├── .gitattributes ├── .gitignore ├── LICENSE ├── MANIFEST.in ├── README.md ├── dfviz ├── __init__.py ├── _version.py ├── example.py ├── fields.py ├── sigslot.py ├── utils.py └── widget.py ├── docs ├── Makefile ├── README.md ├── environment.yml ├── make.bat └── source │ ├── conf.py │ ├── images │ ├── field_select.png │ ├── linear.png │ ├── out0.png │ ├── sampled.png │ ├── start.png │ ├── violin.png │ └── yaml.png │ ├── index.rst │ └── usage.rst ├── readthedocs.yml ├── requirements.txt ├── setup.cfg ├── setup.py └── versioneer.py /.gitattributes: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | dfviz/_version.py export-subst 2 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /.gitignore: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | # Byte-compiled / optimized / DLL files 2 | __pycache__/ 3 | *.py[cod] 4 | *$py.class 5 | 6 | # C extensions 7 | *.so 8 | 9 | # Distribution / packaging 10 | .Python 11 | build/ 12 | develop-eggs/ 13 | dist/ 14 | downloads/ 15 | eggs/ 16 | .eggs/ 17 | lib/ 18 | lib64/ 19 | parts/ 20 | sdist/ 21 | var/ 22 | wheels/ 23 | *.egg-info/ 24 | .installed.cfg 25 | *.egg 26 | MANIFEST 27 | 28 | # PyInstaller 29 | # Usually these files are written by a python script from a template 30 | # before PyInstaller builds the exe, so as to inject date/other infos into it. 31 | *.manifest 32 | *.spec 33 | 34 | # Installer logs 35 | pip-log.txt 36 | pip-delete-this-directory.txt 37 | 38 | # Unit test / coverage reports 39 | htmlcov/ 40 | .tox/ 41 | .coverage 42 | .coverage.* 43 | .cache 44 | nosetests.xml 45 | coverage.xml 46 | *.cover 47 | .hypothesis/ 48 | .pytest_cache/ 49 | 50 | # Translations 51 | *.mo 52 | *.pot 53 | 54 | # Django stuff: 55 | *.log 56 | local_settings.py 57 | db.sqlite3 58 | 59 | # Flask stuff: 60 | instance/ 61 | .webassets-cache 62 | 63 | # Scrapy stuff: 64 | .scrapy 65 | 66 | # Sphinx documentation 67 | docs/_build/ 68 | 69 | # PyBuilder 70 | target/ 71 | 72 | # Jupyter Notebook 73 | .ipynb_checkpoints 74 | 75 | # pyenv 76 | .python-version 77 | 78 | # celery beat schedule file 79 | celerybeat-schedule 80 | 81 | # SageMath parsed files 82 | *.sage.py 83 | 84 | # Environments 85 | .env 86 | .venv 87 | env/ 88 | venv/ 89 | ENV/ 90 | env.bak/ 91 | venv.bak/ 92 | 93 | # Spyder project settings 94 | .spyderproject 95 | .spyproject 96 | .idea/ 97 | 98 | # Rope project settings 99 | .ropeproject 100 | 101 | # mkdocs documentation 102 | /site 103 | 104 | # mypy 105 | .mypy_cache/ 106 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /LICENSE: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | Copyright (c) 2014-2018, Anaconda, Inc. and contributors 2 | All rights reserved. 3 | 4 | Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, 5 | are permitted provided that the following conditions are met: 6 | 7 | Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, 8 | this list of conditions and the following disclaimer. 9 | 10 | Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, 11 | this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation 12 | and/or other materials provided with the distribution. 13 | 14 | Neither the name of Anaconda nor the names of any contributors may be used to 15 | endorse or promote products derived from this software without specific prior 16 | written permission. 17 | 18 | THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" 19 | AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE 20 | IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE 21 | ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT OWNER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE 22 | LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR 23 | CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF 24 | SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS 25 | INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN 26 | CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) 27 | ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF 28 | THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE. 29 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /MANIFEST.in: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | include versioneer.py 2 | include dfviz/_version.py 3 | include setup.py 4 | include README.md 5 | include LICENSE 6 | include MANIFEST.in 7 | include requirements.txt 8 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /README.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | DFVIZ 2 | ===== 3 | 4 | A simple general-purpose interactive plotting tool for dataframes 5 | 6 | For documentation, please go to [ReadTheDocs](https://dfviz.readthedocs.io/) 7 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dfviz/__init__.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | from .widget import MainWidget as DFViz 2 | from .example import run_example 3 | 4 | from ._version import get_versions 5 | __version__ = get_versions()['version'] 6 | del get_versions 7 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dfviz/_version.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 2 | # This file helps to compute a version number in source trees obtained from 3 | # git-archive tarball (such as those provided by githubs download-from-tag 4 | # feature). Distribution tarballs (built by setup.py sdist) and build 5 | # directories (produced by setup.py build) will contain a much shorter file 6 | # that just contains the computed version number. 7 | 8 | # This file is released into the public domain. Generated by 9 | # versioneer-0.18 (https://github.com/warner/python-versioneer) 10 | 11 | """Git implementation of _version.py.""" 12 | 13 | import errno 14 | import os 15 | import re 16 | import subprocess 17 | import sys 18 | 19 | 20 | def get_keywords(): 21 | """Get the keywords needed to look up the version information.""" 22 | # these strings will be replaced by git during git-archive. 23 | # setup.py/versioneer.py will grep for the variable names, so they must 24 | # each be defined on a line of their own. _version.py will just call 25 | # get_keywords(). 26 | git_refnames = " (HEAD -> master)" 27 | git_full = "eb7f361bc67b4fe06f98bcc7abc525af615a4eec" 28 | git_date = "2019-08-13 17:30:09 -0400" 29 | keywords = {"refnames": git_refnames, "full": git_full, "date": git_date} 30 | return keywords 31 | 32 | 33 | class VersioneerConfig: 34 | """Container for Versioneer configuration parameters.""" 35 | 36 | 37 | def get_config(): 38 | """Create, populate and return the VersioneerConfig() object.""" 39 | # these strings are filled in when 'setup.py versioneer' creates 40 | # _version.py 41 | cfg = VersioneerConfig() 42 | cfg.VCS = "git" 43 | cfg.style = "pep440" 44 | cfg.tag_prefix = "" 45 | cfg.parentdir_prefix = "None" 46 | cfg.versionfile_source = "dfviz/_version.py" 47 | cfg.verbose = False 48 | return cfg 49 | 50 | 51 | class NotThisMethod(Exception): 52 | """Exception raised if a method is not valid for the current scenario.""" 53 | 54 | 55 | LONG_VERSION_PY = {} 56 | HANDLERS = {} 57 | 58 | 59 | def register_vcs_handler(vcs, method): # decorator 60 | """Decorator to mark a method as the handler for a particular VCS.""" 61 | def decorate(f): 62 | """Store f in HANDLERS[vcs][method].""" 63 | if vcs not in HANDLERS: 64 | HANDLERS[vcs] = {} 65 | HANDLERS[vcs][method] = f 66 | return f 67 | return decorate 68 | 69 | 70 | def run_command(commands, args, cwd=None, verbose=False, hide_stderr=False, 71 | env=None): 72 | """Call the given command(s).""" 73 | assert isinstance(commands, list) 74 | p = None 75 | for c in commands: 76 | try: 77 | dispcmd = str([c] + args) 78 | # remember shell=False, so use git.cmd on windows, not just git 79 | p = subprocess.Popen([c] + args, cwd=cwd, env=env, 80 | stdout=subprocess.PIPE, 81 | stderr=(subprocess.PIPE if hide_stderr 82 | else None)) 83 | break 84 | except EnvironmentError: 85 | e = sys.exc_info()[1] 86 | if e.errno == errno.ENOENT: 87 | continue 88 | if verbose: 89 | print("unable to run %s" % dispcmd) 90 | print(e) 91 | return None, None 92 | else: 93 | if verbose: 94 | print("unable to find command, tried %s" % (commands,)) 95 | return None, None 96 | stdout = p.communicate()[0].strip() 97 | if sys.version_info[0] >= 3: 98 | stdout = stdout.decode() 99 | if p.returncode != 0: 100 | if verbose: 101 | print("unable to run %s (error)" % dispcmd) 102 | print("stdout was %s" % stdout) 103 | return None, p.returncode 104 | return stdout, p.returncode 105 | 106 | 107 | def versions_from_parentdir(parentdir_prefix, root, verbose): 108 | """Try to determine the version from the parent directory name. 109 | 110 | Source tarballs conventionally unpack into a directory that includes both 111 | the project name and a version string. We will also support searching up 112 | two directory levels for an appropriately named parent directory 113 | """ 114 | rootdirs = [] 115 | 116 | for i in range(3): 117 | dirname = os.path.basename(root) 118 | if dirname.startswith(parentdir_prefix): 119 | return {"version": dirname[len(parentdir_prefix):], 120 | "full-revisionid": None, 121 | "dirty": False, "error": None, "date": None} 122 | else: 123 | rootdirs.append(root) 124 | root = os.path.dirname(root) # up a level 125 | 126 | if verbose: 127 | print("Tried directories %s but none started with prefix %s" % 128 | (str(rootdirs), parentdir_prefix)) 129 | raise NotThisMethod("rootdir doesn't start with parentdir_prefix") 130 | 131 | 132 | @register_vcs_handler("git", "get_keywords") 133 | def git_get_keywords(versionfile_abs): 134 | """Extract version information from the given file.""" 135 | # the code embedded in _version.py can just fetch the value of these 136 | # keywords. When used from setup.py, we don't want to import _version.py, 137 | # so we do it with a regexp instead. This function is not used from 138 | # _version.py. 139 | keywords = {} 140 | try: 141 | f = open(versionfile_abs, "r") 142 | for line in f.readlines(): 143 | if line.strip().startswith("git_refnames ="): 144 | mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line) 145 | if mo: 146 | keywords["refnames"] = mo.group(1) 147 | if line.strip().startswith("git_full ="): 148 | mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line) 149 | if mo: 150 | keywords["full"] = mo.group(1) 151 | if line.strip().startswith("git_date ="): 152 | mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line) 153 | if mo: 154 | keywords["date"] = mo.group(1) 155 | f.close() 156 | except EnvironmentError: 157 | pass 158 | return keywords 159 | 160 | 161 | @register_vcs_handler("git", "keywords") 162 | def git_versions_from_keywords(keywords, tag_prefix, verbose): 163 | """Get version information from git keywords.""" 164 | if not keywords: 165 | raise NotThisMethod("no keywords at all, weird") 166 | date = keywords.get("date") 167 | if date is not None: 168 | # git-2.2.0 added "%cI", which expands to an ISO-8601 -compliant 169 | # datestamp. However we prefer "%ci" (which expands to an "ISO-8601 170 | # -like" string, which we must then edit to make compliant), because 171 | # it's been around since git-1.5.3, and it's too difficult to 172 | # discover which version we're using, or to work around using an 173 | # older one. 174 | date = date.strip().replace(" ", "T", 1).replace(" ", "", 1) 175 | refnames = keywords["refnames"].strip() 176 | if refnames.startswith("$Format"): 177 | if verbose: 178 | print("keywords are unexpanded, not using") 179 | raise NotThisMethod("unexpanded keywords, not a git-archive tarball") 180 | refs = set([r.strip() for r in refnames.strip("()").split(",")]) 181 | # starting in git-1.8.3, tags are listed as "tag: foo-1.0" instead of 182 | # just "foo-1.0". If we see a "tag: " prefix, prefer those. 183 | TAG = "tag: " 184 | tags = set([r[len(TAG):] for r in refs if r.startswith(TAG)]) 185 | if not tags: 186 | # Either we're using git < 1.8.3, or there really are no tags. We use 187 | # a heuristic: assume all version tags have a digit. The old git %d 188 | # expansion behaves like git log --decorate=short and strips out the 189 | # refs/heads/ and refs/tags/ prefixes that would let us distinguish 190 | # between branches and tags. By ignoring refnames without digits, we 191 | # filter out many common branch names like "release" and 192 | # "stabilization", as well as "HEAD" and "master". 193 | tags = set([r for r in refs if re.search(r'\d', r)]) 194 | if verbose: 195 | print("discarding '%s', no digits" % ",".join(refs - tags)) 196 | if verbose: 197 | print("likely tags: %s" % ",".join(sorted(tags))) 198 | for ref in sorted(tags): 199 | # sorting will prefer e.g. "2.0" over "2.0rc1" 200 | if ref.startswith(tag_prefix): 201 | r = ref[len(tag_prefix):] 202 | if verbose: 203 | print("picking %s" % r) 204 | return {"version": r, 205 | "full-revisionid": keywords["full"].strip(), 206 | "dirty": False, "error": None, 207 | "date": date} 208 | # no suitable tags, so version is "0+unknown", but full hex is still there 209 | if verbose: 210 | print("no suitable tags, using unknown + full revision id") 211 | return {"version": "0+unknown", 212 | "full-revisionid": keywords["full"].strip(), 213 | "dirty": False, "error": "no suitable tags", "date": None} 214 | 215 | 216 | @register_vcs_handler("git", "pieces_from_vcs") 217 | def git_pieces_from_vcs(tag_prefix, root, verbose, run_command=run_command): 218 | """Get version from 'git describe' in the root of the source tree. 219 | 220 | This only gets called if the git-archive 'subst' keywords were *not* 221 | expanded, and _version.py hasn't already been rewritten with a short 222 | version string, meaning we're inside a checked out source tree. 223 | """ 224 | GITS = ["git"] 225 | if sys.platform == "win32": 226 | GITS = ["git.cmd", "git.exe"] 227 | 228 | out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["rev-parse", "--git-dir"], cwd=root, 229 | hide_stderr=True) 230 | if rc != 0: 231 | if verbose: 232 | print("Directory %s not under git control" % root) 233 | raise NotThisMethod("'git rev-parse --git-dir' returned error") 234 | 235 | # if there is a tag matching tag_prefix, this yields TAG-NUM-gHEX[-dirty] 236 | # if there isn't one, this yields HEX[-dirty] (no NUM) 237 | describe_out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["describe", "--tags", "--dirty", 238 | "--always", "--long", 239 | "--match", "%s*" % tag_prefix], 240 | cwd=root) 241 | # --long was added in git-1.5.5 242 | if describe_out is None: 243 | raise NotThisMethod("'git describe' failed") 244 | describe_out = describe_out.strip() 245 | full_out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["rev-parse", "HEAD"], cwd=root) 246 | if full_out is None: 247 | raise NotThisMethod("'git rev-parse' failed") 248 | full_out = full_out.strip() 249 | 250 | pieces = {} 251 | pieces["long"] = full_out 252 | pieces["short"] = full_out[:7] # maybe improved later 253 | pieces["error"] = None 254 | 255 | # parse describe_out. It will be like TAG-NUM-gHEX[-dirty] or HEX[-dirty] 256 | # TAG might have hyphens. 257 | git_describe = describe_out 258 | 259 | # look for -dirty suffix 260 | dirty = git_describe.endswith("-dirty") 261 | pieces["dirty"] = dirty 262 | if dirty: 263 | git_describe = git_describe[:git_describe.rindex("-dirty")] 264 | 265 | # now we have TAG-NUM-gHEX or HEX 266 | 267 | if "-" in git_describe: 268 | # TAG-NUM-gHEX 269 | mo = re.search(r'^(.+)-(\d+)-g([0-9a-f]+)$', git_describe) 270 | if not mo: 271 | # unparseable. Maybe git-describe is misbehaving? 