summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/python-versioneer.spec
blob: caabb2c6cef8b131123fabc5c5b8f8ec84061ffa (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
668
669
670
671
672
673
674
675
676
677
678
679
680
681
682
683
684
685
686
687
688
689
690
691
692
693
694
695
696
697
698
699
700
701
702
703
704
705
706
707
708
709
710
711
712
713
714
715
716
717
718
719
720
721
722
723
724
725
726
727
728
729
730
731
732
733
734
735
736
737
738
739
740
741
742
743
744
745
746
747
748
749
750
751
752
753
754
755
756
757
%global _empty_manifest_terminate_build 0
Name:		python-versioneer
Version:	0.28
Release:	1
Summary:	Easy VCS-based management of project version strings
License:	This is free and unencumbered software released into the public domain. Anyone is free to copy, modify, publish, use, compile, sell, or distribute this software, either in source code form or as a compiled binary, for any purpose, commercial or non-commercial, and by any means. In jurisdictions that recognize copyright laws, the author or authors of this software dedicate any and all copyright interest in the software to the public domain. We make this dedication for the benefit of the public at large and to the detriment of our heirs and successors. We intend this dedication to be an overt act of relinquishment in perpetuity of all present and future rights to this software under copyright law. THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE. For more information, please refer to <http://unlicense.org/>
URL:		https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer
Source0:	https://mirrors.nju.edu.cn/pypi/web/packages/15/86/bed1c929495d8ca30512c8fcc6e9c2555ecffcdd32f0c04f11e492eba9e0/versioneer-0.28.tar.gz
BuildArch:	noarch

Requires:	python3-tomli

%description
* like a rocketeer, but for versions!
* https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer
* Brian Warner
* License: Public Domain (Unlicense)
* Compatible with: Python 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10 and pypy3
* [![Latest Version][pypi-image]][pypi-url]
* [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url]
This is a tool for managing a recorded version number in setuptools-based
python projects. The goal is to remove the tedious and error-prone "update
the embedded version string" step from your release process. Making a new
release should be as easy as recording a new tag in your version-control
system, and maybe making new tarballs.
## Quick Install
Versioneer provides two installation modes. The "classic" vendored mode installs
a copy of versioneer into your repository. The experimental build-time dependency mode
is intended to allow you to skip this step and simplify the process of upgrading.
### Vendored mode
* `pip install versioneer` to somewhere in your $PATH
   * A [conda-forge recipe](https://github.com/conda-forge/versioneer-feedstock) is
     available, so you can also use `conda install -c conda-forge versioneer`
* add a `[tool.versioneer]` section to your `pyproject.toml` or a
  `[versioneer]` section to your `setup.cfg` (see [Install](INSTALL.md))
   * Note that you will need to add `tomli; python_version < "3.11"` to your
     build-time dependencies if you use `pyproject.toml`
* run `versioneer install --vendor` in your source tree, commit the results
* verify version information with `python setup.py version`
### Build-time dependency mode
* `pip install versioneer` to somewhere in your $PATH
   * A [conda-forge recipe](https://github.com/conda-forge/versioneer-feedstock) is
     available, so you can also use `conda install -c conda-forge versioneer`
* add a `[tool.versioneer]` section to your `pyproject.toml` or a
  `[versioneer]` section to your `setup.cfg` (see [Install](INSTALL.md))
* add `versioneer` (with `[toml]` extra, if configuring in `pyproject.toml`)
  to the `requires` key of the `build-system` table in `pyproject.toml`:
  ```toml
  [build-system]
  requires = ["setuptools", "versioneer[toml]"]
  build-backend = "setuptools.build_meta"
  ```
* run `versioneer install --no-vendor` in your source tree, commit the results
* verify version information with `python setup.py version`
## Version Identifiers
Source trees come from a variety of places:
* a version-control system checkout (mostly used by developers)
* a nightly tarball, produced by build automation
* a snapshot tarball, produced by a web-based VCS browser, like github's
  "tarball from tag" feature
* a release tarball, produced by "setup.py sdist", distributed through PyPI
Within each source tree, the version identifier (either a string or a number,
this tool is format-agnostic) can come from a variety of places:
* ask the VCS tool itself, e.g. "git describe" (for checkouts), which knows
  about recent "tags" and an absolute revision-id
* the name of the directory into which the tarball was unpacked
* an expanded VCS keyword ($Id$, etc)
* a `_version.py` created by some earlier build step
For released software, the version identifier is closely related to a VCS
tag. Some projects use tag names that include more than just the version
string (e.g. "myproject-1.2" instead of just "1.2"), in which case the tool
needs to strip the tag prefix to extract the version identifier. For
unreleased software (between tags), the version identifier should provide
enough information to help developers recreate the same tree, while also
giving them an idea of roughly how old the tree is (after version 1.2, before
version 1.3). Many VCS systems can report a description that captures this,
for example `git describe --tags --dirty --always` reports things like
"0.7-1-g574ab98-dirty" to indicate that the checkout is one revision past the
0.7 tag, has a unique revision id of "574ab98", and is "dirty" (it has
uncommitted changes).
