of the glob patterns in the comma-separated list<patterns>
. Ignored files will not be looked for in wheels for check W101, and if any of them do show up in a wheel, it will cause check W102 to fail.In a TOML file,
<patterns>
may alternatively be given as a list of strings.The default set of ignored patterns is
.*, CVS, RCS, *.pyc, *.pyo, *.egg-info
.
Note: Unless otherwise stated, the common causes and their fixes listed here are specific to projects developed using setuptools. Users of other tools like flit and poetry will have to consult those projects' documentation in order to resolve failed checks.
Note: When rebuilding a wheel with setuptools, it is a good idea to delete
the build/
directory first. (This can be done in a single command with
python setup.py clean --all bdist_wheel
.) Not doing this can cause various
checks to continue to fail or new ones to start failing.
This check fails if there are any files in the wheel with a .pyc
or
.pyo
extension. Such files are compiled Python bytecode files, and they do
not belong in wheels, because (a) they are platform-specific and thus useless
to many of your users, and (b) pip generates .pyc
files for the .py
files in your wheel automatically.
Common causes:
You have
include_package_data
set toTrue
, yourMANIFEST.in
containsgraft packagename
orrecursive-include packagename *
, and the lineglobal-exclude *.py[co]
or similar is either missing from theMANIFEST.in
or else in the wrong location.Solution: Ensure that
global-exclude *.py[co]
appears in yourMANIFEST.in
file after allinclude
,recursive-include
,global-include
, andgraft
commands.You have
[install]optimize = 1
set insetup.cfg
(or, equivalently,options={"install": {"optimize": "1"}}
set insetup.py
).Solution: Remove this setting. It's only useful when using
setup.py install
anyway, which is deprecated.
This check fails if any two files in the wheel have the same contents. Common
file contents, such as files that are empty or just contain the line "# -*-
coding: utf-8 -*-
", are excluded from this check.
Common causes:
(Build tool agnostic) You copied a file or directory when you actually meant to rename it.
Solution: Delete the original copy of the file or directory.
You built a wheel, renamed a file or directory, and then built a wheel again without first deleting the
build/
directory.Solution: Delete the
build/
directory and build the wheel again.
This check fails if there are any files at the root of the purelib or platlib
section of the wheel that are not Python modules or .pth
files.
Non-modules belong elsewhere in a wheel:
- Licenses and similar notices should be stored in the wheel's
*.dist-info
directory usingwheel
'slicense_files
option. - Package data/resource files belong inside a package directory so that they
can be located with
pkg_resources
orimportlib-resources
. - A project's
README
should already be used as the project'slong_description
, in which case the text of theREADME
is already included in the wheel inside the*.dist-info/METADATA
file. There should thus be no need to store theREADME
in the wheel's library sections.
This check fails if there are any Python modules in the purelib or platlib section of the wheel that cannot be imported due to one or more of their path components being invalid Python identifiers.
Common causes:
(Build tool agnostic) You gave a package directory or module a name containing a hyphen or other character not allowed in Python identifiers.
Solution: Rename the offending directory or module to remove the offending character, most likely by changing it to an underscore.
(Build tool agnostic) You gave a package directory or module the name of a Python keyword.
Solution: Rename the offending directory or module.
(Build tool agnostic) Your package contains database migration files generated by alembic or Django, which (may) begin with numbers and thus do not have valid Python identifiers as names.
Solution: Ignore this check. (Ignoring checks only for specific files is not yet implemented.)
This check fails if there are any files or directories named .eggs
,
.nox
, .tox
, .venv
, app
, build
, cli
, data
, dist
,
doc
, docs
, example
, examples
, lib
, scripts
, src
,
test
, tests
, or venv
located at the root of the purelib or platlib
section of the wheel. These names are conventionally used for directories that
don't belong in wheels (aside from src
, whose contents belong in wheels but
itself does not belong in a wheel). Projects should only use toplevel names
that resemble the project name; using common names will cause different
projects' files to overwrite each other on installation.
If the --toplevel
option is set, the names listed in the option will not
cause this check to fail.
Common causes:
For
src
: You failed to set up yoursrc/
layout correctly.src
should not contain an__init__.py
file,where='src'
needs to be passed tosetuptools.find_packages()
insetup.py
, andpackage_dir={"": "src"}
needs to be passed tosetup()
insetup.py
.For directories other than
src
: The directory contains an__init__.py
file, and the directory is not listed in theexclude
argument tosetuptools.find_packages()
insetup.py
.Solution: Include
'DIRNAME'
and'DIRNAME.*'
in the list passed to theexclude
argument offind_packages()
.For directories other than
src
: The directory is listed in theexclude
argument tofind_packages()
, but'DIRNAME.*'
is not, and a subdirectory of the directory contains an__init__.py
file.Solution: Include
'DIRNAME.*'
in the list passed to theexclude
argument offind_packages()
.You actually want to include your tests or examples in your wheel.
Solution: Move the tests or whatever to inside your main package directory (e.g., move
tests/
tosomepackage/tests/
) so that they won't collide with other projects' files on installation.You are actually making a package whose name is one of the listed names.
Solution: Include the name of your package in the
--toplevel
option so thatcheck-wheel-contents
knows it's meant to be there.
This check fails if there is a file named __init__.py
at the root of the
purelib or platlib section of the wheel. __init__.py
files only belong
inside package directories, not at the root of an installation.