272 | pieces["error"] = ("unable to parse git-describe output: '%s'" 273 | % describe_out) 274 | return pieces 275 | 276 | # tag 277 | full_tag = mo.group(1) 278 | if not full_tag.startswith(tag_prefix): 279 | if verbose: 280 | fmt = "tag '%s' doesn't start with prefix '%s'" 281 | print(fmt % (full_tag, tag_prefix)) 282 | pieces["error"] = ("tag '%s' doesn't start with prefix '%s'" 283 | % (full_tag, tag_prefix)) 284 | return pieces 285 | pieces["closest-tag"] = full_tag[len(tag_prefix):] 286 | 287 | # distance: number of commits since tag 288 | pieces["distance"] = int(mo.group(2)) 289 | 290 | # commit: short hex revision ID 291 | pieces["short"] = mo.group(3) 292 | 293 | else: 294 | # HEX: no tags 295 | pieces["closest-tag"] = None 296 | count_out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["rev-list", "HEAD", "--count"], 297 | cwd=root) 298 | pieces["distance"] = int(count_out) # total number of commits 299 | 300 | # commit date: see ISO-8601 comment in git_versions_from_keywords() 301 | date = run_command(GITS, ["show", "-s", "--format=%ci", "HEAD"], 302 | cwd=root)[0].strip() 303 | pieces["date"] = date.strip().replace(" ", "T", 1).replace(" ", "", 1) 304 | 305 | return pieces 306 | 307 | 308 | def plus_or_dot(pieces): 309 | """Return a + if we don't already have one, else return a .""" 310 | if "+" in pieces.get("closest-tag", ""): 311 | return "." 312 | return "+" 313 | 314 | 315 | def render_pep440(pieces): 316 | """Build up version string, with post-release "local version identifier". 317 | 318 | Our goal: TAG[+DISTANCE.gHEX[.dirty]] . Note that if you 319 | get a tagged build and then dirty it, you'll get TAG+0.gHEX.dirty 320 | 321 | Exceptions: 322 | 1: no tags. git_describe was just HEX. 0+untagged.DISTANCE.gHEX[.dirty] 323 | """ 324 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 325 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 326 | if pieces["distance"] or pieces["dirty"]: 327 | rendered += plus_or_dot(pieces) 328 | rendered += "%d.g%s" % (pieces["distance"], pieces["short"]) 329 | if pieces["dirty"]: 330 | rendered += ".dirty" 331 | else: 332 | # exception #1 333 | rendered = "0+untagged.%d.g%s" % (pieces["distance"], 334 | pieces["short"]) 335 | if pieces["dirty"]: 336 | rendered += ".dirty" 337 | return rendered 338 | 339 | 340 | def render_pep440_pre(pieces): 341 | """TAG[.post.devDISTANCE] -- No -dirty. 342 | 343 | Exceptions: 344 | 1: no tags. 0.post.devDISTANCE 345 | """ 346 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 347 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 348 | if pieces["distance"]: 349 | rendered += ".post.dev%d" % pieces["distance"] 350 | else: 351 | # exception #1 352 | rendered = "0.post.dev%d" % pieces["distance"] 353 | return rendered 354 | 355 | 356 | def render_pep440_post(pieces): 357 | """TAG[.postDISTANCE[.dev0]+gHEX] . 358 | 359 | The ".dev0" means dirty. Note that .dev0 sorts backwards 360 | (a dirty tree will appear "older" than the corresponding clean one), 361 | but you shouldn't be releasing software with -dirty anyways. 362 | 363 | Exceptions: 364 | 1: no tags. 0.postDISTANCE[.dev0] 365 | """ 366 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 367 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 368 | if pieces["distance"] or pieces["dirty"]: 369 | rendered += ".post%d" % pieces["distance"] 370 | if pieces["dirty"]: 371 | rendered += ".dev0" 372 | rendered += plus_or_dot(pieces) 373 | rendered += "g%s" % pieces["short"] 374 | else: 375 | # exception #1 376 | rendered = "0.post%d" % pieces["distance"] 377 | if pieces["dirty"]: 378 | rendered += ".dev0" 379 | rendered += "+g%s" % pieces["short"] 380 | return rendered 381 | 382 | 383 | def render_pep440_old(pieces): 384 | """TAG[.postDISTANCE[.dev0]] . 385 | 386 | The ".dev0" means dirty. 387 | 388 | Eexceptions: 389 | 1: no tags. 0.postDISTANCE[.dev0] 390 | """ 391 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 392 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 393 | if pieces["distance"] or pieces["dirty"]: 394 | rendered += ".post%d" % pieces["distance"] 395 | if pieces["dirty"]: 396 | rendered += ".dev0" 397 | else: 398 | # exception #1 399 | rendered = "0.post%d" % pieces["distance"] 400 | if pieces["dirty"]: 401 | rendered += ".dev0" 402 | return rendered 403 | 404 | 405 | def render_git_describe(pieces): 406 | """TAG[-DISTANCE-gHEX][-dirty]. 407 | 408 | Like 'git describe --tags --dirty --always'. 409 | 410 | Exceptions: 411 | 1: no tags. HEX[-dirty] (note: no 'g' prefix) 412 | """ 413 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 414 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 415 | if pieces["distance"]: 416 | rendered += "-%d-g%s" % (pieces["distance"], pieces["short"]) 417 | else: 418 | # exception #1 419 | rendered = pieces["short"] 420 | if pieces["dirty"]: 421 | rendered += "-dirty" 422 | return rendered 423 | 424 | 425 | def render_git_describe_long(pieces): 426 | """TAG-DISTANCE-gHEX[-dirty]. 427 | 428 | Like 'git describe --tags --dirty --always -long'. 429 | The distance/hash is unconditional. 430 | 431 | Exceptions: 432 | 1: no tags. HEX[-dirty] (note: no 'g' prefix) 433 | """ 434 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 435 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 436 | rendered += "-%d-g%s" % (pieces["distance"], pieces["short"]) 437 | else: 438 | # exception #1 439 | rendered = pieces["short"] 440 | if pieces["dirty"]: 441 | rendered += "-dirty" 442 | return rendered 443 | 444 | 445 | def render(pieces, style): 446 | """Render the given version pieces into the requested style.""" 447 | if pieces["error"]: 448 | return {"version": "unknown", 449 | "full-revisionid": pieces.get("long"), 450 | "dirty": None, 451 | "error": pieces["error"], 452 | "date": None} 453 | 454 | if not style or style == "default": 455 | style = "pep440" # the default 456 | 457 | if style == "pep440": 458 | rendered = render_pep440(pieces) 459 | elif style == "pep440-pre": 460 | rendered = render_pep440_pre(pieces) 461 | elif style == "pep440-post": 462 | rendered = render_pep440_post(pieces) 463 | elif style == "pep440-old": 464 | rendered = render_pep440_old(pieces) 465 | elif style == "git-describe": 466 | rendered = render_git_describe(pieces) 467 | elif style == "git-describe-long": 468 | rendered = render_git_describe_long(pieces) 469 | else: 470 | raise ValueError("unknown style '%s'" % style) 471 | 472 | return {"version": rendered, "full-revisionid": pieces["long"], 473 | "dirty": pieces["dirty"], "error": None, 474 | "date": pieces.get("date")} 475 | 476 | 477 | def get_versions(): 478 | """Get version information or return default if unable to do so.""" 479 | # I am in _version.py, which lives at ROOT/VERSIONFILE_SOURCE. If we have 480 | # __file__, we can work backwards from there to the root. Some 481 | # py2exe/bbfreeze/non-CPython implementations don't do __file__, in which 482 | # case we can only use expanded keywords. 483 | 484 | cfg = get_config() 485 | verbose = cfg.verbose 486 | 487 | try: 488 | return git_versions_from_keywords(get_keywords(), cfg.tag_prefix, 489 | verbose) 490 | except NotThisMethod: 491 | pass 492 | 493 | try: 494 | root = os.path.realpath(__file__) 495 | # versionfile_source is the relative path from the top of the source 496 | # tree (where the .git directory might live) to this file. Invert 497 | # this to find the root from __file__. 498 | for i in cfg.versionfile_source.split('/'): 499 | root = os.path.dirname(root) 500 | except NameError: 501 | return {"version": "0+unknown", "full-revisionid": None, 502 | "dirty": None, 503 | "error": "unable to find root of source tree", 504 | "date": None} 505 | 506 | try: 507 | pieces = git_pieces_from_vcs(cfg.tag_prefix, root, verbose) 508 | return render(pieces, cfg.style) 509 | except NotThisMethod: 510 | pass 511 | 512 | try: 513 | if cfg.parentdir_prefix: 514 | return versions_from_parentdir(cfg.parentdir_prefix, root, verbose) 515 | except NotThisMethod: 516 | pass 517 | 518 | return {"version": "0+unknown", "full-revisionid": None, 519 | "dirty": None, 520 | "error": "unable to compute version", "date": None} 521 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dfviz/example.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | """ 2 | Executable example of the interface with random data. 3 | 4 | Call as: 5 | $ python example.py # in this directory 6 | or 7 | $ python -c "import dfviz; dfviz.run_example()" 8 | from anywhere, if dfviz has been installed. 9 | """ 10 | 11 | import numpy as np 12 | import pandas as pd 13 | from dfviz import DFViz 14 | 15 | 16 | def run_example(show=True): 17 | """Display example dataset in the interface 18 | 19 | Parameters 20 | ---------- 21 | show : bool 22 | If True, automatically opens new browser tab with the interface. 23 | 24 | Returns 25 | ------- 26 | A dfviz.DFViz instance. To display, you can use widget.show() or 27 | allow widget.panel to be rendered in a notebook. 28 | """ 29 | try: 30 | import dask.dataframe as dd 31 | except ImportError: 32 | dd = False 33 | N = 1000 34 | df = pd.DataFrame({ 35 | 'a': range(N), 36 | 'b': np.random.rand(N), 37 | 'c': np.random.randn(N), 38 | 'd': np.random.choice(['A', 'B', 'C'], size=N) 39 | }) 40 | if dd: 41 | df = dd.from_pandas(df, 2) 42 | kwargs = { 43 | 'alpha': 0.7, 44 | 'color': 'a', 45 | 'marker': 's', 46 | 'colorbar': True, 47 | 'cmap': 'Viridis', 48 | 'size': 55, 49 | 'width': 600, 50 | 'height': 600, 51 | 'xlim': (0, 1000.0), 52 | 'ylim': (-2, 2), 53 | 'y': 'c', 54 | 'x': 'a', 55 | 'kind': 'scatter', 56 | 'Sample': False 57 | } 58 | wid = DFViz(df, **kwargs) 59 | if show: 60 | try: 61 | wid.show() 62 | except KeyboardInterrupt: 63 | pass 64 | return wid 65 | 66 | 67 | if __name__ == '__main__': 68 | wid = run_example() 69 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dfviz/fields.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | """ 2 | Definitions of required and optional parameters for many hvplot 3 | plot types. 4 | """ 5 | 6 | 7 | plot_requires = { 8 | 'area': ['multi_y'], 9 | 'bar': ['multi_y'], 10 | 'box': ['multi_y'], 11 | 'bivariate': ['x', 'y'], 12 | 'heatmap': ['x', 'y', 'C'], 13 | 'hexbin': ['x', 'y'], 14 | 'hist': ['multi_y'], 15 | 'line': ['multi_y', 'x'], 16 | 'kde': ['multi_y'], 17 | 'scatter': ['y'], 18 | 'table': ['columns'], 19 | 'violin': ['y'] 20 | } 21 | plot_allows = { 22 | 'area': ['x', 'stacked', 'logy'], 23 | 'bar': ['x', 'by', 'groupby', 'stacked', 'logy'], 24 | 'box': ['by', 'invert'], 25 | 'bivariate': ['colorbar'], 26 | 'heatmap': ['colorbar'], 27 | 'hexbin': ['colorbar'], 28 | 'hist': ['by', 'bins'], 29 | 'kde': ['by'], 30 | 'line': ['logx', 'logy'], 31 | 'scatter': ['x', 'color', 'marker', 'colorbar', 'cmap', 'size', 'logx', 32 | 'logy'], 33 | 'table': [], 34 | 'violin': ['by', 'groupby'] 35 | } 36 | all_names = set(sum(plot_allows.values(), [])) 37 | field_names = {'x', 'y', 'C', 'color', 'multi_y', 'by', 'groupby', 'columns', 38 | 'size'} 39 | option_names = [n for n in all_names if n not in field_names] + [ 40 | 'color', 'alpha', 'legend', 'size'] 41 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dfviz/sigslot.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | import contextlib 2 | from.utils import logger, logging 3 | 4 | 5 | class SigSlot(object): 6 | """Signal-slot mixin, for Panel event passing 7 | 8 | Include this class in a widget manager's superclasses to be able to 9 | register events and callbacks on Panel widgets managed by that class. 10 | 11 | The method ``_register`` should be called as widgets are added, and external 12 | code should call ``connect`` to associate callbacks. 13 | 14 | By default, all signals emit a DEBUG logging statement. 15 | """ 16 | 17 | def __init__(self): 18 | self._ignoring_events = False 19 | self._sigs = {} 20 | self._map = {} 21 | 22 | def _clear(self): 23 | """Remove all registered events""" 24 | self._sigs.clear() 25 | self._map.clear() 26 | 27 | def _deregister(self, name): 28 | """Remove named event""" 29 | del self._sigs[name] # explicitly stop watchers? 30 | wn = [k for k, v in self._map.items() if v == name][0] 31 | del self._map[wn] 32 | 33 | def _register(self, widget, name, thing='value', log_level=logging.DEBUG): 34 | """Watch the given attribute of a widget and assign it a named event 35 | 36 | This is normally called at the time a widget is instantiated, in the 37 | class which owns it. 38 | 39 | Parameters 40 | ---------- 41 | widget : pn.layout.Panel or None 42 | Widget to watch. If None, an anonymous signal not associated with 43 | any widget. 44 | name : str 45 | Name of this event 46 | thing : str 47 | Attribute of the given widget to watch 48 | log_level : int 49 | When the signal is triggered, a logging event of the given level 50 | will be fired in the dfviz logger. 51 | """ 52 | self._sigs[name] = {'widget': widget, 'callbacks': [], 'thing': thing, 53 | 'log': log_level} 54 | wn = "-".join([widget.name if widget is not None else "none", thing]) 55 | self._map[wn] = name 56 | if widget is not None: 57 | widget.param.watch(self._signal, thing, onlychanged=True) 58 | 59 | @property 60 | def signals(self): 61 | """Known named signals of this class""" 62 | return list(self._sigs) 63 | 64 | def connect(self, name, callback): 65 | """Associate call back with given event 66 | 67 | The callback must be a function which takes the "new" value of the 68 | watched attribute as the only parameter. If the callback return False, 69 | this cancels any further processing of the given event. 70 | 71 | Alternatively, the callback can be a string, in which case it means 72 | emitting the correspondingly-named event. 73 | """ 74 | self._sigs[name]['callbacks'].append(callback) 75 | 76 | def _signal(self, event): 77 | """This is called by a an action on a widget 78 | 79 | Within an self.ignore_events context, nothing happens. 80 | 81 | Tests can execute this method by directly changing the values of 82 | widget components. 83 | """ 84 | if not self._ignoring_events: 85 | wn = "-".join([event.obj.name, event.name]) 86 | if wn in self._map and self._map[wn] in self._sigs: 87 | self._emit(self._map[wn], event.new) 88 | 89 | @contextlib.contextmanager 90 | def ignore_events(self): 91 | """Temporarily turn off events processing in this instance""" 92 | self._ignoring_events = True 93 | try: 94 | yield 95 | finally: 96 | self._ignoring_events = False 97 | 98 | def _emit(self, sig, value=None): 99 | """An event happened, call its callbacks 100 | 101 | This method can be used in tests to simulate message passing without 102 | directly changing visual elements. 103 | 104 | Calling of callbacks will halt whenever one returns False. 105 | """ 106 | logger.log(self._sigs[sig]['log'], "{}: {}".format(sig, value)) 107 | for callback in self._sigs[sig]['callbacks']: 108 | if isinstance(callback, str): 109 | self._emit(callback) 110 | elif callback(value) is False: 111 | break 112 | 113 | def show(self): 114 | """Open a new browser tab and display this instance's interface""" 115 | self.panel.show() 116 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dfviz/utils.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | import logging 2 | logger = logging.getLogger('dfviz') 3 | 4 | 5 | def pretty_describe(object, nestedness=0, indent=2): 6 | """Nice YAML-like text version of given dict/object 7 | 8 | Maintains dict ordering 9 | """ 10 | if not isinstance(object, dict): 11 | return str(object) 12 | sep = '\n{}'.format(" " * nestedness * indent) 13 | out = sep.join(('{}: {}'.format(k, pretty_describe(v, nestedness + 1)) 14 | for k, v in object.items())) 15 | if nestedness > 0 and out: 16 | return '{sep}{out}'.format(sep=sep, format=format) 17 | return out 18 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /dfviz/widget.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | from bokeh import palettes 2 | import pandas as pd 3 | import panel as pn 4 | from hvplot import hvPlot 5 | from .sigslot import SigSlot 6 | from .utils import pretty_describe 7 | from .fields import * 8 | 9 | 10 | class MainWidget(SigSlot): 11 | """dfviz main interface, interactive plotting of dataframes 12 | 13 | This is designed to be viewed in a notebook or stand-alone web application. 14 | 15 | Parameters 16 | ---------- 17 | data : dataframe 18 | Dask or pandas dataframe to be plotted 19 | kwargs : values to pre-populate the options. 20 | These have the same names as the labels of the widgets in most cases; 21 | where the same name appears in both Fields and Style panes, the value 22 | will be assigned to the Fields version if the it is equal the value of 23 | a column(s) in the data. 24 | 25 | Examples 26 | -------- 27 | wid = MainWidget(df) 28 | wid.show() # opens up new browser tab 29 | wid.panel # in a notebook, will display interface in cell output 30 | """ 31 | 32 | def __init__(self, data, **kwargs): 33 | # TODO: input kwargs to set widgets' initial state 34 | super().