The version identifier is used for multiple purposes:
* to allow the module to self-identify its version: `myproject.__version__`
* to choose a name and prefix for a 'setup.py sdist' tarball
## Theory of Operation
Versioneer works by adding a special `_version.py` file into your source
tree, where your `__init__.py` can import it. This `_version.py` knows how to
dynamically ask the VCS tool for version information at import time.
`_version.py` also contains `$Revision$` markers, and the installation
process marks `_version.py` to have this marker rewritten with a tag name
during the `git archive` command. As a result, generated tarballs will
contain enough information to get the proper version.
To allow `setup.py` to compute a version too, a `versioneer.py` is added to
the top level of your source tree, next to `setup.py` and the `setup.cfg`
that configures it. This overrides several distutils/setuptools commands to
compute the version when invoked, and changes `setup.py build` and `setup.py
sdist` to replace `_version.py` with a small static file that contains just
the generated version data.
## Installation
See [INSTALL.md](./INSTALL.md) for detailed installation instructions.
## Version-String Flavors
Code which uses Versioneer can learn about its version string at runtime by
importing `_version` from your main `__init__.py` file and running the
`get_versions()` function. From the "outside" (e.g. in `setup.py`), you can
import the top-level `versioneer.py` and run `get_versions()`.
Both functions return a dictionary with different flavors of version
information:
* `['version']`: A condensed version string, rendered using the selected
  style. This is the most commonly used value for the project's version
  string. The default "pep440" style yields strings like `0.11`,
  `0.11+2.g1076c97`, or `0.11+2.g1076c97.dirty`. See the "Styles" section
  below for alternative styles.
* `['full-revisionid']`: detailed revision identifier. For Git, this is the
  full SHA1 commit id, e.g. "1076c978a8d3cfc70f408fe5974aa6c092c949ac".
* `['date']`: Date and time of the latest `HEAD` commit. For Git, it is the
  commit date in ISO 8601 format. This will be None if the date is not
  available.
* `['dirty']`: a boolean, True if the tree has uncommitted changes. Note that
  this is only accurate if run in a VCS checkout, otherwise it is likely to
  be False or None
* `['error']`: if the version string could not be computed, this will be set
  to a string describing the problem, otherwise it will be None. It may be
  useful to throw an exception in setup.py if this is set, to avoid e.g.
  creating tarballs with a version string of "unknown".
Some variants are more useful than others. Including `full-revisionid` in a
bug report should allow developers to reconstruct the exact code being tested
(or indicate the presence of local changes that should be shared with the
developers). `version` is suitable for display in an "about" box or a CLI
`--version` output: it can be easily compared against release notes and lists
of bugs fixed in various releases.
The installer adds the following text to your `__init__.py` to place a basic
version in `YOURPROJECT.__version__`:
    from ._version import get_versions
    __version__ = get_versions()['version']
    del get_versions
## Styles
The setup.cfg `style=` configuration controls how the VCS information is
rendered into a version string.
The default style, "pep440", produces a PEP440-compliant string, equal to the
un-prefixed tag name for actual releases, and containing an additional "local
version" section with more detail for in-between builds. For Git, this is
TAG[+DISTANCE.gHEX[.dirty]] , using information from `git describe --tags
--dirty --always`. For example "0.11+2.g1076c97.dirty" indicates that the
tree is like the "1076c97" commit but has uncommitted changes (".dirty"), and
that this commit is two revisions ("+2") beyond the "0.11" tag. For released
software (exactly equal to a known tag), the identifier will only contain the
stripped tag, e.g. "0.11".
Other styles are available. See [details.md](details.md) in the Versioneer
source tree for descriptions.
## Debugging
Versioneer tries to avoid fatal errors: if something goes wrong, it will tend
to return a version of "0+unknown". To investigate the problem, run `setup.py
version`, which will run the version-lookup code in a verbose mode, and will
display the full contents of `get_versions()` (including the `error` string,
which may help identify what went wrong).
## Known Limitations
Some situations are known to cause problems for Versioneer. This details the
most significant ones. More can be found on Github
[issues page](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/issues).
### Subprojects
Versioneer has limited support for source trees in which `setup.py` is not in
the root directory (e.g. `setup.py` and `.git/` are *not* siblings). The are
two common reasons why `setup.py` might not be in the root:
* Source trees which contain multiple subprojects, such as
  [Buildbot](https://github.com/buildbot/buildbot), which contains both
  "master" and "slave" subprojects, each with their own `setup.py`,
  `setup.cfg`, and `tox.ini`. Projects like these produce multiple PyPI
  distributions (and upload multiple independently-installable tarballs).