Common causes:
You failed to set up your
src/
layout correctly.src
should not contain an__init__.py
file,where='src'
needs to be passed tosetuptools.find_packages()
insetup.py
, andpackage_dir={"": "src"}
needs to be passed tosetup()
insetup.py
.You created an
__init__.py
file at the root of your project and setpackages='.'
insetup.py
.Solution: Configure your project's packages correctly. For single-file modules, pass a list of their names (without the
.py
extension) to thepy_modules
argument tosetup()
. For package modules (directories), pass a list of their names and the dotted names of their descendant subpackages (possibly obtained by callingsetuptools.find_packages()
) topackages
.
This check fails if the wheel contains no files in either its purelib or platlib section.
Common causes:
Your project consists of a single-file
.py
module, but you declared it tosetup()
insetup.py
using thepackages
keyword.Solution: Single-file modules must be declared to
setup()
using thepy_modules
keyword. Pass it a list of the names of your single-file modules without the.py
extension.You are using
setuptools.find_packages()
to list your packages forsetup()
, but your package does not contain an__init__.py
file.Solution: Create an
__init__.py
file in your package. If this is not an option because you are building a namespace package, usesetuptools.find_namespace_packages()
instead offind_packages()
. Be sure to set the arguments appropriately so that the function only finds your main package; see the documentation for further information.
You're deliberately creating a wheel that only contains scripts, headers, or other data files.
Solution: Ignore this check.
This check fails if the wheel contains no files other than the *.dist-info
metadata directory. It is a stronger check than W007, intended for users who
are creating wheels that only contain scripts, headers, and other data files
and thus need to ignore W007.
Common causes:
Same causes as for W007
You're deliberately creating an empty wheel whose only function is to cause a set of dependencies to be installed.
Solution: Ignore this check.
This check fails if the wheel's purelib and platlib sections contain more than
one toplevel entry between them, excluding .pth
files and files &
directories that begin with an underscore. This is generally a sign that
something has gone wrong in packaging your project, as very few projects want
to distribute code with multiple top-level modules or packages.
This check is disabled if the --toplevel
, --package
, or --src-dir
option is given either on the command line or in the configuration file.
Common causes:
You built a wheel, renamed a toplevel file or directory, and then built a wheel again without first deleting the
build/
directory.Solution: Delete the
build/
directory and build the wheel again.You are using
setuptools.find_packages()
in yoursetup.py
, your project contains multiple directories with__init__.py
files, and one or more of these directories (other than your main package) is not listed in theexclude
argument tofind_packages()
.Solution: Pass a list of all
__init__.py
-having directories in your project other than your main package to theexclude
argument offind_packages()
. For proper exclusion, each directoryDIRNAME
should correspond to two elements of this list,'DIRNAME'
and'DIRNAME.*'
, in order to ensure that the directory and all of its subdirectories are excluded.You are deliberately creating a wheel with multiple top-level Python modules or packages.
Solution: Use the
--toplevel
option to letcheck-wheel-contents
know what toplevel entries to expect.
This check fails if a directory tree rooted at the root of the purelib or
platlib section of the wheel contains no Python modules. *-stubs
directories are excluded from this check.
This check is only enabled if the --package
or --src-dir
option is set.
This check fails if a path in a tree rooted at an argument to --package
or
inside an argument to --src-dir
does not appear in the wheel's purelib or
platlib section. Empty directories and local files & directories that match
any of the patterns specified with --package-omit
or its default value are
excluded from this check.
Note that this check only checks file paths, i.e., names of files & directories. File contents are not examined.
For example, given the below local tree:
/usr/src/project/ ├── foo/ │ ├── .gitignore │ ├── __init__.py │ └── foo.py └── src/ ├── bar/ │ ├── __init__.py │ ├── bar.py │ ├── empty/ │ └── quux/ │ └── data.dat └── bar.egg-info/ └── PKG-INFO
If the options --package /usr/src/project/foo
and --src-dir
/usr/src/project/src
are supplied and --package-omit
is left at its
default value, then check-wheel-contents
will look for the following paths
in the wheel, and the check will fail if any of them do not appear in either
the purelib or platlib section:
foo/__init__.py foo/foo.py bar/__init__.py bar/bar.py bar/quux/data.dat
Note that foo/.gitignore
and src/bar.egg-info
are omitted from this
check (and if they do appear in the wheel, it will cause check W102 to fail).
Empty directories are ignored altogether.
Common causes:
- For Python files: You failed to pass all of your project's packages &
subpackages to
setup()
'spackages
argument. If you are usingsetuptools.find_packages()
, all of your packages & subpackages need to contain__init__.py
files. - For non-Python files: You failed to declare your project's package data appropriately. See the setuptools documentation for information on how to do this.
This check is only enabled if the --package
or --src-dir
option is set.
This check fails if the purelib or platlib section of the wheel contains any
files at paths that do not exist in any of the file trees specified with
--package
or --src-dir
.
Note that this check only checks file paths, i.e., names of files & directories. File contents are not examined.
For example, given the local tree and options shown in the example under W101, this check will fail if the wheel contains any files in its purelib or platlib section other than the following:
foo/__init__.py foo/foo.py bar/__init__.py bar/bar.py bar/quux/data.dat
Note that files & directories that match any of the patterns specified with
--package-omit
or its default value are ignored in local trees, and so any
entries with those names in the wheel will cause this check to fail. Empty
directories are ignored altogether.
Common causes: See common causes of W009
This check is only enabled if the --toplevel
option is set. This check
fails if one or more of the names given in the --toplevel
option does not
appear at the root of the purelib or platlib section of the wheel.
Common causes: See common causes of W007
This check is only enabled if the --toplevel
option is set. This check
fails if there is a file or directory at the root of the purelib or platlib
section of the wheel that is not listed in the --toplevel
option.
*.pth
files are ignored for the purposes of this check.
Common causes: See common causes of W009