__init__() 35 | self.data = data 36 | self.dasky = hasattr(data, 'dask') 37 | self.control = ControlWidget(self.data, **kwargs) 38 | self.kwtext = pn.pane.Str(name='YAML') 39 | self.output = pn.Tabs(pn.Spacer(name='Plot'), self.kwtext) 40 | 41 | self.method = pn.widgets.Select( 42 | name='Plot Type', options=list(plot_requires), 43 | value=kwargs.get('kind', 'area') 44 | ) 45 | self.plot = pn.widgets.Button(name='Plot') 46 | plotcont = pn.Row(self.method, self.plot, 47 | pn.layout.HSpacer()) 48 | 49 | self._register(self.plot, 'plot_clicked', 'clicks') 50 | self._register(self.method, 'method_changed') 51 | 52 | self.connect('plot_clicked', self.draw) 53 | self.connect('method_changed', self.control.set_method) 54 | 55 | self.panel = pn.Column(plotcont, self.control.panel, self.output) 56 | 57 | def draw(self, *args): 58 | """Recreate the plot with current arguments 59 | 60 | Called by "Plot" button 61 | """ 62 | kwargs = self.control.kwargs 63 | kwargs['kind'] = self.method.value 64 | self.kwtext.object = pretty_describe(kwargs) 65 | data = self.control.sample.sample_data(self.data) 66 | self._plot = hvPlot(data)(**kwargs) 67 | self.output[0] = pn.Row(*pn.pane.HoloViews(self._plot), name='Plot') 68 | fig = list(self.output[0][0]._models.values())[0][0] 69 | try: 70 | xrange = fig.x_range.start, fig.x_range.end 71 | yrange = fig.y_range.start, fig.y_range.end 72 | self.control.set_ranges(xrange, yrange) 73 | except AttributeError: 74 | # some plots (e.g., Table) don't have ranges 75 | pass 76 | 77 | 78 | class ControlWidget(SigSlot): 79 | """Set of tabs controlling data and style options""" 80 | 81 | def __init__(self, df, **kwargs): 82 | super().__init__() 83 | npartitions = getattr(df, 'npartitions', 1) 84 | self.autoplot = False 85 | 86 | self.sample = SamplePane(npartitions) 87 | self.fields = FieldsPane(columns=list(df.columns)) 88 | self.style = StylePane() 89 | self.panel = pn.Tabs(self.sample.panel, self.fields.panel, 90 | self.style.panel, 91 | background=(230, 230, 230)) 92 | self._register(self.panel, 'tab_changed', 'active') 93 | self.connect('tab_changed', self.maybe_disable_axes) 94 | self.previous_kwargs = {} 95 | self.start_kwargs = kwargs 96 | self.set_method(kwargs.get('kind', 'area')) 97 | 98 | if 'xlim' in kwargs or 'ylim' in kwargs: 99 | self.set_ranges(kwargs.get('xlim', None), 100 | kwargs.get('ylim', None)) 101 | self.fields.connect("changed", 102 | lambda _: self.maybe_disable_axes(None, True)) 103 | 104 | def maybe_disable_axes(self, tab, force=False): 105 | """When the style tab is selected, the calculated axes may be invalid 106 | 107 | If ``force`` is True, the axes vales are always invalidated. 108 | """ 109 | # tab activated - if kwargs changed, disable ranges 110 | if force or self.panel[tab] is self.style.panel: 111 | if force or self.fields_kwargs != self.previous_kwargs: 112 | self.style.disable_axes() 113 | 114 | def set_ranges(self, xrange, yrange): 115 | """New plot ranges are available, so set the corresponding widgets""" 116 | # new plot - if kwargs changed since last plot, update ranges; 117 | # they should be enabled if they end up with a real range 118 | if self.fields_kwargs != self.previous_kwargs: 119 | self.style.set_ranges(xrange, yrange) 120 | self.previous_kwargs = self.fields_kwargs 121 | 122 | def set_method(self, method, kwargs=None): 123 | """A new plot type was selected, so reset fields and style tabs""" 124 | self.method = method 125 | kwargs = kwargs if kwargs is not None else self.start_kwargs 126 | # self.set_ranges(None, None) 127 | self.fields.setup(method, kwargs) 128 | self.style.setup(method, kwargs) 129 | self.sample.setup(kwargs) 130 | self.start_kwargs = {} # only on the first call 131 | 132 | @property 133 | def fields_kwargs(self): 134 | fields_kwargs = {k: v for k, v in self.fields.kwargs.items() 135 | if v is not None} 136 | fields_kwargs.update(self.sample.kwargs) 137 | return fields_kwargs 138 | 139 | @property 140 | def kwargs(self): 141 | kwargs = self.style.kwargs 142 | kwargs.update(self.fields_kwargs) 143 | return kwargs 144 | 145 | 146 | def make_option_widget(name, columns=[], optional=False, style=False): 147 | """Create a panel object for the names keyword argument 148 | 149 | The arguments are all options to pass to hvplot(), and may have 150 | correspondingly named widgets somewhere in the interface. 151 | """ 152 | if name in ['multi_y', 'columns']: 153 | if name == 'multi_y': 154 | name = 'y' 155 | return pn.widgets.MultiSelect(options=columns, name=name) 156 | if name == 'color' and style: 157 | return pn.widgets.ColorPicker(name='color', value="#FFFFFF") 158 | if name == 'size' and style: 159 | return pn.widgets.IntSlider(name='size', start=3, end=65, value=12, 160 | step=2) 161 | if name in ['x', 'y', 'z', 'by', 'groupby', 'color', 'size', 'C']: 162 | options = ([None] + columns) if optional else columns 163 | return pn.widgets.Select(options=options, name=name) 164 | if name in ['stacked', 'colorbar', 'logx', 'logy', 'invert']: 165 | return pn.widgets.Checkbox(name=name, value=False) 166 | if name == 'legend': 167 | return pn.widgets.Select( 168 | name='legend', value='right', 169 | options=[None, 'top', 'bottom', 'left', 'right'] 170 | ) 171 | if name == 'alpha': 172 | return pn.widgets.FloatSlider(name='alpha', start=0, end=1, value=0.9, 173 | step=0.05) 174 | if name == 'cmap': 175 | return pn.widgets.Select(name='cmap', value='Viridis', 176 | options=list(palettes.all_palettes)) 177 | if name == 'marker': 178 | return pn.widgets.Select(name='marker', value='o', 179 | options=list('s.ov^<>*+x')) 180 | if name == 'bins': 181 | return pn.widgets.IntSlider(name='bins', value=20, start=2, end=100) 182 | 183 | 184 | class StylePane(SigSlot): 185 | """Options specific to "how" to plot""" 186 | 187 | def __init__(self): 188 | self.panel = pn.Row(pn.Spacer(), pn.Spacer(), name='Style') 189 | 190 | def setup(self, method, kwargs={}): 191 | """Find set of options relevant to given plot type and make widgets""" 192 | allowed = ['alpha', 'legend'] + plot_allows[method] 193 | ws = [make_option_widget(nreq, style=True) for nreq in allowed 194 | if nreq in option_names] 195 | self.panel[0] = pn.Column(*ws, name='Style') 196 | self.panel[1] = pn.Column( 197 | pn.widgets.IntSlider(name='width', value=600, start=100, end=1200), 198 | pn.widgets.IntSlider(name='height', value=400, start=100, end=1200) 199 | ) 200 | self.axes = [ 201 | pn.widgets.FloatSlider(name=n, start=0, end=1, disabled=True) 202 | for n in ['x min', 'x max', 'y min', 'y max'] 203 | ] 204 | self.panel[1].extend(self.axes) 205 | self.xrange, self.yrange = None, None 206 | if kwargs: 207 | for wid in list(self.panel[0]) + list(self.panel[1][:2]): 208 | if wid.name in kwargs: 209 | wid.value = kwargs[wid.name] 210 | 211 | def disable_axes(self): 212 | """Axes are invalid, so make them unselectable""" 213 | for ax in self.axes: 214 | ax.disabled = True 215 | ax.start = ax.value = ax.end = 0 216 | 217 | def set_ranges(self, xrange=None, yrange=None): 218 | """Axes ranges were calculated, so remake the range widgets 219 | 220 | Note either of the ranges can be None, e.g., for categorical axes, 221 | in which case we clear and disable the corresponding widgets. 222 | """ 223 | ax1, ax2 = self.axes[:2] 224 | if xrange and xrange[0] is not None and xrange[1] is not None: 225 | ax1.start = ax2.start = ax1.value = xrange[0] 226 | ax1.end = ax2.end = ax2.value = xrange[1] 227 | ax1.disabled = False 228 | ax2.disabled = False 229 | else: 230 | ax1.disabled = True 231 | ax2.disabled = True 232 | ax1, ax2 = self.axes[2:] 233 | if yrange and yrange[0] is not None and yrange[1] is not None: 234 | ax1.start = ax2.start = ax1.value = yrange[0] 235 | ax1.end = ax2.end = ax2.value = yrange[1] 236 | ax1.disabled = False 237 | ax2.disabled = False 238 | else: 239 | ax1.disabled = True 240 | ax2.disabled = True 241 | 242 | @property 243 | def kwargs(self): 244 | kw = {p.name: p.value for p in self.panel[0]} 245 | kw.update({p.name: p.value for p in self.panel[1][:2]}) 246 | xlim = [None, None] 247 | ylim = [None, None] 248 | for w in self.panel[1][2:]: 249 | if w.disabled: 250 | continue 251 | if 'x ' in w.name: 252 | xlim['max' in w.name] = float(w.value) 253 | kw['xlim'] = tuple(xlim) 254 | else: 255 | ylim['max' in w.name] = float(w.value) 256 | kw['ylim'] = tuple(ylim) 257 | return kw 258 | 259 | 260 | class FieldsPane(SigSlot): 261 | """Select which columns of the data get used for which roles in plotting""" 262 | 263 | def __init__(self, columns): 264 | super().__init__() 265 | self.columns = columns 266 | self.panel = pn.Column(name='Fields') 267 | self._register(None, "changed") 268 | 269 | def setup(self, method='bar', kwargs={}): 270 | """Display field selector appropriate for the given plot type""" 271 | for sig in set(self.signals) - {'changed'}: 272 | self._deregister(sig) 273 | self.panel.clear() 274 | for nreq in plot_requires[method] + plot_allows[method]: 275 | opt = nreq not in plot_requires[method] 276 | if nreq in field_names: 277 | w = make_option_widget(nreq, self.columns, opt) 278 | self._register(w, w.name) 279 | self.connect(w.name, "changed") 280 | self.panel.append(w) 281 | if nreq == 'multi_y' and w.name == 'y' and 'y' in kwargs: 282 | val = kwargs.pop('y') 283 | if isinstance(val, str): 284 | val = val 285 | w.value = val 286 | if nreq in kwargs: 287 | setval = kwargs[nreq] in self.columns 288 | setval += (isinstance(kwargs[nreq], list) and 289 | set(kwargs[nreq]).issubset(set(self.columns))) 290 | if setval: 291 | w.value = kwargs.pop(nreq) 292 | 293 | @property 294 | def kwargs(self): 295 | out = {p.name: p.value for p in self.panel} 296 | y = out.get('y', []) 297 | if isinstance(y, list) and len(y) == 1: 298 | out['y'] = y[0] 299 | return out 300 | 301 | 302 | class SamplePane(SigSlot): 303 | """Global data selection options""" 304 | 305 | def __init__(self, npartitions): 306 | super().__init__() 307 | self.npartitions = npartitions 308 | 309 | self.sample = pn.widgets.Checkbox(name='Sample', value=False) 310 | op = ['Random', 'Head', 'Tail'] 311 | if npartitions > 1: 312 | op.append('Partition') 313 | self.how = pn.widgets.Select(options=op, name='SampleMethod') 314 | self.par = pn.widgets.Select(name='SamplePar') 315 | self.rasterize = pn.widgets.Checkbox(name='rasterize') 316 | self.persist = pn.widgets.Checkbox(name='persist') 317 | self.make_sample_pars('Head') 318 | 319 | self._register(self.sample, 'sample_toggled') 320 | self._register(self.how, 'how_chosen') 321 | 322 | self.connect('sample_toggled', 323 | lambda x: setattr(self.how, 'disabled', not x) or 324 | setattr(self.par, 'disabled', not x)) 325 | self.connect('how_chosen', self.make_sample_pars) 326 | self.changed = False 327 | 328 | # set default value 329 | self.sample.value = npartitions > 1 330 | 331 | self.panel = pn.Column( 332 | pn.Row(self.sample, self.how, self.par), 333 | pn.Row(self.rasterize, self.persist), 334 | name='Control' 335 | ) 336 | 337 | def setup(self, kwargs): 338 | for wid in [self.sample, self.how, self.par, self.rasterize, 339 | self.persist]: 340 | if wid.name in kwargs: 341 | wid.value = kwargs[wid.name] 342 | 343 | def sample_data(self, data): 344 | """Execute sampling selection on th data""" 345 | # TODO: keep sampled data and don't remake until parameters change 346 | if self.sample.value is False: 347 | return data 348 | if self.how.value == 'Head': 349 | return data.head(self.par.value) 350 | if self.how.value == 'Tail': 351 | return data.tail(self.par.value) 352 | if self.how.value == 'Partition': 353 | return data.get_partition(self.par.value) 354 | if self.how.value == 'Random': 355 | df = data.sample(frac=self.par.value / 100) 356 | if hasattr(df, 'npartitions'): 357 | df = df.map_partitions(pd.DataFrame.sort_index) 358 | else: 359 | df.sort_index(inplace=True) 360 | return df 361 | 362 | @property 363 | def kwargs(self): 364 | return {w.name: w.value for w in [self.rasterize, self.persist]} 365 | 366 | def make_sample_pars(self, manner): 367 | opts = {'Random': ('percent', [10, 1, 0.1]), 368 | 'Partition': ('#', list(range(self.npartitions))), 369 | 'Head': ('rows', [10, 100, 1000, 10000]), 370 | 'Tail': ('rows', [10, 100, 1000, 10000])}[manner] 371 | self.par.name = opts[0] 372 | self.par.options = opts[1] 373 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/Makefile: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | # Minimal makefile for Sphinx documentation 2 | # 3 | 4 | # You can set these variables from the command line. 5 | SPHINXOPTS = 6 | SPHINXBUILD = sphinx-build 7 | SPHINXPROJ = dfviz 8 | SOURCEDIR = source 9 | BUILDDIR = build 10 | 11 | # Put it first so that "make" without argument is like "make help". 12 | help: 13 | @$(SPHINXBUILD) -M help "$(SOURCEDIR)" "$(BUILDDIR)" $(SPHINXOPTS) $(O) 14 | 15 | .PHONY: help Makefile 16 | 17 | # Catch-all target: route all unknown targets to Sphinx using the new 18 | # "make mode" option. $(O) is meant as a shortcut for $(SPHINXOPTS). 19 | %: Makefile 20 | @$(SPHINXBUILD) -M $@ "$(SOURCEDIR)" "$(BUILDDIR)" $(SPHINXOPTS) $(O) 21 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/README.md: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | # Building Documentation 2 | 3 | A basic python environment with packages listed in `./requirements.txt` is 4 | required to build the docs, see ``environment.yml``. 5 | 6 | To make HTML documentation: 7 | 8 | ```bash 9 | make html 10 | ``` 11 | 12 | Outputs to `build/html/index.html` 13 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/environment.yml: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | name: dfviz 2 | channels: 3 | - defaults 4 | - conda-forge 5 | dependencies: 6 | - python=3.7 7 | - panel 8 | - pandas 9 | - hvplot 10 | - bokeh 11 | - numpydoc 12 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/make.bat: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | @ECHO OFF 2 | 3 | pushd %~dp0 4 | 5 | REM Command file for Sphinx documentation 6 | 7 | if "%SPHINXBUILD%" == "" ( 8 | set SPHINXBUILD=sphinx-build 9 | ) 10 | set SOURCEDIR=source 11 | set BUILDDIR=build 12 | set SPHINXPROJ=dfviz 13 | 14 | if "%1" == "" goto help 15 | 16 | %SPHINXBUILD% >NUL 2>NUL 17 | if errorlevel 9009 ( 18 | echo. 19 | echo.The 'sphinx-build' command was not found. Make sure you have Sphinx 20 | echo.installed, then set the SPHINXBUILD environment variable to point 21 | echo.to the full path of the 'sphinx-build' executable. Alternatively you 22 | echo.may add the Sphinx directory to PATH. 23 | echo. 24 | echo.If you don't have Sphinx installed, grab it from 25 | echo.http://sphinx-doc.org/ 26 | exit /b 1 27 | ) 28 | 29 | %SPHINXBUILD% -M %1 %SOURCEDIR% %BUILDDIR% %SPHINXOPTS% 30 | goto end 31 | 32 | :help 33 | %SPHINXBUILD% -M help %SOURCEDIR% %BUILDDIR% %SPHINXOPTS% 34 | 35 | :end 36 | popd 37 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/source/conf.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- 2 | # 3 | # dfviz documentation build configuration file, created by 4 | # sphinx-quickstart on Mon Jan 15 18:11:02 2018. 5 | # 6 | # This file is execfile()d with the current directory set to its 7 | # containing dir. 8 | # 9 | # Note that not all possible configuration values are present in this 10 | # autogenerated file. 11 | # 12 | # All configuration values have a default; values that are commented out 13 | # serve to show the default. 14 | 15 | # If extensions (or modules to document with autodoc) are in another directory, 16 | # add these directories to sys.path here. If the directory is relative to the 17 | # documentation root, use os.path.abspath to make it absolute, like shown here. 18 | # 19 | import os 20 | import sys 21 | sys.path.insert(0, os.path.abspath('../..')) 