* Source trees whose main purpose is to contain a C library, but which also
  provide bindings to Python (and perhaps other languages) in subdirectories.
Versioneer will look for `.git` in parent directories, and most operations
should get the right version string. However `pip` and `setuptools` have bugs
and implementation details which frequently cause `pip install .` from a
subproject directory to fail to find a correct version string (so it usually
defaults to `0+unknown`).
`pip install --editable .` should work correctly. `setup.py install` might
work too.
Pip-8.1.1 is known to have this problem, but hopefully it will get fixed in
some later version.
[Bug #38](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/issues/38) is tracking
this issue. The discussion in
[PR #61](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/pull/61) describes the
issue from the Versioneer side in more detail.
[pip PR#3176](https://github.com/pypa/pip/pull/3176) and
[pip PR#3615](https://github.com/pypa/pip/pull/3615) contain work to improve
pip to let Versioneer work correctly.
Versioneer-0.16 and earlier only looked for a `.git` directory next to the
`setup.cfg`, so subprojects were completely unsupported with those releases.
### Editable installs with setuptools <= 18.5
`setup.py develop` and `pip install --editable .` allow you to install a
project into a virtualenv once, then continue editing the source code (and
test) without re-installing after every change.
"Entry-point scripts" (`setup(entry_points={"console_scripts": ..})`) are a
convenient way to specify executable scripts that should be installed along
with the python package.
These both work as expected when using modern setuptools. When using
setuptools-18.5 or earlier, however, certain operations will cause
`pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound` errors when running the entrypoint
script, which must be resolved by re-installing the package. This happens
when the install happens with one version, then the egg_info data is
regenerated while a different version is checked out. Many setup.py commands
cause egg_info to be rebuilt (including `sdist`, `wheel`, and installing into
a different virtualenv), so this can be surprising.
[Bug #83](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/issues/83) describes
this one, but upgrading to a newer version of setuptools should probably
resolve it.
## Updating Versioneer
To upgrade your project to a new release of Versioneer, do the following:
* install the new Versioneer (`pip install -U versioneer` or equivalent)
* edit `setup.cfg` and `pyproject.toml`, if necessary,
  to include any new configuration settings indicated by the release notes.
  See [UPGRADING](./UPGRADING.md) for details.
* re-run `versioneer install --[no-]vendor` in your source tree, to replace
  `SRC/_version.py`
* commit any changed files
## Future Directions
This tool is designed to make it easily extended to other version-control
systems: all VCS-specific components are in separate directories like
src/git/ . The top-level `versioneer.py` script is assembled from these
components by running make-versioneer.py . In the future, make-versioneer.py
will take a VCS name as an argument, and will construct a version of
`versioneer.py` that is specific to the given VCS. It might also take the
configuration arguments that are currently provided manually during
installation by editing setup.py . Alternatively, it might go the other
direction and include code from all supported VCS systems, reducing the
number of intermediate scripts.
## Similar projects
* [setuptools_scm](https://github.com/pypa/setuptools_scm/) - a non-vendored build-time
  dependency
* [minver](https://github.com/jbweston/miniver) - a lightweight reimplementation of
  versioneer
* [versioningit](https://github.com/jwodder/versioningit) - a PEP 518-based setuptools
  plugin
## License
To make Versioneer easier to embed, all its code is dedicated to the public
domain. The `_version.py` that it creates is also in the public domain.
Specifically, both are released under the "Unlicense", as described in
https://unlicense.org/.
[pypi-image]: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/versioneer.svg
[pypi-url]: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/versioneer/
[travis-image]:
https://img.shields.io/travis/com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer.svg
[travis-url]: https://travis-ci.com/github/python-versioneer/python-versioneer

%package -n python3-versioneer
Summary:	Easy VCS-based management of project version strings
Provides:	python-versioneer
BuildRequires:	python3-devel
BuildRequires:	python3-setuptools
BuildRequires:	python3-pip
%description -n python3-versioneer
* like a rocketeer, but for versions!
* https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer
* Brian Warner
* License: Public Domain (Unlicense)
* Compatible with: Python 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10 and pypy3
* [![Latest Version][pypi-image]][pypi-url]
* [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url]
This is a tool for managing a recorded version number in setuptools-based
python projects. The goal is to remove the tedious and error-prone "update
the embedded version string" step from your release process. Making a new
release should be as easy as recording a new tag in your version-control
system, and maybe making new tarballs.
## Quick Install
Versioneer provides two installation modes. The "classic" vendored mode installs
a copy of versioneer into your repository. The experimental build-time dependency mode
is intended to allow you to skip this step and simplify the process of upgrading.
