On 2/5/19 12:44 AM, Eli Young wrote:
Python packages can specify extras dependencies, which are sets of dependencies not
required for core functionality, and which generally correspond to some feature. These
can then be specified by downstream consumers of the package. For example, requests has
an entry in extras called security[1], which currently adds requirements of python
packages pyOpenSSL >= 0.14, cryptography >= 1.3.4, and idna >= 2.0.0. A
downstream consumer that wants to use this would add a dependency on requests[security].
From what I can tell, the current practice in Fedora packaging is to ignore
these. This simplifies packaging Python modules that have extras specified, but
ultimately pushes the specification of those dependencies down into every
consumer of the package, whether users or other packages.
As an example of this, I currently maintain the python-dns-lexicon package,
which provides a common CLI and API for various different DNS providers. Some
of the providers have additional dependencies that are necessary to function,
and which are specified as extras. The Plesk provider, for example, also
requires python-xmltodict[2]. In line with what appears to standard practice,
extra dependencies are not currently installed with the broader
python-dns-lexicon package. If, however, a user or dependent package wants to
utilize the Plesk functionality of python-dns-lexicon, they now need to know
that python-xmltodict needs to be installed, and will need to check whenever
the package updates as to whether or not that has changed.
How should we be handling this? Right now, it seems that most packages follow
this behavior of punting on the responsibility to package consumers. Should
this continue? If not, how should we handle things? Should we just include all
extras dependencies in the parent package? Alternatively, should we have
dummy/meta subpackages for extras that require the parent package as well as
any extras dependencies (e.g. python-dns-lexicon-plesk would require
python-dns-lexicon and python-xmltodict)?
[1]: https://github.com/requests/requests/blob/v2.21.0/setup.py#L105
[2]: https://github.com/AnalogJ/lexicon/blob/v3.0.6/setup.py#L101
Hello,
AFAIK, there are currently no official guidelines for Python extras, and
there's some fame & glory waiting if you'd like to help draft them :)
That said, I believe subpackages are the answer here.
In addition you could use weak dependencies. I think the main package
should have "Suggests:" for all the extras, and even "Recommends:" for
ones that are almost always useful.
I believe the cost of extra dependencies is lower in Fedora than on
PyPI. Some common reasons for punting deps to extras don't apply (like
bootstrapping issues or requiring compiled modules from pure-Python
ones), so sometimes it's good to just go for hard Requires.
Purely as a packager, I'd like to see "boolean Provides", something like:
Provides: (python3dist(dns-lexicon[plesk]) if python3dist(xmltodict))
... but at a chat with RPM devs on the last Flock, I learned that is not
feasible.
The Python SIG (python-de...@lists.fedoraproject.org) would be a good
place to discuss specific details.
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