22 | 23 | 24 | # -- General configuration ------------------------------------------------ 25 | 26 | # If your documentation needs a minimal Sphinx version, state it here. 27 | # 28 | # needs_sphinx = '1.0' 29 | 30 | # Add any Sphinx extension module names here, as strings. They can be 31 | # extensions coming with Sphinx (named 'sphinx.ext.*') or your custom 32 | # ones. 33 | extensions = [ 34 | 'sphinx.ext.autodoc', 35 | 'sphinx.ext.viewcode', 36 | 'sphinx.ext.autosummary', 37 | 'numpydoc', 38 | ] 39 | 40 | # Add any paths that contain templates here, relative to this directory. 41 | templates_path = ['_templates'] 42 | 43 | # The suffix(es) of source filenames. 44 | # You can specify multiple suffix as a list of string: 45 | # 46 | # source_suffix = ['.rst', '.md'] 47 | source_suffix = '.rst' 48 | 49 | # The master toctree document. 50 | master_doc = 'index' 51 | 52 | # General information about the project. 53 | project = u'dfviz' 54 | copyright = u'2019, Martin Durant' 55 | author = u'Martin Durant' 56 | 57 | # The version info for the project you're documenting, acts as replacement for 58 | # |version| and |release|, also used in various other places throughout the 59 | # built documents. 60 | # 61 | # The short X.Y version. 62 | import dfviz 63 | version = dfviz.__version__ 64 | # The full version, including alpha/beta/rc tags. 65 | release = dfviz.__version__ 66 | 67 | # The language for content autogenerated by Sphinx. Refer to documentation 68 | # for a list of supported languages. 69 | # 70 | # This is also used if you do content translation via gettext catalogs. 71 | # Usually you set "language" from the command line for these cases. 72 | language = None 73 | 74 | # List of patterns, relative to source directory, that match files and 75 | # directories to ignore when looking for source files. 76 | # This patterns also effect to html_static_path and html_extra_path 77 | exclude_patterns = [] 78 | 79 | # The name of the Pygments (syntax highlighting) style to use. 80 | pygments_style = 'sphinx' 81 | 82 | # If true, `todo` and `todoList` produce output, else they produce nothing. 83 | todo_include_todos = False 84 | 85 | 86 | # -- Options for HTML output ---------------------------------------------- 87 | 88 | # The theme to use for HTML and HTML Help pages. See the documentation for 89 | # a list of builtin themes. 90 | # 91 | html_theme = 'sphinx_rtd_theme' 92 | 93 | # Theme options are theme-specific and customize the look and feel of a theme 94 | # further. For a list of options available for each theme, see the 95 | # documentation. 96 | # 97 | # html_theme_options = {} 98 | 99 | # Add any paths that contain custom static files (such as style sheets) here, 100 | # relative to this directory. They are copied after the builtin static files, 101 | # so a file named "default.css" will overwrite the builtin "default.css". 102 | html_static_path = [] 103 | 104 | # Custom sidebar templates, must be a dictionary that maps document names 105 | # to template names. 106 | # 107 | # This is required for the alabaster theme 108 | # refs: http://alabaster.readthedocs.io/en/latest/installation.html#sidebars 109 | html_sidebars = { 110 | '**': [ 111 | 'relations.html', # needs 'show_related': True theme option to display 112 | 'searchbox.html', 113 | ] 114 | } 115 | 116 | 117 | # -- Options for HTMLHelp output ------------------------------------------ 118 | 119 | # Output file base name for HTML help builder. 120 | htmlhelp_basename = 'dfvizdoc' 121 | 122 | 123 | # -- Options for LaTeX output --------------------------------------------- 124 | 125 | latex_elements = { 126 | # The paper size ('letterpaper' or 'a4paper'). 127 | # 128 | # 'papersize': 'letterpaper', 129 | 130 | # The font size ('10pt', '11pt' or '12pt'). 131 | # 132 | # 'pointsize': '10pt', 133 | 134 | # Additional stuff for the LaTeX preamble. 135 | # 136 | # 'preamble': '', 137 | 138 | # Latex figure (float) alignment 139 | # 140 | # 'figure_align': 'htbp', 141 | } 142 | 143 | # Grouping the document tree into LaTeX files. List of tuples 144 | # (source start file, target name, title, 145 | # author, documentclass [howto, manual, or own class]). 146 | latex_documents = [ 147 | (master_doc, 'dfviz.tex', u'dfviz Documentation', 148 | u'Joseph Crail', 'manual'), 149 | ] 150 | 151 | 152 | # -- Options for manual page output --------------------------------------- 153 | 154 | # One entry per manual page. List of tuples 155 | # (source start file, name, description, authors, manual section). 156 | man_pages = [ 157 | (master_doc, 'dfviz', u'dfviz Documentation', 158 | [author], 1) 159 | ] 160 | 161 | 162 | # -- Options for Texinfo output ------------------------------------------- 163 | 164 | # Grouping the document tree into Texinfo files. List of tuples 165 | # (source start file, target name, title, author, 166 | # dir menu entry, description, category) 167 | texinfo_documents = [ 168 | (master_doc, 'dfviz', u'dfviz Documentation', 169 | author, 'dfviz', 'One line description of project.', 170 | 'Miscellaneous'), 171 | ] 172 | 173 | 174 | 175 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/source/images/field_select.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intake/dfviz/eb7f361bc67b4fe06f98bcc7abc525af615a4eec/docs/source/images/field_select.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/source/images/linear.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intake/dfviz/eb7f361bc67b4fe06f98bcc7abc525af615a4eec/docs/source/images/linear.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/source/images/out0.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intake/dfviz/eb7f361bc67b4fe06f98bcc7abc525af615a4eec/docs/source/images/out0.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/source/images/sampled.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intake/dfviz/eb7f361bc67b4fe06f98bcc7abc525af615a4eec/docs/source/images/sampled.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/source/images/start.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intake/dfviz/eb7f361bc67b4fe06f98bcc7abc525af615a4eec/docs/source/images/start.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/source/images/violin.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intake/dfviz/eb7f361bc67b4fe06f98bcc7abc525af615a4eec/docs/source/images/violin.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/source/images/yaml.png: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/intake/dfviz/eb7f361bc67b4fe06f98bcc7abc525af615a4eec/docs/source/images/yaml.png -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/source/index.rst: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | DFVIZ: interactive plotting of dataframes 2 | ========================================= 3 | 4 | ``dfviz`` is a small package for interactive visualisation of `Pandas`_ 5 | or `Dask`_ dataframes. It is built upon `Panel`_ and `hvPlot`_ and can be used 6 | either within a notebook environment, as a stand-alone application, or as one of the 7 | visualisation modules within the `Intake`_ GUI. 8 | 9 | .. _Dask: https://docs.dask.org/en/latest/dataframe.html 10 | .. _hvPlot: https://hvplot.pyviz.org 11 | .. _Intake: https://intake.readthedocs.io 12 | .. _Pandas: https://pandas.pydata.org 13 | .. _Panel: https://panel.pyviz.org 14 | 15 | Installation 16 | ------------ 17 | 18 | With a conda environment, you can use 19 | 20 | .. code-block:: 21 | 22 | $ conda install -c conda-forge dfviz 23 | 24 | 25 | or, in general you can install the released version 26 | 27 | .. code-block:: 28 | 29 | $ pip install dfviz 30 | 31 | or development version 32 | 33 | .. code-block:: 34 | 35 | $ pip install git+https://github.com/intake/dfviz 36 | 37 | 38 | For both ``pip``-based methods, it is generally better to install the requirements 39 | manually beforehand. 40 | 41 | Example 42 | ------- 43 | 44 | To run the interface with some random data, you can execute 45 | 46 | .. code-block:: 47 | 48 | python -c "import dfviz; dfviz.example.run_example()" 49 | 50 | which will open a new tab in a browser, ready for a plot to be defined. 51 | Just press Plot to get a colourful scatter-plot output. 52 | 53 | .. toctree:: 54 | :maxdepth: 2 55 | :caption: Contents: 56 | 57 | usage.rst 58 | 59 | 60 | Indices and tables 61 | ================== 62 | 63 | * :ref:`genindex` 64 | * :ref:`modindex` 65 | * :ref:`search` 66 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /docs/source/usage.rst: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | Usage 2 | ===== 3 | 4 | The ``dfviz`` interface is designed to be simple and easy to use. 5 | 6 | 7 | Invoking dfviz 8 | -------------- 9 | 10 | The main entry point is ``dfviz.DFViz``. Pass either a Pandas or Dask dataframe, and optionally 11 | pass values for any of the widget in interface. The following sets the plot type to "bar" 12 | and that the "y" values should be taken from (the only) column "data": 13 | 14 | .. code-block:: 15 | 16 | import pandas as pd 17 | import dfviz 18 | 19 | df = pd.DataFrame({'data': [5, 2, 6]}) 20 | dfv = dfviz.DFViz(df, kind="bar", y=["data"]) 21 | 22 | To show the interface, you can simply render ``dfv.panel`` in a notebook cell (by letting it 23 | be the last thing in the cell), using `display()`_ on ``dfv.panel``, or running ``dfv.show()``, 24 | which will launch the interface stand-alone in a new browser tab. 25 | 26 | .. _display(): https://ipython.readthedocs.io/en/stable/api/generated/IPython.display.html#module-IPython.display 27 | 28 | Walkthrough 29 | ----------- 30 | 31 | Ee will demonstrate the options available in the interface by using example random data. 32 | To view the example, please execute 33 | 34 | .. code-block:: python 35 | 36 | import dfviz 37 | dfviz,example.run_example() 38 | 39 | and you should see the following in a browser tab 40 | 41 | .. image:: images/start.png 42 | 43 | The interface has three main components: 44 | 45 | - above the grey area are the two main controls to select the type of plot, and to render the plot 46 | 47 | - the central grey area, which dominates the space, is for user input. Here you can define the sampling 48 | of the data, the columns to use, and style attributes of the plot 49 | 50 | - below, and currently blank, is hte output area, which will contain the plot and a text description of 51 | how to produce this plot from the data. 52 | 53 | Clicking Plot 54 | ------------- 55 | 56 | The "Plot" button causes a rendering of the data with the current selections. If you change 57 | parameters in the input area, the plot will not update until you press this button. Try it now. 58 | The two panes of the output area will contain the graph: 59 | 60 | .. image:: images/out0.png 61 | 62 | and the parameters that were used to produce it 63 | 64 | .. image:: images/yaml.png 65 | 66 | Note that the example sets the parameters to produce decent output. 67 | 68 | Setting Parameters 69 | ------------------ 70 | 71 | Each pane contains different controls which affect the plot you will see: 72 | 73 | "Plot Type" 74 | ~~~~~~~~~~~ 75 | 76 | Several types of output are available, provided by `hvPlot`_. Please follow the link 77 | to see the kinds of output you can expect, and the effect that setting parameters can 78 | have on them. 79 | 80 | .. _hvPlot: https://hvplot.pyviz.org/user_guide/Plotting.html 81 | 82 | "Control" 83 | ~~~~~~~~~ 84 | 85 | These are global parameters, particularly the sampling of the underlying data. 86 | 87 | For example, choosing to sample (checking the box next to "Sample") and picking the "Head" 88 | method with 100 rows will select only the first 1/10th of the data and 89 | will produce output something like 90 | 91 | .. image:: images/sampled.png 92 | 93 | "Fields" 94 | ~~~~~~~~ 95 | 96 | Here we can define which column of the input data is used for what function while plotting. 97 | The example data-frame contains columns "a", "b", "c" and "d". So for example, if we select 98 | columns "a" (a monotonically increasing integer) for the ``y`` axis 99 | 100 | .. image:: images/field_select.png 101 | 102 | we get output 103 | 104 | .. image:: images/linear.png 105 | 106 | Which field functions can be selected here will depend on the plot type; for example, the `table` 107 | plot type only allows selection of which columns to show, but 108 | statistical plots like `violin` allow grouping in this case "by" categorical column "d": 109 | 110 | .. image:: images/violin.png 111 | 112 | It is possible to pick combinations of fields which do not produce any reasonable 113 | output. Again, please refer to `hvPlot`_. 114 | 115 | "Style" 116 | ~~~~~~~ 117 | 118 | This pane offers optional parameters which affect the general look of the plot, such as colours, 119 | marker styles and axes extent. Some of these are also only shown for those plot types where they 120 | are appropriate; and some will not have any effect for all combinations of fields selections 121 | (a legend is not shown when only one column is selected, even if the a legend is requested). 122 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /readthedocs.yml: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | conda: 2 | file: docs/environment.yml 3 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /requirements.txt: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | panel 2 | hvplot 3 | pandas 4 | bokeh 5 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /setup.cfg: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | [flake8] 2 | # References: 3 | # http://flake8.readthedocs.org/en/latest/config.html 4 | # http://flake8.readthedocs.org/en/latest/warnings.html#error-codes 5 | # 6 | # Style checks turned on: 7 | # F - all pyflake errors 8 | # E101 - indentation contains mixed spaces and tabs 9 | # E111 - indentation is not a multiple of four 10 | # E501 - line too long (see max-line-length) 11 | 12 | # Note: there cannot be spaces after comma's here 13 | exclude = __init__.py 14 | ignore = E,W 15 | select = F,E101,E111,E501 16 | max-line-length = 165 17 | 18 | [versioneer] 19 | VCS = git 20 | style = pep440 21 | versionfile_source = dfviz/_version.py 22 | versionfile_build = dfviz/_version.py 23 | tag_prefix = 24 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /setup.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | #!/usr/bin/env python 2 | 3 | from setuptools import setup, find_packages 4 | import versioneer 5 | 6 | 7 | requires = open('requirements.txt').read().strip().split('\n') 8 | 9 | setup( 10 | name='dfviz', 11 | version=versioneer.get_version(), 12 | cmdclass=versioneer.get_cmdclass(), 13 | description='dataframe interactive visualisation interface', 14 | classifiers=[ 15 | 'Development Status :: 4 - Beta', 16 | 'Intended Audience :: Developers', 17 | 'License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License', 18 | 'Operating System :: OS Independent', 19 | 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5', 20 | 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6', 21 | 'Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7', 22 | ], 23 | url='https://github.com/intake/dfviz', 24 | maintainer='Martin Durant', 25 | maintainer_email='mdurant@anaconda.com', 26 | license='BSD', 27 | packages=find_packages(), 28 | package_data={'': ['*.csv', '*.yml', '*.html']}, 29 | include_package_data=True, 30 | install_requires=requires, 31 | long_description=open('README.md').read(), 32 | python_requires='>= 3.5', 33 | keywords=['dataframe', 'plotting', 'visualization', 'interactive'], 34 | zip_safe=False, 35 | ) 36 | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- /versioneer.py: -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 2 | # Version: 0.18 3 | 4 | """The Versioneer - like a rocketeer, but for versions. 5 | 6 | The Versioneer 7 | ============== 8 | 9 | * like a rocketeer, but for versions! 