### Vendored mode
* `pip install versioneer` to somewhere in your $PATH
   * A [conda-forge recipe](https://github.com/conda-forge/versioneer-feedstock) is
     available, so you can also use `conda install -c conda-forge versioneer`
* add a `[tool.versioneer]` section to your `pyproject.toml` or a
  `[versioneer]` section to your `setup.cfg` (see [Install](INSTALL.md))
   * Note that you will need to add `tomli; python_version < "3.11"` to your
     build-time dependencies if you use `pyproject.toml`
* run `versioneer install --vendor` in your source tree, commit the results
* verify version information with `python setup.py version`
### Build-time dependency mode
* `pip install versioneer` to somewhere in your $PATH
   * A [conda-forge recipe](https://github.com/conda-forge/versioneer-feedstock) is
     available, so you can also use `conda install -c conda-forge versioneer`
* add a `[tool.versioneer]` section to your `pyproject.toml` or a
  `[versioneer]` section to your `setup.cfg` (see [Install](INSTALL.md))
* add `versioneer` (with `[toml]` extra, if configuring in `pyproject.toml`)
  to the `requires` key of the `build-system` table in `pyproject.toml`:
  ```toml
  [build-system]
  requires = ["setuptools", "versioneer[toml]"]
  build-backend = "setuptools.build_meta"
  ```
* run `versioneer install --no-vendor` in your source tree, commit the results
* verify version information with `python setup.py version`
## Version Identifiers
Source trees come from a variety of places:
* a version-control system checkout (mostly used by developers)
* a nightly tarball, produced by build automation
* a snapshot tarball, produced by a web-based VCS browser, like github's
  "tarball from tag" feature
* a release tarball, produced by "setup.py sdist", distributed through PyPI
Within each source tree, the version identifier (either a string or a number,
this tool is format-agnostic) can come from a variety of places:
* ask the VCS tool itself, e.g. "git describe" (for checkouts), which knows
  about recent "tags" and an absolute revision-id
* the name of the directory into which the tarball was unpacked
* an expanded VCS keyword ($Id$, etc)
* a `_version.py` created by some earlier build step
For released software, the version identifier is closely related to a VCS
tag. Some projects use tag names that include more than just the version
string (e.g. "myproject-1.2" instead of just "1.2"), in which case the tool
needs to strip the tag prefix to extract the version identifier. For
unreleased software (between tags), the version identifier should provide
enough information to help developers recreate the same tree, while also
giving them an idea of roughly how old the tree is (after version 1.2, before
version 1.3). Many VCS systems can report a description that captures this,
for example `git describe --tags --dirty --always` reports things like
"0.7-1-g574ab98-dirty" to indicate that the checkout is one revision past the
0.7 tag, has a unique revision id of "574ab98", and is "dirty" (it has
uncommitted changes).
The version identifier is used for multiple purposes:
* to allow the module to self-identify its version: `myproject.__version__`
* to choose a name and prefix for a 'setup.py sdist' tarball
## Theory of Operation
Versioneer works by adding a special `_version.py` file into your source
tree, where your `__init__.py` can import it. This `_version.py` knows how to
dynamically ask the VCS tool for version information at import time.
`_version.py` also contains `$Revision$` markers, and the installation
process marks `_version.py` to have this marker rewritten with a tag name
during the `git archive` command. As a result, generated tarballs will
contain enough information to get the proper version.
To allow `setup.py` to compute a version too, a `versioneer.py` is added to
the top level of your source tree, next to `setup.py` and the `setup.cfg`
that configures it. This overrides several distutils/setuptools commands to
compute the version when invoked, and changes `setup.py build` and `setup.py
sdist` to replace `_version.py` with a small static file that contains just
the generated version data.
## Installation
See [INSTALL.md](./INSTALL.md) for detailed installation instructions.
## Version-String Flavors
Code which uses Versioneer can learn about its version string at runtime by
importing `_version` from your main `__init__.py` file and running the
`get_versions()` function. From the "outside" (e.g. in `setup.py`), you can
import the top-level `versioneer.py` and run `get_versions()`.
Both functions return a dictionary with different flavors of version
information:
* `['version']`: A condensed version string, rendered using the selected
  style. This is the most commonly used value for the project's version
  string. The default "pep440" style yields strings like `0.11`,
  `0.11+2.g1076c97`, or `0.11+2.g1076c97.dirty`. See the "Styles" section
  below for alternative styles.
* `['full-revisionid']`: detailed revision identifier. For Git, this is the
  full SHA1 commit id, e.g. "1076c978a8d3cfc70f408fe5974aa6c092c949ac".
* `['date']`: Date and time of the latest `HEAD` commit. For Git, it is the
  commit date in ISO 8601 format. This will be None if the date is not
  available.
* `['dirty']`: a boolean, True if the tree has uncommitted changes. Note that
  this is only accurate if run in a VCS checkout, otherwise it is likely to
  be False or None
* `['error']`: if the version string could not be computed, this will be set
  to a string describing the problem, otherwise it will be None. It may be
  useful to throw an exception in setup.py if this is set, to avoid e.g.
  creating tarballs with a version string of "unknown".