10 | * https://github.com/warner/python-versioneer 11 | * Brian Warner 12 | * License: Public Domain 13 | * Compatible With: python2.6, 2.7, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6, and pypy 14 | * [![Latest Version] 15 | (https://pypip.in/version/versioneer/badge.svg?style=flat) 16 | ](https://pypi.python.org/pypi/versioneer/) 17 | * [![Build Status] 18 | (https://travis-ci.org/warner/python-versioneer.png?branch=master) 19 | ](https://travis-ci.org/warner/python-versioneer) 20 | 21 | This is a tool for managing a recorded version number in distutils-based 22 | python projects. The goal is to remove the tedious and error-prone "update 23 | the embedded version string" step from your release process. Making a new 24 | release should be as easy as recording a new tag in your version-control 25 | system, and maybe making new tarballs. 26 | 27 | 28 | ## Quick Install 29 | 30 | * `pip install versioneer` to somewhere to your $PATH 31 | * add a `[versioneer]` section to your setup.cfg (see below) 32 | * run `versioneer install` in your source tree, commit the results 33 | 34 | ## Version Identifiers 35 | 36 | Source trees come from a variety of places: 37 | 38 | * a version-control system checkout (mostly used by developers) 39 | * a nightly tarball, produced by build automation 40 | * a snapshot tarball, produced by a web-based VCS browser, like github's 41 | "tarball from tag" feature 42 | * a release tarball, produced by "setup.py sdist", distributed through PyPI 43 | 44 | Within each source tree, the version identifier (either a string or a number, 45 | this tool is format-agnostic) can come from a variety of places: 46 | 47 | * ask the VCS tool itself, e.g. "git describe" (for checkouts), which knows 48 | about recent "tags" and an absolute revision-id 49 | * the name of the directory into which the tarball was unpacked 50 | * an expanded VCS keyword ($Id$, etc) 51 | * a `_version.py` created by some earlier build step 52 | 53 | For released software, the version identifier is closely related to a VCS 54 | tag. Some projects use tag names that include more than just the version 55 | string (e.g. "myproject-1.2" instead of just "1.2"), in which case the tool 56 | needs to strip the tag prefix to extract the version identifier. For 57 | unreleased software (between tags), the version identifier should provide 58 | enough information to help developers recreate the same tree, while also 59 | giving them an idea of roughly how old the tree is (after version 1.2, before 60 | version 1.3). Many VCS systems can report a description that captures this, 61 | for example `git describe --tags --dirty --always` reports things like 62 | "0.7-1-g574ab98-dirty" to indicate that the checkout is one revision past the 63 | 0.7 tag, has a unique revision id of "574ab98", and is "dirty" (it has 64 | uncommitted changes. 65 | 66 | The version identifier is used for multiple purposes: 67 | 68 | * to allow the module to self-identify its version: `myproject.__version__` 69 | * to choose a name and prefix for a 'setup.py sdist' tarball 70 | 71 | ## Theory of Operation 72 | 73 | Versioneer works by adding a special `_version.py` file into your source 74 | tree, where your `__init__.py` can import it. This `_version.py` knows how to 75 | dynamically ask the VCS tool for version information at import time. 76 | 77 | `_version.py` also contains `$Revision$` markers, and the installation 78 | process marks `_version.py` to have this marker rewritten with a tag name 79 | during the `git archive` command. As a result, generated tarballs will 80 | contain enough information to get the proper version. 81 | 82 | To allow `setup.py` to compute a version too, a `versioneer.py` is added to 83 | the top level of your source tree, next to `setup.py` and the `setup.cfg` 84 | that configures it. This overrides several distutils/setuptools commands to 85 | compute the version when invoked, and changes `setup.py build` and `setup.py 86 | sdist` to replace `_version.py` with a small static file that contains just 87 | the generated version data. 88 | 89 | ## Installation 90 | 91 | See [INSTALL.md](./INSTALL.md) for detailed installation instructions. 92 | 93 | ## Version-String Flavors 94 | 95 | Code which uses Versioneer can learn about its version string at runtime by 96 | importing `_version` from your main `__init__.py` file and running the 97 | `get_versions()` function. From the "outside" (e.g. in `setup.py`), you can 98 | import the top-level `versioneer.py` and run `get_versions()`. 99 | 100 | Both functions return a dictionary with different flavors of version 101 | information: 102 | 103 | * `['version']`: A condensed version string, rendered using the selected 104 | style. This is the most commonly used value for the project's version 105 | string. The default "pep440" style yields strings like `0.11`, 106 | `0.11+2.g1076c97`, or `0.11+2.g1076c97.dirty`. See the "Styles" section 107 | below for alternative styles. 108 | 109 | * `['full-revisionid']`: detailed revision identifier. For Git, this is the 110 | full SHA1 commit id, e.g. "1076c978a8d3cfc70f408fe5974aa6c092c949ac". 111 | 112 | * `['date']`: Date and time of the latest `HEAD` commit. For Git, it is the 113 | commit date in ISO 8601 format. This will be None if the date is not 114 | available. 115 | 116 | * `['dirty']`: a boolean, True if the tree has uncommitted changes. Note that 117 | this is only accurate if run in a VCS checkout, otherwise it is likely to 118 | be False or None 119 | 120 | * `['error']`: if the version string could not be computed, this will be set 121 | to a string describing the problem, otherwise it will be None. It may be 122 | useful to throw an exception in setup.py if this is set, to avoid e.g. 123 | creating tarballs with a version string of "unknown". 124 | 125 | Some variants are more useful than others. Including `full-revisionid` in a 126 | bug report should allow developers to reconstruct the exact code being tested 127 | (or indicate the presence of local changes that should be shared with the 128 | developers). `version` is suitable for display in an "about" box or a CLI 129 | `--version` output: it can be easily compared against release notes and lists 130 | of bugs fixed in various releases. 131 | 132 | The installer adds the following text to your `__init__.py` to place a basic 133 | version in `YOURPROJECT.__version__`: 134 | 135 | from ._version import get_versions 136 | __version__ = get_versions()['version'] 137 | del get_versions 138 | 139 | ## Styles 140 | 141 | The setup.cfg `style=` configuration controls how the VCS information is 142 | rendered into a version string. 143 | 144 | The default style, "pep440", produces a PEP440-compliant string, equal to the 145 | un-prefixed tag name for actual releases, and containing an additional "local 146 | version" section with more detail for in-between builds. For Git, this is 147 | TAG[+DISTANCE.gHEX[.dirty]] , using information from `git describe --tags 148 | --dirty --always`. For example "0.11+2.g1076c97.dirty" indicates that the 149 | tree is like the "1076c97" commit but has uncommitted changes (".dirty"), and 150 | that this commit is two revisions ("+2") beyond the "0.11" tag. For released 151 | software (exactly equal to a known tag), the identifier will only contain the 152 | stripped tag, e.g. "0.11". 153 | 154 | Other styles are available. See [details.md](details.md) in the Versioneer 155 | source tree for descriptions. 156 | 157 | ## Debugging 158 | 159 | Versioneer tries to avoid fatal errors: if something goes wrong, it will tend 160 | to return a version of "0+unknown". To investigate the problem, run `setup.py 161 | version`, which will run the version-lookup code in a verbose mode, and will 162 | display the full contents of `get_versions()` (including the `error` string, 163 | which may help identify what went wrong). 164 | 165 | ## Known Limitations 166 | 167 | Some situations are known to cause problems for Versioneer. This details the 168 | most significant ones. More can be found on Github 169 | [issues page](https://github.com/warner/python-versioneer/issues). 170 | 171 | ### Subprojects 172 | 173 | Versioneer has limited support for source trees in which `setup.py` is not in 174 | the root directory (e.g. `setup.py` and `.git/` are *not* siblings). The are 175 | two common reasons why `setup.py` might not be in the root: 176 | 177 | * Source trees which contain multiple subprojects, such as 178 | [Buildbot](https://github.com/buildbot/buildbot), which contains both 179 | "master" and "slave" subprojects, each with their own `setup.py`, 180 | `setup.cfg`, and `tox.ini`. Projects like these produce multiple PyPI 181 | distributions (and upload multiple independently-installable tarballs). 182 | * Source trees whose main purpose is to contain a C library, but which also 183 | provide bindings to Python (and perhaps other langauges) in subdirectories. 184 | 185 | Versioneer will look for `.git` in parent directories, and most operations 186 | should get the right version string. However `pip` and `setuptools` have bugs 187 | and implementation details which frequently cause `pip install .` from a 188 | subproject directory to fail to find a correct version string (so it usually 189 | defaults to `0+unknown`). 190 | 191 | `pip install --editable .` should work correctly. `setup.py install` might 192 | work too. 193 | 194 | Pip-8.1.1 is known to have this problem, but hopefully it will get fixed in 195 | some later version. 196 | 197 | [Bug #38](https://github.com/warner/python-versioneer/issues/38) is tracking 198 | this issue. The discussion in 199 | [PR #61](https://github.com/warner/python-versioneer/pull/61) describes the 200 | issue from the Versioneer side in more detail. 201 | [pip PR#3176](https://github.com/pypa/pip/pull/3176) and 202 | [pip PR#3615](https://github.com/pypa/pip/pull/3615) contain work to improve 203 | pip to let Versioneer work correctly. 204 | 205 | Versioneer-0.16 and earlier only looked for a `.git` directory next to the 206 | `setup.cfg`, so subprojects were completely unsupported with those releases. 207 | 208 | ### Editable installs with setuptools <= 18.5 209 | 210 | `setup.py develop` and `pip install --editable .` allow you to install a 211 | project into a virtualenv once, then continue editing the source code (and 212 | test) without re-installing after every change. 213 | 214 | "Entry-point scripts" (`setup(entry_points={"console_scripts": ..})`) are a 215 | convenient way to specify executable scripts that should be installed along 216 | with the python package. 217 | 218 | These both work as expected when using modern setuptools. When using 219 | setuptools-18.5 or earlier, however, certain operations will cause 220 | `pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound` errors when running the entrypoint 221 | script, which must be resolved by re-installing the package. This happens 222 | when the install happens with one version, then the egg_info data is 223 | regenerated while a different version is checked out. Many setup.py commands 224 | cause egg_info to be rebuilt (including `sdist`, `wheel`, and installing into 225 | a different virtualenv), so this can be surprising. 226 | 227 | [Bug #83](https://github.com/warner/python-versioneer/issues/83) describes 228 | this one, but upgrading to a newer version of setuptools should probably 229 | resolve it. 230 | 231 | ### Unicode version strings 232 | 233 | While Versioneer works (and is continually tested) with both Python 2 and 234 | Python 3, it is not entirely consistent with bytes-vs-unicode distinctions. 235 | Newer releases probably generate unicode version strings on py2. It's not 236 | clear that this is wrong, but it may be surprising for applications when then 237 | write these strings to a network connection or include them in bytes-oriented 238 | APIs like cryptographic checksums. 239 | 240 | [Bug #71](https://github.com/warner/python-versioneer/issues/71) investigates 241 | this question. 242 | 243 | 244 | ## Updating Versioneer 245 | 246 | To upgrade your project to a new release of Versioneer, do the following: 247 | 248 | * install the new Versioneer (`pip install -U versioneer` or equivalent) 249 | * edit `setup.cfg`, if necessary, to include any new configuration settings 250 | indicated by the release notes. See [UPGRADING](./UPGRADING.md) for details. 251 | * re-run `versioneer install` in your source tree, to replace 252 | `SRC/_version.py` 253 | * commit any changed files 254 | 255 | ## Future Directions 256 | 257 | This tool is designed to make it easily extended to other version-control 258 | systems: all VCS-specific components are in separate directories like 259 | src/git/ . The top-level `versioneer.py` script is assembled from these 260 | components by running make-versioneer.py . In the future, make-versioneer.py 261 | will take a VCS name as an argument, and will construct a version of 262 | `versioneer.py` that is specific to the given VCS. It might also take the 263 | configuration arguments that are currently provided manually during 264 | installation by editing setup.py . Alternatively, it might go the other 265 | direction and include code from all supported VCS systems, reducing the 266 | number of intermediate scripts. 267 | 268 | 269 | ## License 270 | 271 | To make Versioneer easier to embed, all its code is dedicated to the public 272 | domain. The `_version.py` that it creates is also in the public domain. 273 | Specifically, both are released under the Creative Commons "Public Domain 274 | Dedication" license (CC0-1.0), as described in 275 | https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ . 276 | 277 | """ 278 | 279 | from __future__ import print_function 280 | try: 281 | import configparser 282 | except ImportError: 283 | import ConfigParser as configparser 284 | import errno 285 | import json 286 | import os 287 | import re 288 | import subprocess 289 | import sys 290 | 291 | 292 | class VersioneerConfig: 293 | """Container for Versioneer configuration parameters.""" 294 | 295 | 296 | def get_root(): 297 | """Get the project root directory. 298 | 299 | We require that all commands are run from the project root, i.e. the 300 | directory that contains setup.py, setup.cfg, and versioneer.py . 301 | """ 302 | root = os.path.realpath(os.path.abspath(os.getcwd())) 303 | setup_py = os.path.join(root, "setup.py") 304 | versioneer_py = os.path.join(root, "versioneer.py") 305 | if not (os.path.exists(setup_py) or os.path.exists(versioneer_py)): 306 | # allow 'python path/to/setup.py COMMAND' 307 | root = os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(os.path.abspath(sys.argv[0]))) 308 | setup_py = os.path.join(root, "setup.py") 309 | versioneer_py = os.path.join(root, "versioneer.py") 310 | if not (os.path.exists(setup_py) or os.path.exists(versioneer_py)): 311 | err = ("Versioneer was unable to run the project root directory. " 312 | "Versioneer requires setup.py to be executed from " 313 | "its immediate directory (like 'python setup.py COMMAND'), " 314 | "or in a way that lets it use sys.argv[0] to find the root " 315 | "(like 'python path/to/setup.py COMMAND').") 316 | raise VersioneerBadRootError(err) 317 | try: 318 | # Certain runtime workflows (setup.py install/develop in a setuptools 319 | # tree) execute all dependencies in a single python process, so 320 | # "versioneer" may be imported multiple times, and python's shared 321 | # module-import table will cache the first one. So we can't use 322 | # os.path.dirname(__file__), as that will find whichever 323 | # versioneer.py was first imported, even in later projects. 324 | me = os.path.realpath(os.path.abspath(__file__)) 325 | me_dir = os.path.normcase(os.path.splitext(me)[0]) 326 | vsr_dir = os.path.normcase(os.path.splitext(versioneer_py)[0]) 327 | if me_dir != vsr_dir: 328 | print("Warning: build in %s is using versioneer.py from %s" 329 | % (os.path.dirname(me), versioneer_py)) 330 | except NameError: 331 | pass 332 | return root 333 | 334 | 335 | def get_config_from_root(root): 336 | """Read the project setup.cfg file to determine Versioneer config.""" 337 | # This might raise EnvironmentError (if setup.cfg is missing), or 338 | # configparser.NoSectionError (if it lacks a [versioneer] section), or 339 | # configparser.NoOptionError (if it lacks "VCS="). See the docstring at 340 | # the top of versioneer.py for instructions on writing your setup.cfg . 341 | setup_cfg = os.path.join(root, "setup.cfg") 342 | parser = configparser.SafeConfigParser() 343 | with open(setup_cfg, "r") as f: 344 | parser.readfp(f) 345 | VCS = parser.get("versioneer", "VCS") # mandatory 346 | 347 | def get(parser, name): 348 | if parser.has_option("versioneer", name): 349 | return parser.get("versioneer", name) 350 | return None 351 | cfg = VersioneerConfig() 352 | cfg.VCS = VCS 353 | cfg.style = get(parser, "style") or "" 354 | cfg.versionfile_source = get(parser, "versionfile_source") 355 | cfg.versionfile_build = get(parser, "versionfile_build") 356 | cfg.tag_prefix = get(parser, "tag_prefix") 357 | if cfg.tag_prefix in ("''", '""'): 358 | cfg.tag_prefix = "" 359 | cfg.parentdir_prefix = get(parser, "parentdir_prefix") 360 | cfg.verbose = get(parser, "verbose") 361 | return cfg 362 | 363 | 364 | class NotThisMethod(Exception): 365 | """Exception raised if a method is not valid for the current scenario.""" 366 | 367 | 368 | # these dictionaries contain VCS-specific tools 369 | LONG_VERSION_PY = {} 370 | HANDLERS = {} 371 | 372 | 373 | def register_vcs_handler(vcs, method): # decorator 374 | """Decorator to mark a method as the handler for a particular VCS.""" 375 | def decorate(f): 376 | """Store f in HANDLERS[vcs][method].""" 377 | if vcs not in HANDLERS: 378 | HANDLERS[vcs] = {} 379 | HANDLERS[vcs][method] = f 380 | return f 381 | return decorate 382 | 383 | 384 | def run_command(commands, args, cwd=None, verbose=False, hide_stderr=False, 385 | env=None): 386 | """Call the given command(s).""" 387 | assert isinstance(commands, list) 388 | p = None 389 | for c in commands: 390 | try: 391 | dispcmd = str([c] + args) 392 | # remember shell=False, so use git.cmd on windows, not just git 393 | p = subprocess.Popen([c] + args, cwd=cwd, env=env, 394 | stdout=subprocess.PIPE, 395 | stderr=(subprocess.PIPE if hide_stderr 396 | else None)) 397 | break 398 | except EnvironmentError: 399 | e = sys.exc_info()[1] 400 | if e.errno == errno.ENOENT: 401 | continue 402 | if verbose: 403 | print("unable to run %s" % dispcmd) 404 | print(e) 405 | return None, None 406 | else: 407 | if verbose: 408 | print("unable to find command, tried %s" % (commands,)) 409 | return None, None 410 | stdout = p.communicate()[0].strip() 411 | if sys.version_info[0] >= 3: 412 | stdout = stdout.decode() 413 | if p.returncode != 0: 414 | if verbose: 415 | print("unable to run %s (error)" % dispcmd) 416 | print("stdout was %s" % stdout) 417 | return None, p.returncode 418 | return stdout, p.returncode 419 | 420 | 421 | LONG_VERSION_PY['git'] = ''' 422 | # This file helps to compute a version number in source trees obtained from 423 | # git-archive tarball (such as those provided by githubs download-from-tag 424 | # feature). Distribution tarballs (built by setup.py sdist) and build 425 | # directories (produced by setup.py build) will contain a much shorter file 426 | # that just contains the computed version number. 427 | 428 | # This file is released into the public domain. Generated by 429 | # versioneer-0.18 (https://github.com/warner/python-versioneer) 430 | 431 | """Git implementation of _version.py.""" 432 | 433 | import errno 434 | import os 435 | import re 436 | import subprocess 437 | import sys 438 | 439 | 440 | def get_keywords(): 441 | """Get the keywords needed to look up the version information.""" 442 | # these strings will be replaced by git during git-archive. 443 | # setup.py/versioneer.py will grep for the variable names, so they must 444 | # each be defined on a line of their own. _version.py will just call 445 | # get_keywords(). 446 | git_refnames = "%(DOLLAR)sFormat:%%d%(DOLLAR)s" 447 | git_full = "%(DOLLAR)sFormat:%%H%(DOLLAR)s" 448 | git_date = "%(DOLLAR)sFormat:%%ci%(DOLLAR)s" 449 | keywords = {"refnames": git_refnames, "full": git_full, "date": git_date} 450 | return keywords 451 | 452 | 453 | class VersioneerConfig: 454 | """Container for Versioneer configuration parameters.""" 455 | 456 | 457 | def get_config(): 458 | """Create, populate and return the VersioneerConfig() object.""" 459 | # these strings are filled in when 'setup.py versioneer' creates 460 | # _version.py 461 | cfg = VersioneerConfig() 462 | cfg.VCS = "git" 463 | cfg.style = "%(STYLE)s" 464 | cfg.tag_prefix = "%(TAG_PREFIX)s" 465 | cfg.parentdir_prefix = "%(PARENTDIR_PREFIX)s" 466 | cfg.versionfile_source = "%(VERSIONFILE_SOURCE)s" 467 | cfg.verbose = False 468 | return cfg 469 | 470 | 471 | class NotThisMethod(Exception): 472 | """Exception raised if a method is not valid for the current scenario.""" 473 | 474 | 475 | LONG_VERSION_PY = {} 476 | HANDLERS = {} 477 | 478 | 479 | def register_vcs_handler(vcs, method): # decorator 480 | """Decorator to mark a method as the handler for a particular VCS.""" 481 | def decorate(f): 482 | """Store f in HANDLERS[vcs][method].""" 483 | if vcs not in HANDLERS: 484 | HANDLERS[vcs] = {} 485 | HANDLERS[vcs][method] = f 486 | return f 487 | return decorate 488 | 489 | 490 | def run_command(commands, args, cwd=None, verbose=False, hide_stderr=False, 491 | env=None): 492 | """Call the given command(s).""" 493 | assert isinstance(commands, list) 494 | p = None 495 | for c in commands: 496 | try: 497 | dispcmd = str([c] + args) 498 | # remember shell=False, so use git.cmd on windows, not just git 499 | p = subprocess.Popen([c] + args, cwd=cwd, env=env, 500 | stdout=subprocess.PIPE, 501 | stderr=(subprocess.PIPE if hide_stderr 502 | else None)) 503 | break 504 | except EnvironmentError: 505 | e = sys.exc_info()[1] 506 | if e.errno == errno.ENOENT: 507 | continue 508 | if verbose: 509 | print("unable to run %%s" %% dispcmd) 510 | print(e) 511 | return None, None 512 | else: 513 | if verbose: 514 | print("unable to find command, tried %%s" %% (commands,)) 515 | return None, None 516 | stdout = p.communicate()[0].strip() 517 | if sys.version_info[0] >= 3: 518 | stdout = stdout.decode() 519 | if p.returncode != 0: 520 | if verbose: 521 | print("unable to run %%s (error)" %% dispcmd) 522 | print("stdout was %%s" %% stdout) 523 | return None, p.returncode 524 | return stdout, p.returncode 525 | 526 | 527 | def versions_from_parentdir(parentdir_prefix, root, verbose): 528 | """Try to determine the version from the parent directory name. 529 | 530 | Source tarballs conventionally unpack into a directory that includes both 531 | the project name and a version string. We will also support searching up 532 | two directory levels for an appropriately named parent directory 533 | """ 534 | rootdirs = [] 535 | 536 | for i in range(3): 537 | dirname = os.path.basename(root) 538 | if dirname.startswith(parentdir_prefix): 539 | return {"version": dirname[len(parentdir_prefix):], 540 | "full-revisionid": None, 541 | "dirty": False, "error": None, "date": None} 542 | else: 543 | rootdirs.append(root) 544 | root = os.path.dirname(root) # up a level 545 | 546 | if verbose: 547 | print("Tried directories %%s but none started with prefix %%s" %% 548 | (str(rootdirs), parentdir_prefix)) 549 | raise NotThisMethod("rootdir doesn't start with parentdir_prefix") 550 | 551 | 552 | @register_vcs_handler("git", "get_keywords") 553 | def git_get_keywords(versionfile_abs): 554 | """Extract version information from the given file.""" 555 | # the code embedded in _version.py can just fetch the value of these 556 | # keywords. When used from setup.py, we don't want to import _version.py, 557 | # so we do it with a regexp instead. This function is not used from 558 | # _version.py. 559 | keywords = {} 560 | try: 561 | f = open(versionfile_abs, "r") 562 | for line in f.readlines(): 563 | if line.strip().startswith("git_refnames ="): 564 | mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line) 565 | if mo: 566 | keywords["refnames"] = mo.group(1) 567 | if line.strip().startswith("git_full ="): 568 | mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line) 569 | if mo: 570 | keywords["full"] = mo.group(1) 571 | if line.strip().startswith("git_date ="): 572 | mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line) 573 | if mo: 574 | keywords["date"] = mo.group(1) 575 | f.close() 576 | except EnvironmentError: 577 | pass 578 | return keywords 579 | 580 | 581 | @register_vcs_handler("git", "keywords") 582 | def git_versions_from_keywords(keywords, tag_prefix, verbose): 583 | """Get version information from git keywords.""" 584 | if not keywords: 585 | raise NotThisMethod("no keywords at all, weird") 586 | date = keywords.get("date") 587 | if date is not None: 588 | # git-2.2.0 added "%%cI", which expands to an ISO-8601 -compliant 589 | # datestamp. However we prefer "%%ci" (which expands to an "ISO-8601 590 | # -like" string, which we must then edit to make compliant), because 591 | # it's been around since git-1.5.3, and it's too difficult to 592 | # discover which version we're using, or to work around using an 593 | # older one. 594 | date = date.strip().replace(" ", "T", 1).replace(" ", "", 1) 595 | refnames = keywords["refnames"].strip() 596 | if refnames.startswith("$Format"): 597 | if verbose: 598 | print("keywords are unexpanded, not using") 599 | raise NotThisMethod("unexpanded keywords, not a git-archive tarball") 600 | refs = set([r.strip() for r in refnames.strip("()").split(",")]) 601 | # starting in git-1.8.3, tags are listed as "tag: foo-1.0" instead of 602 | # just "foo-1.0". If we see a "tag: " prefix, prefer those. 603 | TAG = "tag: " 604 | tags = set([r[len(TAG):] for r in refs if r.startswith(TAG)]) 605 | if not tags: 606 | # Either we're using git < 1.8.3, or there really are no tags. We use 607 | # a heuristic: assume all version tags have a digit. The old git %%d 608 | # expansion behaves like git log --decorate=short and strips out the 609 | # refs/heads/ and refs/tags/ prefixes that would let us distinguish 610 | # between branches and tags. By ignoring refnames without digits, we 611 | # filter out many common branch names like "release" and 612 | # "stabilization", as well as "HEAD" and "master". 613 | tags = set([r for r in refs if re.search(r'\d', r)]) 614 | if verbose: 615 | print("discarding '%%s', no digits" %% ",".join(refs - tags)) 616 | if verbose: 617 | print("likely tags: %%s" %% ",".join(sorted(tags))) 618 | for ref in sorted(tags): 619 | # sorting will prefer e.g. "2.0" over "2.0rc1" 620 | if ref.startswith(tag_prefix): 621 | r = ref[len(tag_prefix):] 622 | if verbose: 623 | print("picking %%s" %% r) 624 | return {"version": r, 625 | "full-revisionid": keywords["full"].strip(), 626 | "dirty": False, "error": None, 627 | "date": date} 628 | # no suitable tags, so version is "0+unknown", but full hex is still there 629 | if verbose: 630 | print("no suitable tags, using unknown + full revision id") 631 | return {"version": "0+unknown", 632 | "full-revisionid": keywords["full"].strip(), 633 | "dirty": False, "error": "no suitable tags", "date": None} 634 | 635 | 636 | @register_vcs_handler("git", "pieces_from_vcs") 637 | def git_pieces_from_vcs(tag_prefix, root, verbose, run_command=run_command): 638 | """Get version from 'git describe' in the root of the source tree. 639 | 640 | This only gets called if the git-archive 'subst' keywords were *not* 641 | expanded, and _version.py hasn't already been rewritten with a short 642 | version string, meaning we're inside a checked out source tree. 643 | """ 644 | GITS = ["git"] 645 | if sys.platform == "win32": 646 | GITS = ["git.cmd", "git.exe"] 647 | 648 | out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["rev-parse", "--git-dir"], cwd=root, 649 | hide_stderr=True) 650 | if rc != 0: 651 | if verbose: 652 | print("Directory %%s not under git control" %% root) 653 | raise NotThisMethod("'git rev-parse --git-dir' returned error") 654 | 655 | # if there is a tag matching tag_prefix, this yields TAG-NUM-gHEX[-dirty] 656 | # if there isn't one, this yields HEX[-dirty] (no NUM) 657 | describe_out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["describe", "--tags", "--dirty", 658 | "--always", "--long", 659 | "--match", "%%s*" %% tag_prefix], 660 | cwd=root) 661 | # --long was added in git-1.5.5 662 | if describe_out is None: 663 | raise NotThisMethod("'git describe' failed") 664 | describe_out = describe_out.strip() 665 | full_out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["rev-parse", "HEAD"], cwd=root) 666 | if full_out is None: 667 | raise NotThisMethod("'git rev-parse' failed") 668 | full_out = full_out.strip() 669 | 670 | pieces = {} 671 | pieces["long"] = full_out 672 | pieces["short"] = full_out[:7] # maybe improved later 673 | pieces["error"] = None 674 | 675 | # parse describe_out. It will be like TAG-NUM-gHEX[-dirty] or HEX[-dirty] 676 | # TAG might have hyphens. 677 | git_describe = describe_out 678 | 679 | # look for -dirty suffix 680 | dirty = git_describe.endswith("-dirty") 681 | pieces["dirty"] = dirty 682 | if dirty: 683 | git_describe = git_describe[:git_describe.rindex("-dirty")] 684 | 685 | # now we have TAG-NUM-gHEX or HEX 686 | 687 | if "-" in git_describe: 688 | # TAG-NUM-gHEX 689 | mo = re.search(r'^(.+)-(\d+)-g([0-9a-f]+)$', git_describe) 690 | if not mo: 691 | # unparseable. Maybe git-describe is misbehaving? 692 | pieces["error"] = ("unable to parse git-describe output: '%%s'" 693 | %% describe_out) 694 | return pieces 695 | 696 | # tag 697 | full_tag = mo.group(1) 698 | if not full_tag.startswith(tag_prefix): 699 | if verbose: 700 | fmt = "tag '%%s' doesn't start with prefix '%%s'" 701 | print(fmt %% (full_tag, tag_prefix)) 702 | pieces["error"] = ("tag '%%s' doesn't start with prefix '%%s'" 703 | %% (full_tag, tag_prefix)) 704 | return pieces 705 | pieces["closest-tag"] = full_tag[len(tag_prefix):] 706 | 707 | # distance: number of commits since tag 708 | pieces["distance"] = int(mo.group(2)) 709 | 710 | # commit: short hex revision ID 711 | pieces["short"] = mo.group(3) 712 | 713 | else: 714 | # HEX: no tags 715 | pieces["closest-tag"] = None 716 | count_out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["rev-list", "HEAD", "--count"], 717 | cwd=root) 718 | pieces["distance"] = int(count_out) # total number of commits 719 | 720 | # commit date: see ISO-8601 comment in git_versions_from_keywords() 721 | date = run_command(GITS, ["show", "-s", "--format=%%ci", "HEAD"], 722 | cwd=root)[0].strip() 723 | pieces["date"] = date.strip().replace(" ", "T", 1).replace(" ", "", 1) 724 | 725 | return pieces 726 | 727 | 728 | def plus_or_dot(pieces): 729 | """Return a + if we don't already have one, else return a .""" 730 | if "+" in pieces.get("closest-tag", ""): 731 | return "." 732 | return "+" 733 | 734 | 735 | def render_pep440(pieces): 736 | """Build up version string, with post-release "local version identifier". 737 | 738 | Our goal: TAG[+DISTANCE.gHEX[.dirty]] . Note that if you 739 | get a tagged build and then dirty it, you'll get TAG+0.gHEX.dirty 740 | 741 | Exceptions: 742 | 1: no tags. git_describe was just HEX. 0+untagged.DISTANCE.gHEX[.dirty] 743 | """ 744 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 745 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 746 | if pieces["distance"] or pieces["dirty"]: 747 | rendered += plus_or_dot(pieces) 748 | rendered += "%%d.g%%s" %% (pieces["distance"], pieces["short"]) 749 | if pieces["dirty"]: 750 | rendered += ".dirty" 751 | else: 752 | # exception #1 753 | rendered = "0+untagged.%%d.g%%s" %% (pieces["distance"], 754 | pieces["short"]) 755 | if pieces["dirty"]: 756 | rendered += ".dirty" 757 | return rendered 758 | 759 | 760 | def render_pep440_pre(pieces): 761 | """TAG[.post.devDISTANCE] -- No -dirty. 762 | 763 | Exceptions: 764 | 1: no tags. 0.post.devDISTANCE 765 | """ 766 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 767 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 768 | if pieces["distance"]: 769 | rendered += ".post.dev%%d" %% pieces["distance"] 770 | else: 771 | # exception #1 772 | rendered = "0.post.dev%%d" %% pieces["distance"] 773 | return rendered 774 | 775 | 776 | def render_pep440_post(pieces): 777 | """TAG[.postDISTANCE[.dev0]+gHEX] . 