Some variants are more useful than others. Including `full-revisionid` in a
bug report should allow developers to reconstruct the exact code being tested
(or indicate the presence of local changes that should be shared with the
developers). `version` is suitable for display in an "about" box or a CLI
`--version` output: it can be easily compared against release notes and lists
of bugs fixed in various releases.
The installer adds the following text to your `__init__.py` to place a basic
version in `YOURPROJECT.__version__`:
    from ._version import get_versions
    __version__ = get_versions()['version']
    del get_versions
## Styles
The setup.cfg `style=` configuration controls how the VCS information is
rendered into a version string.
The default style, "pep440", produces a PEP440-compliant string, equal to the
un-prefixed tag name for actual releases, and containing an additional "local
version" section with more detail for in-between builds. For Git, this is
TAG[+DISTANCE.gHEX[.dirty]] , using information from `git describe --tags
--dirty --always`. For example "0.11+2.g1076c97.dirty" indicates that the
tree is like the "1076c97" commit but has uncommitted changes (".dirty"), and
that this commit is two revisions ("+2") beyond the "0.11" tag. For released
software (exactly equal to a known tag), the identifier will only contain the
stripped tag, e.g. "0.11".
Other styles are available. See [details.md](details.md) in the Versioneer
source tree for descriptions.
## Debugging
Versioneer tries to avoid fatal errors: if something goes wrong, it will tend
to return a version of "0+unknown". To investigate the problem, run `setup.py
version`, which will run the version-lookup code in a verbose mode, and will
display the full contents of `get_versions()` (including the `error` string,
which may help identify what went wrong).
## Known Limitations
Some situations are known to cause problems for Versioneer. This details the
most significant ones. More can be found on Github
[issues page](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/issues).
### Subprojects
Versioneer has limited support for source trees in which `setup.py` is not in
the root directory (e.g. `setup.py` and `.git/` are *not* siblings). The are
two common reasons why `setup.py` might not be in the root:
* Source trees which contain multiple subprojects, such as
  [Buildbot](https://github.com/buildbot/buildbot), which contains both
  "master" and "slave" subprojects, each with their own `setup.py`,
  `setup.cfg`, and `tox.ini`. Projects like these produce multiple PyPI
  distributions (and upload multiple independently-installable tarballs).
* Source trees whose main purpose is to contain a C library, but which also
  provide bindings to Python (and perhaps other languages) in subdirectories.
Versioneer will look for `.git` in parent directories, and most operations
should get the right version string. However `pip` and `setuptools` have bugs
and implementation details which frequently cause `pip install .` from a
subproject directory to fail to find a correct version string (so it usually
defaults to `0+unknown`).
`pip install --editable .` should work correctly. `setup.py install` might
work too.
Pip-8.1.1 is known to have this problem, but hopefully it will get fixed in
some later version.
[Bug #38](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/issues/38) is tracking
this issue. The discussion in
[PR #61](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/pull/61) describes the
issue from the Versioneer side in more detail.
[pip PR#3176](https://github.com/pypa/pip/pull/3176) and
[pip PR#3615](https://github.com/pypa/pip/pull/3615) contain work to improve
pip to let Versioneer work correctly.
Versioneer-0.16 and earlier only looked for a `.git` directory next to the
`setup.cfg`, so subprojects were completely unsupported with those releases.
### Editable installs with setuptools <= 18.5
`setup.py develop` and `pip install --editable .` allow you to install a
project into a virtualenv once, then continue editing the source code (and
test) without re-installing after every change.
"Entry-point scripts" (`setup(entry_points={"console_scripts": ..})`) are a
convenient way to specify executable scripts that should be installed along
with the python package.
These both work as expected when using modern setuptools. When using
setuptools-18.5 or earlier, however, certain operations will cause
`pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound` errors when running the entrypoint
script, which must be resolved by re-installing the package. This happens
when the install happens with one version, then the egg_info data is
regenerated while a different version is checked out. Many setup.py commands
cause egg_info to be rebuilt (including `sdist`, `wheel`, and installing into
a different virtualenv), so this can be surprising.
[Bug #83](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/issues/83) describes
this one, but upgrading to a newer version of setuptools should probably
resolve it.
## Updating Versioneer
To upgrade your project to a new release of Versioneer, do the following:
* install the new Versioneer (`pip install -U versioneer` or equivalent)
* edit `setup.cfg` and `pyproject.toml`, if necessary,
  to include any new configuration settings indicated by the release notes.
  See [UPGRADING](./UPGRADING.md) for details.
* re-run `versioneer install --[no-]vendor` in your source tree, to replace
  `SRC/_version.py`
* commit any changed files
## Future Directions
This tool is designed to make it easily extended to other version-control
systems: all VCS-specific components are in separate directories like
src/git/ . The top-level `versioneer.py` script is assembled from these
components by running make-versioneer.py . In the future, make-versioneer.py
will take a VCS name as an argument, and will construct a version of
`versioneer.py` that is specific to the given VCS. It might also take the
configuration arguments that are currently provided manually during
installation by editing setup.py . Alternatively, it might go the other
direction and include code from all supported VCS systems, reducing the
number of intermediate scripts.
## Similar projects
* [setuptools_scm](https://github.com/pypa/setuptools_scm/) - a non-vendored build-time
  dependency
* [minver](https://github.com/jbweston/miniver) - a lightweight reimplementation of
  versioneer
* [versioningit](https://github.com/jwodder/versioningit) - a PEP 518-based setuptools
  plugin
## License
To make Versioneer easier to embed, all its code is dedicated to the public
domain. The `_version.py` that it creates is also in the public domain.
Specifically, both are released under the "Unlicense", as described in
https://unlicense.org/.
[pypi-image]: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/versioneer.svg
[pypi-url]: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/versioneer/
[travis-image]:
https://img.shields.io/travis/com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer.svg
[travis-url]: https://travis-ci.com/github/python-versioneer/python-versioneer

%package help
Summary:	Development documents and examples for versioneer
Provides:	python3-versioneer-doc
%description help
* like a rocketeer, but for versions!
* https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer
* Brian Warner
* License: Public Domain (Unlicense)
* Compatible with: Python 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10 and pypy3
* [![Latest Version][pypi-image]][pypi-url]
* [![Build Status][travis-image]][travis-url]
This is a tool for managing a recorded version number in setuptools-based
python projects. The goal is to remove the tedious and error-prone "update
the embedded version string" step from your release process. Making a new
release should be as easy as recording a new tag in your version-control
system, and maybe making new tarballs.
## Quick Install
Versioneer provides two installation modes. The "classic" vendored mode installs
a copy of versioneer into your repository. The experimental build-time dependency mode
is intended to allow you to skip this step and simplify the process of upgrading.
### Vendored mode
* `pip install versioneer` to somewhere in your $PATH
   * A [conda-forge recipe](https://github.com/conda-forge/versioneer-feedstock) is
     available, so you can also use `conda install -c conda-forge versioneer`
* add a `[tool.versioneer]` section to your `pyproject.toml` or a
  `[versioneer]` section to your `setup.cfg` (see [Install](INSTALL.md))
   * Note that you will need to add `tomli; python_version < "3.11"` to your
     build-time dependencies if you use `pyproject.toml`
* run `versioneer install --vendor` in your source tree, commit the results
* verify version information with `python setup.py version`
### Build-time dependency mode
* `pip install versioneer` to somewhere in your $PATH
   * A [conda-forge recipe](https://github.com/conda-forge/versioneer-feedstock) is
     available, so you can also use `conda install -c conda-forge versioneer`
* add a `[tool.versioneer]` section to your `pyproject.toml` or a
  `[versioneer]` section to your `setup.cfg` (see [Install](INSTALL.md))
* add `versioneer` (with `[toml]` extra, if configuring in `pyproject.toml`)
  to the `requires` key of the `build-system` table in `pyproject.toml`:
  ```toml
  [build-system]
  requires = ["setuptools", "versioneer[toml]"]
  build-backend = "setuptools.build_meta"
  ```
* run `versioneer install --no-vendor` in your source tree, commit the results
* verify version information with `python setup.py version`
## Version Identifiers
Source trees come from a variety of places:
* a version-control system checkout (mostly used by developers)
* a nightly tarball, produced by build automation
* a snapshot tarball, produced by a web-based VCS browser, like github's
  "tarball from tag" feature
* a release tarball, produced by "setup.py sdist", distributed through PyPI
Within each source tree, the version identifier (either a string or a number,
this tool is format-agnostic) can come from a variety of places:
* ask the VCS tool itself, e.g. "git describe" (for checkouts), which knows
  about recent "tags" and an absolute revision-id
* the name of the directory into which the tarball was unpacked
* an expanded VCS keyword ($Id$, etc)
* a `_version.py` created by some earlier build step
For released software, the version identifier is closely related to a VCS
tag. Some projects use tag names that include more than just the version
string (e.g. "myproject-1.2" instead of just "1.2"), in which case the tool
needs to strip the tag prefix to extract the version identifier. For
unreleased software (between tags), the version identifier should provide
enough information to help developers recreate the same tree, while also
giving them an idea of roughly how old the tree is (after version 1.2, before
version 1.3). Many VCS systems can report a description that captures this,
for example `git describe --tags --dirty --always` reports things like
"0.7-1-g574ab98-dirty" to indicate that the checkout is one revision past the
0.7 tag, has a unique revision id of "574ab98", and is "dirty" (it has
uncommitted changes).