778 | 779 | The ".dev0" means dirty. Note that .dev0 sorts backwards 780 | (a dirty tree will appear "older" than the corresponding clean one), 781 | but you shouldn't be releasing software with -dirty anyways. 782 | 783 | Exceptions: 784 | 1: no tags. 0.postDISTANCE[.dev0] 785 | """ 786 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 787 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 788 | if pieces["distance"] or pieces["dirty"]: 789 | rendered += ".post%%d" %% pieces["distance"] 790 | if pieces["dirty"]: 791 | rendered += ".dev0" 792 | rendered += plus_or_dot(pieces) 793 | rendered += "g%%s" %% pieces["short"] 794 | else: 795 | # exception #1 796 | rendered = "0.post%%d" %% pieces["distance"] 797 | if pieces["dirty"]: 798 | rendered += ".dev0" 799 | rendered += "+g%%s" %% pieces["short"] 800 | return rendered 801 | 802 | 803 | def render_pep440_old(pieces): 804 | """TAG[.postDISTANCE[.dev0]] . 805 | 806 | The ".dev0" means dirty. 807 | 808 | Eexceptions: 809 | 1: no tags. 0.postDISTANCE[.dev0] 810 | """ 811 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 812 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 813 | if pieces["distance"] or pieces["dirty"]: 814 | rendered += ".post%%d" %% pieces["distance"] 815 | if pieces["dirty"]: 816 | rendered += ".dev0" 817 | else: 818 | # exception #1 819 | rendered = "0.post%%d" %% pieces["distance"] 820 | if pieces["dirty"]: 821 | rendered += ".dev0" 822 | return rendered 823 | 824 | 825 | def render_git_describe(pieces): 826 | """TAG[-DISTANCE-gHEX][-dirty]. 827 | 828 | Like 'git describe --tags --dirty --always'. 829 | 830 | Exceptions: 831 | 1: no tags. HEX[-dirty] (note: no 'g' prefix) 832 | """ 833 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 834 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 835 | if pieces["distance"]: 836 | rendered += "-%%d-g%%s" %% (pieces["distance"], pieces["short"]) 837 | else: 838 | # exception #1 839 | rendered = pieces["short"] 840 | if pieces["dirty"]: 841 | rendered += "-dirty" 842 | return rendered 843 | 844 | 845 | def render_git_describe_long(pieces): 846 | """TAG-DISTANCE-gHEX[-dirty]. 847 | 848 | Like 'git describe --tags --dirty --always -long'. 849 | The distance/hash is unconditional. 850 | 851 | Exceptions: 852 | 1: no tags. HEX[-dirty] (note: no 'g' prefix) 853 | """ 854 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 855 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 856 | rendered += "-%%d-g%%s" %% (pieces["distance"], pieces["short"]) 857 | else: 858 | # exception #1 859 | rendered = pieces["short"] 860 | if pieces["dirty"]: 861 | rendered += "-dirty" 862 | return rendered 863 | 864 | 865 | def render(pieces, style): 866 | """Render the given version pieces into the requested style.""" 867 | if pieces["error"]: 868 | return {"version": "unknown", 869 | "full-revisionid": pieces.get("long"), 870 | "dirty": None, 871 | "error": pieces["error"], 872 | "date": None} 873 | 874 | if not style or style == "default": 875 | style = "pep440" # the default 876 | 877 | if style == "pep440": 878 | rendered = render_pep440(pieces) 879 | elif style == "pep440-pre": 880 | rendered = render_pep440_pre(pieces) 881 | elif style == "pep440-post": 882 | rendered = render_pep440_post(pieces) 883 | elif style == "pep440-old": 884 | rendered = render_pep440_old(pieces) 885 | elif style == "git-describe": 886 | rendered = render_git_describe(pieces) 887 | elif style == "git-describe-long": 888 | rendered = render_git_describe_long(pieces) 889 | else: 890 | raise ValueError("unknown style '%%s'" %% style) 891 | 892 | return {"version": rendered, "full-revisionid": pieces["long"], 893 | "dirty": pieces["dirty"], "error": None, 894 | "date": pieces.get("date")} 895 | 896 | 897 | def get_versions(): 898 | """Get version information or return default if unable to do so.""" 899 | # I am in _version.py, which lives at ROOT/VERSIONFILE_SOURCE. If we have 900 | # __file__, we can work backwards from there to the root. Some 901 | # py2exe/bbfreeze/non-CPython implementations don't do __file__, in which 902 | # case we can only use expanded keywords. 903 | 904 | cfg = get_config() 905 | verbose = cfg.verbose 906 | 907 | try: 908 | return git_versions_from_keywords(get_keywords(), cfg.tag_prefix, 909 | verbose) 910 | except NotThisMethod: 911 | pass 912 | 913 | try: 914 | root = os.path.realpath(__file__) 915 | # versionfile_source is the relative path from the top of the source 916 | # tree (where the .git directory might live) to this file. Invert 917 | # this to find the root from __file__. 918 | for i in cfg.versionfile_source.split('/'): 919 | root = os.path.dirname(root) 920 | except NameError: 921 | return {"version": "0+unknown", "full-revisionid": None, 922 | "dirty": None, 923 | "error": "unable to find root of source tree", 924 | "date": None} 925 | 926 | try: 927 | pieces = git_pieces_from_vcs(cfg.tag_prefix, root, verbose) 928 | return render(pieces, cfg.style) 929 | except NotThisMethod: 930 | pass 931 | 932 | try: 933 | if cfg.parentdir_prefix: 934 | return versions_from_parentdir(cfg.parentdir_prefix, root, verbose) 935 | except NotThisMethod: 936 | pass 937 | 938 | return {"version": "0+unknown", "full-revisionid": None, 939 | "dirty": None, 940 | "error": "unable to compute version", "date": None} 941 | ''' 942 | 943 | 944 | @register_vcs_handler("git", "get_keywords") 945 | def git_get_keywords(versionfile_abs): 946 | """Extract version information from the given file.""" 947 | # the code embedded in _version.py can just fetch the value of these 948 | # keywords. When used from setup.py, we don't want to import _version.py, 949 | # so we do it with a regexp instead. This function is not used from 950 | # _version.py. 951 | keywords = {} 952 | try: 953 | f = open(versionfile_abs, "r") 954 | for line in f.readlines(): 955 | if line.strip().startswith("git_refnames ="): 956 | mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line) 957 | if mo: 958 | keywords["refnames"] = mo.group(1) 959 | if line.strip().startswith("git_full ="): 960 | mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line) 961 | if mo: 962 | keywords["full"] = mo.group(1) 963 | if line.strip().startswith("git_date ="): 964 | mo = re.search(r'=\s*"(.*)"', line) 965 | if mo: 966 | keywords["date"] = mo.group(1) 967 | f.close() 968 | except EnvironmentError: 969 | pass 970 | return keywords 971 | 972 | 973 | @register_vcs_handler("git", "keywords") 974 | def git_versions_from_keywords(keywords, tag_prefix, verbose): 975 | """Get version information from git keywords.""" 976 | if not keywords: 977 | raise NotThisMethod("no keywords at all, weird") 978 | date = keywords.get("date") 979 | if date is not None: 980 | # git-2.2.0 added "%cI", which expands to an ISO-8601 -compliant 981 | # datestamp. However we prefer "%ci" (which expands to an "ISO-8601 982 | # -like" string, which we must then edit to make compliant), because 983 | # it's been around since git-1.5.3, and it's too difficult to 984 | # discover which version we're using, or to work around using an 985 | # older one. 986 | date = date.strip().replace(" ", "T", 1).replace(" ", "", 1) 987 | refnames = keywords["refnames"].strip() 988 | if refnames.startswith("$Format"): 989 | if verbose: 990 | print("keywords are unexpanded, not using") 991 | raise NotThisMethod("unexpanded keywords, not a git-archive tarball") 992 | refs = set([r.strip() for r in refnames.strip("()").split(",")]) 993 | # starting in git-1.8.3, tags are listed as "tag: foo-1.0" instead of 994 | # just "foo-1.0". If we see a "tag: " prefix, prefer those. 995 | TAG = "tag: " 996 | tags = set([r[len(TAG):] for r in refs if r.startswith(TAG)]) 997 | if not tags: 998 | # Either we're using git < 1.8.3, or there really are no tags. We use 999 | # a heuristic: assume all version tags have a digit. The old git %d 1000 | # expansion behaves like git log --decorate=short and strips out the 1001 | # refs/heads/ and refs/tags/ prefixes that would let us distinguish 1002 | # between branches and tags. By ignoring refnames without digits, we 1003 | # filter out many common branch names like "release" and 1004 | # "stabilization", as well as "HEAD" and "master". 1005 | tags = set([r for r in refs if re.search(r'\d', r)]) 1006 | if verbose: 1007 | print("discarding '%s', no digits" % ",".join(refs - tags)) 1008 | if verbose: 1009 | print("likely tags: %s" % ",".join(sorted(tags))) 1010 | for ref in sorted(tags): 1011 | # sorting will prefer e.g. "2.0" over "2.0rc1" 1012 | if ref.startswith(tag_prefix): 1013 | r = ref[len(tag_prefix):] 1014 | if verbose: 1015 | print("picking %s" % r) 1016 | return {"version": r, 1017 | "full-revisionid": keywords["full"].strip(), 1018 | "dirty": False, "error": None, 1019 | "date": date} 1020 | # no suitable tags, so version is "0+unknown", but full hex is still there 1021 | if verbose: 1022 | print("no suitable tags, using unknown + full revision id") 1023 | return {"version": "0+unknown", 1024 | "full-revisionid": keywords["full"].strip(), 1025 | "dirty": False, "error": "no suitable tags", "date": None} 1026 | 1027 | 1028 | @register_vcs_handler("git", "pieces_from_vcs") 1029 | def git_pieces_from_vcs(tag_prefix, root, verbose, run_command=run_command): 1030 | """Get version from 'git describe' in the root of the source tree. 1031 | 1032 | This only gets called if the git-archive 'subst' keywords were *not* 1033 | expanded, and _version.py hasn't already been rewritten with a short 1034 | version string, meaning we're inside a checked out source tree. 1035 | """ 1036 | GITS = ["git"] 1037 | if sys.platform == "win32": 1038 | GITS = ["git.cmd", "git.exe"] 1039 | 1040 | out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["rev-parse", "--git-dir"], cwd=root, 1041 | hide_stderr=True) 1042 | if rc != 0: 1043 | if verbose: 1044 | print("Directory %s not under git control" % root) 1045 | raise NotThisMethod("'git rev-parse --git-dir' returned error") 1046 | 1047 | # if there is a tag matching tag_prefix, this yields TAG-NUM-gHEX[-dirty] 1048 | # if there isn't one, this yields HEX[-dirty] (no NUM) 1049 | describe_out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["describe", "--tags", "--dirty", 1050 | "--always", "--long", 1051 | "--match", "%s*" % tag_prefix], 1052 | cwd=root) 1053 | # --long was added in git-1.5.5 1054 | if describe_out is None: 1055 | raise NotThisMethod("'git describe' failed") 1056 | describe_out = describe_out.strip() 1057 | full_out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["rev-parse", "HEAD"], cwd=root) 1058 | if full_out is None: 1059 | raise NotThisMethod("'git rev-parse' failed") 1060 | full_out = full_out.strip() 1061 | 1062 | pieces = {} 1063 | pieces["long"] = full_out 1064 | pieces["short"] = full_out[:7] # maybe improved later 1065 | pieces["error"] = None 1066 | 1067 | # parse describe_out. It will be like TAG-NUM-gHEX[-dirty] or HEX[-dirty] 1068 | # TAG might have hyphens. 1069 | git_describe = describe_out 1070 | 1071 | # look for -dirty suffix 1072 | dirty = git_describe.endswith("-dirty") 1073 | pieces["dirty"] = dirty 1074 | if dirty: 1075 | git_describe = git_describe[:git_describe.rindex("-dirty")] 1076 | 1077 | # now we have TAG-NUM-gHEX or HEX 1078 | 1079 | if "-" in git_describe: 1080 | # TAG-NUM-gHEX 1081 | mo = re.search(r'^(.+)-(\d+)-g([0-9a-f]+)$', git_describe) 1082 | if not mo: 1083 | # unparseable. Maybe git-describe is misbehaving? 1084 | pieces["error"] = ("unable to parse git-describe output: '%s'" 1085 | % describe_out) 1086 | return pieces 1087 | 1088 | # tag 1089 | full_tag = mo.group(1) 1090 | if not full_tag.startswith(tag_prefix): 1091 | if verbose: 1092 | fmt = "tag '%s' doesn't start with prefix '%s'" 1093 | print(fmt % (full_tag, tag_prefix)) 1094 | pieces["error"] = ("tag '%s' doesn't start with prefix '%s'" 1095 | % (full_tag, tag_prefix)) 1096 | return pieces 1097 | pieces["closest-tag"] = full_tag[len(tag_prefix):] 1098 | 1099 | # distance: number of commits since tag 1100 | pieces["distance"] = int(mo.group(2)) 1101 | 1102 | # commit: short hex revision ID 1103 | pieces["short"] = mo.group(3) 1104 | 1105 | else: 1106 | # HEX: no tags 1107 | pieces["closest-tag"] = None 1108 | count_out, rc = run_command(GITS, ["rev-list", "HEAD", "--count"], 1109 | cwd=root) 1110 | pieces["distance"] = int(count_out) # total number of commits 1111 | 1112 | # commit date: see ISO-8601 comment in git_versions_from_keywords() 1113 | date = run_command(GITS, ["show", "-s", "--format=%ci", "HEAD"], 1114 | cwd=root)[0].strip() 1115 | pieces["date"] = date.strip().replace(" ", "T", 1).replace(" ", "", 1) 1116 | 1117 | return pieces 1118 | 1119 | 1120 | def do_vcs_install(manifest_in, versionfile_source, ipy): 1121 | """Git-specific installation logic for Versioneer. 1122 | 1123 | For Git, this means creating/changing .gitattributes to mark _version.py 1124 | for export-subst keyword substitution. 1125 | """ 1126 | GITS = ["git"] 1127 | if sys.platform == "win32": 1128 | GITS = ["git.cmd", "git.exe"] 1129 | files = [manifest_in, versionfile_source] 1130 | if ipy: 1131 | files.append(ipy) 1132 | try: 1133 | me = __file__ 1134 | if me.endswith(".pyc") or me.endswith(".pyo"): 1135 | me = os.path.splitext(me)[0] + ".py" 1136 | versioneer_file = os.path.relpath(me) 1137 | except NameError: 1138 | versioneer_file = "versioneer.py" 1139 | files.append(versioneer_file) 1140 | present = False 1141 | try: 1142 | f = open(".gitattributes", "r") 1143 | for line in f.readlines(): 1144 | if line.strip().startswith(versionfile_source): 1145 | if "export-subst" in line.strip().split()[1:]: 1146 | present = True 1147 | f.close() 1148 | except EnvironmentError: 1149 | pass 1150 | if not present: 1151 | f = open(".gitattributes", "a+") 1152 | f.write("%s export-subst\n" % versionfile_source) 1153 | f.close() 1154 | files.append(".gitattributes") 1155 | run_command(GITS, ["add", "--"] + files) 1156 | 1157 | 1158 | def versions_from_parentdir(parentdir_prefix, root, verbose): 1159 | """Try to determine the version from the parent directory name. 1160 | 1161 | Source tarballs conventionally unpack into a directory that includes both 1162 | the project name and a version string. We will also support searching up 1163 | two directory levels for an appropriately named parent directory 1164 | """ 1165 | rootdirs = [] 1166 | 1167 | for i in range(3): 1168 | dirname = os.path.basename(root) 1169 | if dirname.startswith(parentdir_prefix): 1170 | return {"version": dirname[len(parentdir_prefix):], 1171 | "full-revisionid": None, 1172 | "dirty": False, "error": None, "date": None} 1173 | else: 1174 | rootdirs.append(root) 1175 | root = os.path.dirname(root) # up a level 1176 | 1177 | if verbose: 1178 | print("Tried directories %s but none started with prefix %s" % 1179 | (str(rootdirs), parentdir_prefix)) 1180 | raise NotThisMethod("rootdir doesn't start with parentdir_prefix") 1181 | 1182 | 1183 | SHORT_VERSION_PY = """ 1184 | # This file was generated by 'versioneer.py' (0.18) from 1185 | # revision-control system data, or from the parent directory name of an 1186 | # unpacked source archive. Distribution tarballs contain a pre-generated copy 1187 | # of this file. 1188 | 1189 | import json 1190 | 1191 | version_json = ''' 1192 | %s 1193 | ''' # END VERSION_JSON 1194 | 1195 | 1196 | def get_versions(): 1197 | return json.loads(version_json) 1198 | """ 1199 | 1200 | 1201 | def versions_from_file(filename): 1202 | """Try to determine the version from _version.py if present.""" 1203 | try: 1204 | with open(filename) as f: 1205 | contents = f.read() 1206 | except EnvironmentError: 1207 | raise NotThisMethod("unable to read _version.py") 1208 | mo = re.search(r"version_json = '''\n(.*)''' # END VERSION_JSON", 1209 | contents, re.M | re.S) 1210 | if not mo: 1211 | mo = re.search(r"version_json = '''\r\n(.