The version identifier is used for multiple purposes:
* to allow the module to self-identify its version: `myproject.__version__`
* to choose a name and prefix for a 'setup.py sdist' tarball
## Theory of Operation
Versioneer works by adding a special `_version.py` file into your source
tree, where your `__init__.py` can import it. This `_version.py` knows how to
dynamically ask the VCS tool for version information at import time.
`_version.py` also contains `$Revision$` markers, and the installation
process marks `_version.py` to have this marker rewritten with a tag name
during the `git archive` command. As a result, generated tarballs will
contain enough information to get the proper version.
To allow `setup.py` to compute a version too, a `versioneer.py` is added to
the top level of your source tree, next to `setup.py` and the `setup.cfg`
that configures it. This overrides several distutils/setuptools commands to
compute the version when invoked, and changes `setup.py build` and `setup.py
sdist` to replace `_version.py` with a small static file that contains just
the generated version data.
## Installation
See [INSTALL.md](./INSTALL.md) for detailed installation instructions.
## Version-String Flavors
Code which uses Versioneer can learn about its version string at runtime by
importing `_version` from your main `__init__.py` file and running the
`get_versions()` function. From the "outside" (e.g. in `setup.py`), you can
import the top-level `versioneer.py` and run `get_versions()`.
Both functions return a dictionary with different flavors of version
information:
* `['version']`: A condensed version string, rendered using the selected
  style. This is the most commonly used value for the project's version
  string. The default "pep440" style yields strings like `0.11`,
  `0.11+2.g1076c97`, or `0.11+2.g1076c97.dirty`. See the "Styles" section
  below for alternative styles.
* `['full-revisionid']`: detailed revision identifier. For Git, this is the
  full SHA1 commit id, e.g. "1076c978a8d3cfc70f408fe5974aa6c092c949ac".
* `['date']`: Date and time of the latest `HEAD` commit. For Git, it is the
  commit date in ISO 8601 format. This will be None if the date is not
  available.
* `['dirty']`: a boolean, True if the tree has uncommitted changes. Note that
  this is only accurate if run in a VCS checkout, otherwise it is likely to
  be False or None
* `['error']`: if the version string could not be computed, this will be set
  to a string describing the problem, otherwise it will be None. It may be
  useful to throw an exception in setup.py if this is set, to avoid e.g.
  creating tarballs with a version string of "unknown".
Some variants are more useful than others. Including `full-revisionid` in a
bug report should allow developers to reconstruct the exact code being tested
(or indicate the presence of local changes that should be shared with the
developers). `version` is suitable for display in an "about" box or a CLI
`--version` output: it can be easily compared against release notes and lists
of bugs fixed in various releases.
The installer adds the following text to your `__init__.py` to place a basic
version in `YOURPROJECT.__version__`:
    from ._version import get_versions
    __version__ = get_versions()['version']
    del get_versions
## Styles
The setup.cfg `style=` configuration controls how the VCS information is
rendered into a version string.
The default style, "pep440", produces a PEP440-compliant string, equal to the
un-prefixed tag name for actual releases, and containing an additional "local
version" section with more detail for in-between builds. For Git, this is
TAG[+DISTANCE.gHEX[.dirty]] , using information from `git describe --tags
--dirty --always`. For example "0.11+2.g1076c97.dirty" indicates that the
tree is like the "1076c97" commit but has uncommitted changes (".dirty"), and
that this commit is two revisions ("+2") beyond the "0.11" tag. For released
software (exactly equal to a known tag), the identifier will only contain the
stripped tag, e.g. "0.11".
Other styles are available. See [details.md](details.md) in the Versioneer
source tree for descriptions.
## Debugging
Versioneer tries to avoid fatal errors: if something goes wrong, it will tend
to return a version of "0+unknown". To investigate the problem, run `setup.py
version`, which will run the version-lookup code in a verbose mode, and will
display the full contents of `get_versions()` (including the `error` string,
which may help identify what went wrong).
## Known Limitations
Some situations are known to cause problems for Versioneer. This details the
most significant ones. More can be found on Github
[issues page](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/issues).
### Subprojects
Versioneer has limited support for source trees in which `setup.py` is not in
the root directory (e.g. `setup.py` and `.git/` are *not* siblings). The are
two common reasons why `setup.py` might not be in the root:
* Source trees which contain multiple subprojects, such as
  [Buildbot](https://github.com/buildbot/buildbot), which contains both
  "master" and "slave" subprojects, each with their own `setup.py`,
  `setup.cfg`, and `tox.ini`. Projects like these produce multiple PyPI
  distributions (and upload multiple independently-installable tarballs).
* Source trees whose main purpose is to contain a C library, but which also
  provide bindings to Python (and perhaps other languages) in subdirectories.
Versioneer will look for `.git` in parent directories, and most operations
should get the right version string. However `pip` and `setuptools` have bugs
and implementation details which frequently cause `pip install .` from a
subproject directory to fail to find a correct version string (so it usually
defaults to `0+unknown`).
`pip install --editable .` should work correctly. `setup.py install` might
work too.
Pip-8.1.1 is known to have this problem, but hopefully it will get fixed in
some later version.
[Bug #38](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/issues/38) is tracking
this issue. The discussion in
[PR #61](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/pull/61) describes the
issue from the Versioneer side in more detail.
[pip PR#3176](https://github.com/pypa/pip/pull/3176) and
[pip PR#3615](https://github.com/pypa/pip/pull/3615) contain work to improve
pip to let Versioneer work correctly.
Versioneer-0.16 and earlier only looked for a `.git` directory next to the
`setup.cfg`, so subprojects were completely unsupported with those releases.
### Editable installs with setuptools <= 18.5
`setup.py develop` and `pip install --editable .` allow you to install a
project into a virtualenv once, then continue editing the source code (and
test) without re-installing after every change.
"Entry-point scripts" (`setup(entry_points={"console_scripts": ..})`) are a
convenient way to specify executable scripts that should be installed along
with the python package.
These both work as expected when using modern setuptools. When using
setuptools-18.5 or earlier, however, certain operations will cause
`pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound` errors when running the entrypoint
script, which must be resolved by re-installing the package. This happens
when the install happens with one version, then the egg_info data is
regenerated while a different version is checked out. Many setup.py commands
cause egg_info to be rebuilt (including `sdist`, `wheel`, and installing into
a different virtualenv), so this can be surprising.
[Bug #83](https://github.com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer/issues/83) describes
this one, but upgrading to a newer version of setuptools should probably
resolve it.
## Updating Versioneer
To upgrade your project to a new release of Versioneer, do the following:
* install the new Versioneer (`pip install -U versioneer` or equivalent)
* edit `setup.cfg` and `pyproject.toml`, if necessary,
  to include any new configuration settings indicated by the release notes.
  See [UPGRADING](./UPGRADING.md) for details.
* re-run `versioneer install --[no-]vendor` in your source tree, to replace
  `SRC/_version.py`
* commit any changed files
## Future Directions
This tool is designed to make it easily extended to other version-control
systems: all VCS-specific components are in separate directories like
src/git/ . The top-level `versioneer.py` script is assembled from these
components by running make-versioneer.py . In the future, make-versioneer.py
will take a VCS name as an argument, and will construct a version of
`versioneer.py` that is specific to the given VCS. It might also take the
configuration arguments that are currently provided manually during
installation by editing setup.py . Alternatively, it might go the other
direction and include code from all supported VCS systems, reducing the
number of intermediate scripts.
## Similar projects
* [setuptools_scm](https://github.com/pypa/setuptools_scm/) - a non-vendored build-time
  dependency
* [minver](https://github.com/jbweston/miniver) - a lightweight reimplementation of
  versioneer
* [versioningit](https://github.com/jwodder/versioningit) - a PEP 518-based setuptools
  plugin
## License
To make Versioneer easier to embed, all its code is dedicated to the public
domain. The `_version.py` that it creates is also in the public domain.
Specifically, both are released under the "Unlicense", as described in
https://unlicense.org/.
[pypi-image]: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/versioneer.svg
[pypi-url]: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/versioneer/
[travis-image]:
https://img.shields.io/travis/com/python-versioneer/python-versioneer.svg
[travis-url]: https://travis-ci.com/github/python-versioneer/python-versioneer

%prep
%autosetup -n versioneer-0.28

%build
%py3_build

%install
%py3_install
install -d -m755 %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}
if [ -d doc ]; then cp -arf doc %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
if [ -d docs ]; then cp -arf docs %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
if [ -d example ]; then cp -arf example %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
if [ -d examples ]; then cp -arf examples %{buildroot}/%{_pkgdocdir}; fi
pushd %{buildroot}
if [ -d usr/lib ]; then
	find usr/lib -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
fi
if [ -d usr/lib64 ]; then
	find usr/lib64 -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
fi
if [ -d usr/bin ]; then
	find usr/bin -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
fi
if [ -d usr/sbin ]; then
	find usr/sbin -type f -printf "/%h/%f\n" >> filelist.lst
fi
touch doclist.lst
if [ -d usr/share/man ]; then
	find usr/share/man -type f -printf "/%h/%f.gz\n" >> doclist.lst
fi
popd
mv %{buildroot}/filelist.lst .
mv %{buildroot}/doclist.lst .

%files -n python3-versioneer -f filelist.lst
%dir %{python3_sitelib}/*

%files help -f doclist.lst
%{_docdir}/*

%changelog
* Fri Apr 21 2023 Python_Bot <Python_Bot@openeuler.org> - 0.28-1
- Package Spec generated