*)''' # END VERSION_JSON", 1212 | contents, re.M | re.S) 1213 | if not mo: 1214 | raise NotThisMethod("no version_json in _version.py") 1215 | return json.loads(mo.group(1)) 1216 | 1217 | 1218 | def write_to_version_file(filename, versions): 1219 | """Write the given version number to the given _version.py file.""" 1220 | os.unlink(filename) 1221 | contents = json.dumps(versions, sort_keys=True, 1222 | indent=1, separators=(",", ": ")) 1223 | with open(filename, "w") as f: 1224 | f.write(SHORT_VERSION_PY % contents) 1225 | 1226 | print("set %s to '%s'" % (filename, versions["version"])) 1227 | 1228 | 1229 | def plus_or_dot(pieces): 1230 | """Return a + if we don't already have one, else return a .""" 1231 | if "+" in pieces.get("closest-tag", ""): 1232 | return "." 1233 | return "+" 1234 | 1235 | 1236 | def render_pep440(pieces): 1237 | """Build up version string, with post-release "local version identifier". 1238 | 1239 | Our goal: TAG[+DISTANCE.gHEX[.dirty]] . Note that if you 1240 | get a tagged build and then dirty it, you'll get TAG+0.gHEX.dirty 1241 | 1242 | Exceptions: 1243 | 1: no tags. git_describe was just HEX. 0+untagged.DISTANCE.gHEX[.dirty] 1244 | """ 1245 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 1246 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 1247 | if pieces["distance"] or pieces["dirty"]: 1248 | rendered += plus_or_dot(pieces) 1249 | rendered += "%d.g%s" % (pieces["distance"], pieces["short"]) 1250 | if pieces["dirty"]: 1251 | rendered += ".dirty" 1252 | else: 1253 | # exception #1 1254 | rendered = "0+untagged.%d.g%s" % (pieces["distance"], 1255 | pieces["short"]) 1256 | if pieces["dirty"]: 1257 | rendered += ".dirty" 1258 | return rendered 1259 | 1260 | 1261 | def render_pep440_pre(pieces): 1262 | """TAG[.post.devDISTANCE] -- No -dirty. 1263 | 1264 | Exceptions: 1265 | 1: no tags. 0.post.devDISTANCE 1266 | """ 1267 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 1268 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 1269 | if pieces["distance"]: 1270 | rendered += ".post.dev%d" % pieces["distance"] 1271 | else: 1272 | # exception #1 1273 | rendered = "0.post.dev%d" % pieces["distance"] 1274 | return rendered 1275 | 1276 | 1277 | def render_pep440_post(pieces): 1278 | """TAG[.postDISTANCE[.dev0]+gHEX] . 1279 | 1280 | The ".dev0" means dirty. Note that .dev0 sorts backwards 1281 | (a dirty tree will appear "older" than the corresponding clean one), 1282 | but you shouldn't be releasing software with -dirty anyways. 1283 | 1284 | Exceptions: 1285 | 1: no tags. 0.postDISTANCE[.dev0] 1286 | """ 1287 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 1288 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 1289 | if pieces["distance"] or pieces["dirty"]: 1290 | rendered += ".post%d" % pieces["distance"] 1291 | if pieces["dirty"]: 1292 | rendered += ".dev0" 1293 | rendered += plus_or_dot(pieces) 1294 | rendered += "g%s" % pieces["short"] 1295 | else: 1296 | # exception #1 1297 | rendered = "0.post%d" % pieces["distance"] 1298 | if pieces["dirty"]: 1299 | rendered += ".dev0" 1300 | rendered += "+g%s" % pieces["short"] 1301 | return rendered 1302 | 1303 | 1304 | def render_pep440_old(pieces): 1305 | """TAG[.postDISTANCE[.dev0]] . 1306 | 1307 | The ".dev0" means dirty. 1308 | 1309 | Eexceptions: 1310 | 1: no tags. 0.postDISTANCE[.dev0] 1311 | """ 1312 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 1313 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 1314 | if pieces["distance"] or pieces["dirty"]: 1315 | rendered += ".post%d" % pieces["distance"] 1316 | if pieces["dirty"]: 1317 | rendered += ".dev0" 1318 | else: 1319 | # exception #1 1320 | rendered = "0.post%d" % pieces["distance"] 1321 | if pieces["dirty"]: 1322 | rendered += ".dev0" 1323 | return rendered 1324 | 1325 | 1326 | def render_git_describe(pieces): 1327 | """TAG[-DISTANCE-gHEX][-dirty]. 1328 | 1329 | Like 'git describe --tags --dirty --always'. 1330 | 1331 | Exceptions: 1332 | 1: no tags. HEX[-dirty] (note: no 'g' prefix) 1333 | """ 1334 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 1335 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 1336 | if pieces["distance"]: 1337 | rendered += "-%d-g%s" % (pieces["distance"], pieces["short"]) 1338 | else: 1339 | # exception #1 1340 | rendered = pieces["short"] 1341 | if pieces["dirty"]: 1342 | rendered += "-dirty" 1343 | return rendered 1344 | 1345 | 1346 | def render_git_describe_long(pieces): 1347 | """TAG-DISTANCE-gHEX[-dirty]. 1348 | 1349 | Like 'git describe --tags --dirty --always -long'. 1350 | The distance/hash is unconditional. 1351 | 1352 | Exceptions: 1353 | 1: no tags. HEX[-dirty] (note: no 'g' prefix) 1354 | """ 1355 | if pieces["closest-tag"]: 1356 | rendered = pieces["closest-tag"] 1357 | rendered += "-%d-g%s" % (pieces["distance"], pieces["short"]) 1358 | else: 1359 | # exception #1 1360 | rendered = pieces["short"] 1361 | if pieces["dirty"]: 1362 | rendered += "-dirty" 1363 | return rendered 1364 | 1365 | 1366 | def render(pieces, style): 1367 | """Render the given version pieces into the requested style.""" 1368 | if pieces["error"]: 1369 | return {"version": "unknown", 1370 | "full-revisionid": pieces.get("long"), 1371 | "dirty": None, 1372 | "error": pieces["error"], 1373 | "date": None} 1374 | 1375 | if not style or style == "default": 1376 | style = "pep440" # the default 1377 | 1378 | if style == "pep440": 1379 | rendered = render_pep440(pieces) 1380 | elif style == "pep440-pre": 1381 | rendered = render_pep440_pre(pieces) 1382 | elif style == "pep440-post": 1383 | rendered = render_pep440_post(pieces) 1384 | elif style == "pep440-old": 1385 | rendered = render_pep440_old(pieces) 1386 | elif style == "git-describe": 1387 | rendered = render_git_describe(pieces) 1388 | elif style == "git-describe-long": 1389 | rendered = render_git_describe_long(pieces) 1390 | else: 1391 | raise ValueError("unknown style '%s'" % style) 1392 | 1393 | return {"version": rendered, "full-revisionid": pieces["long"], 1394 | "dirty": pieces["dirty"], "error": None, 1395 | "date": pieces.get("date")} 1396 | 1397 | 1398 | class VersioneerBadRootError(Exception): 1399 | """The project root directory is unknown or missing key files.""" 1400 | 1401 | 1402 | def get_versions(verbose=False): 1403 | """Get the project version from whatever source is available. 1404 | 1405 | Returns dict with two keys: 'version' and 'full'. 1406 | """ 1407 | if "versioneer" in sys.modules: 1408 | # see the discussion in cmdclass.py:get_cmdclass() 1409 | del sys.modules["versioneer"] 1410 | 1411 | root = get_root() 1412 | cfg = get_config_from_root(root) 1413 | 1414 | assert cfg.VCS is not None, "please set [versioneer]VCS= in setup.cfg" 1415 | handlers = HANDLERS.get(cfg.VCS) 1416 | assert handlers, "unrecognized VCS '%s'" % cfg.VCS 1417 | verbose = verbose or cfg.verbose 1418 | assert cfg.versionfile_source is not None, \ 1419 | "please set versioneer.versionfile_source" 1420 | assert cfg.tag_prefix is not None, "please set versioneer.tag_prefix" 1421 | 1422 | versionfile_abs = os.path.join(root, cfg.versionfile_source) 1423 | 1424 | # extract version from first of: _version.py, VCS command (e.g. 'git 1425 | # describe'), parentdir. This is meant to work for developers using a 1426 | # source checkout, for users of a tarball created by 'setup.py sdist', 1427 | # and for users of a tarball/zipball created by 'git archive' or github's 1428 | # download-from-tag feature or the equivalent in other VCSes. 1429 | 1430 | get_keywords_f = handlers.get("get_keywords") 1431 | from_keywords_f = handlers.get("keywords") 1432 | if get_keywords_f and from_keywords_f: 1433 | try: 1434 | keywords = get_keywords_f(versionfile_abs) 1435 | ver = from_keywords_f(keywords, cfg.tag_prefix, verbose) 1436 | if verbose: 1437 | print("got version from expanded keyword %s" % ver) 1438 | return ver 1439 | except NotThisMethod: 1440 | pass 1441 | 1442 | try: 1443 | ver = versions_from_file(versionfile_abs) 1444 | if verbose: 1445 | print("got version from file %s %s" % (versionfile_abs, ver)) 1446 | return ver 1447 | except NotThisMethod: 1448 | pass 1449 | 1450 | from_vcs_f = handlers.get("pieces_from_vcs") 1451 | if from_vcs_f: 1452 | try: 1453 | pieces = from_vcs_f(cfg.tag_prefix, root, verbose) 1454 | ver = render(pieces, cfg.style) 1455 | if verbose: 1456 | print("got version from VCS %s" % ver) 1457 | return ver 1458 | except NotThisMethod: 1459 | pass 1460 | 1461 | try: 1462 | if cfg.parentdir_prefix: 1463 | ver = versions_from_parentdir(cfg.parentdir_prefix, root, verbose) 1464 | if verbose: 1465 | print("got version from parentdir %s" % ver) 1466 | return ver 1467 | except NotThisMethod: 1468 | pass 1469 | 1470 | if verbose: 1471 | print("unable to compute version") 1472 | 1473 | return {"version": "0+unknown", "full-revisionid": None, 1474 | "dirty": None, "error": "unable to compute version", 1475 | "date": None} 1476 | 1477 | 1478 | def get_version(): 1479 | """Get the short version string for this project.""" 1480 | return get_versions()["version"] 1481 | 1482 | 1483 | def get_cmdclass(): 1484 | """Get the custom setuptools/distutils subclasses used by Versioneer.""" 1485 | if "versioneer" in sys.modules: 1486 | del sys.modules["versioneer"] 1487 | # this fixes the "python setup.py develop" case (also 'install' and 1488 | # 'easy_install .'), in which subdependencies of the main project are 1489 | # built (using setup.py bdist_egg) in the same python process. Assume 1490 | # a main project A and a dependency B, which use different versions 1491 | # of Versioneer. A's setup.py imports A's Versioneer, leaving it in 1492 | # sys.modules by the time B's setup.py is executed, causing B to run 1493 | # with the wrong versioneer. Setuptools wraps the sub-dep builds in a 1494 | # sandbox that restores sys.modules to it's pre-build state, so the 1495 | # parent is protected against the child's "import versioneer". By 1496 | # removing ourselves from sys.modules here, before the child build 1497 | # happens, we protect the child from the parent's versioneer too. 1498 | # Also see https://github.com/warner/python-versioneer/issues/52 1499 | 1500 | cmds = {} 1501 | 1502 | # we add "version" to both distutils and setuptools 1503 | from distutils.core import Command 1504 | 1505 | class cmd_version(Command): 1506 | description = "report generated version string" 1507 | user_options = [] 1508 | boolean_options = [] 1509 | 1510 | def initialize_options(self): 1511 | pass 1512 | 1513 | def finalize_options(self): 1514 | pass 1515 | 1516 | def run(self): 1517 | vers = get_versions(verbose=True) 1518 | print("Version: %s" % vers["version"]) 1519 | print(" full-revisionid: %s" % vers.get("full-revisionid")) 1520 | print(" dirty: %s" % vers.get("dirty")) 1521 | print(" date: %s" % vers.get("date")) 1522 | if vers["error"]: 1523 | print(" error: %s" % vers["error"]) 1524 | cmds["version"] = cmd_version 1525 | 1526 | # we override "build_py" in both distutils and setuptools 1527 | # 1528 | # most invocation pathways end up running build_py: 1529 | # distutils/build -> build_py 1530 | # distutils/install -> distutils/build ->.. 1531 | # setuptools/bdist_wheel -> distutils/install ->.. 1532 | # setuptools/bdist_egg -> distutils/install_lib -> build_py 1533 | # setuptools/install -> bdist_egg ->.. 1534 | # setuptools/develop -> ? 1535 | # pip install: 1536 | # copies source tree to a tempdir before running egg_info/etc 1537 | # if .git isn't copied too, 'git describe' will fail 1538 | # then does setup.py bdist_wheel, or sometimes setup.py install 1539 | # setup.py egg_info -> ? 1540 | 1541 | # we override different "build_py" commands for both environments 1542 | if "setuptools" in sys.modules: 1543 | from setuptools.command.build_py import build_py as _build_py 1544 | else: 1545 | from distutils.command.build_py import build_py as _build_py 1546 | 1547 | class cmd_build_py(_build_py): 1548 | def run(self): 1549 | root = get_root() 1550 | cfg = get_config_from_root(root) 1551 | versions = get_versions() 1552 | _build_py.run(self) 1553 | # now locate _version.py in the new build/ directory and replace 1554 | # it with an updated value 1555 | if cfg.versionfile_build: 1556 | target_versionfile = os.path.join(self.build_lib, 1557 | cfg.versionfile_build) 1558 | print("UPDATING %s" % target_versionfile) 1559 | write_to_version_file(target_versionfile, versions) 1560 | cmds["build_py"] = cmd_build_py 1561 | 1562 | if "cx_Freeze" in sys.modules: # cx_freeze enabled? 1563 | from cx_Freeze.dist import build_exe as _build_exe 1564 | # nczeczulin reports that py2exe won't like the pep440-style string 1565 | # as FILEVERSION, but it can be used for PRODUCTVERSION, e.g. 1566 | # setup(console=[{ 1567 | # "version": versioneer.get_version().split("+", 1)[0], # FILEVERSION 1568 | # "product_version": versioneer.get_version(), 1569 | # ... 1570 | 1571 | class cmd_build_exe(_build_exe): 1572 | def run(self): 1573 | root = get_root() 1574 | cfg = get_config_from_root(root) 1575 | versions = get_versions() 1576 | target_versionfile = cfg.versionfile_source 1577 | print("UPDATING %s" % target_versionfile) 1578 | write_to_version_file(target_versionfile, versions) 1579 | 1580 | _build_exe.run(self) 1581 | os.unlink(target_versionfile) 1582 | with open(cfg.versionfile_source, "w") as f: 1583 | LONG = LONG_VERSION_PY[cfg.VCS] 1584 | f.write(LONG % 1585 | {"DOLLAR": "$", 1586 | "STYLE": cfg.style, 1587 | "TAG_PREFIX": cfg.tag_prefix, 1588 | "PARENTDIR_PREFIX": cfg.parentdir_prefix, 1589 | "VERSIONFILE_SOURCE": cfg.versionfile_source, 1590 | }) 1591 | cmds["build_exe"] = cmd_build_exe 1592 | del cmds["build_py"] 1593 | 1594 | if 'py2exe' in sys.modules: # py2exe enabled? 1595 | try: 1596 | from py2exe.distutils_buildexe import py2exe as _py2exe # py3 1597 | except ImportError: 1598 | from py2exe.build_exe import py2exe as _py2exe # py2 1599 | 1600 | class cmd_py2exe(_py2exe): 1601 | def run(self): 1602 | root = get_root() 1603 | cfg = get_config_from_root(root) 1604 | versions = get_versions() 1605 | target_versionfile = cfg.versionfile_source 1606 | print("UPDATING %s" % target_versionfile) 1607 | write_to_version_file(target_versionfile, versions) 1608 | 1609 | _py2exe.run(self) 1610 | os.unlink(target_versionfile) 1611 | with open(cfg.versionfile_source, "w") as f: 1612 | LONG = LONG_VERSION_PY[cfg.VCS] 1613 | f.write(LONG % 1614 | {"DOLLAR": "$", 1615 | "STYLE": cfg.style, 1616 | "TAG_PREFIX": cfg.tag_prefix, 1617 | "PARENTDIR_PREFIX": cfg.parentdir_prefix, 1618 | "VERSIONFILE_SOURCE": cfg.versionfile_source, 1619 | }) 1620 | cmds["py2exe"] = cmd_py2exe 1621 | 1622 | # we override different "sdist" commands for both environments 1623 | if "setuptools" in sys.modules: 1624 | from setuptools.command.sdist import sdist as _sdist 1625 | else: 1626 | from distutils.command.sdist import sdist as _sdist 1627 | 1628 | class cmd_sdist(_sdist): 1629 | def run(self): 1630 | versions = get_versions() 1631 | self._versioneer_generated_versions = versions 1632 | # unless we update this, the command will keep using the old 1633 | # version 1634 | self.distribution.metadata.version = versions["version"] 1635 | return _sdist.run(self) 1636 | 1637 | def make_release_tree(self, base_dir, files): 1638 | root = get_root() 1639 | cfg = get_config_from_root(root) 1640 | _sdist.make_release_tree(self, base_dir, files) 1641 | # now locate _version.py in the new base_dir directory 1642 | # (remembering that it may be a hardlink) and replace it with an 1643 | # updated value 1644 | target_versionfile = os.path.join(base_dir, cfg.versionfile_source) 1645 | print("UPDATING %s" % target_versionfile) 1646 | write_to_version_file(target_versionfile, 1647 | self._versioneer_generated_versions) 1648 | cmds["sdist"] = cmd_sdist 1649 | 1650 | return cmds 1651 | 1652 | 1653 | CONFIG_ERROR = """ 1654 | setup.cfg is missing the necessary Versioneer configuration. You need 1655 | a section like: 1656 | 1657 | [versioneer] 1658 | VCS = git 1659 | style = pep440 1660 | versionfile_source = src/myproject/_version.py 1661 | versionfile_build = myproject/_version.py 1662 | tag_prefix = 1663 | parentdir_prefix = myproject- 1664 | 1665 | You will also need to edit your setup.py to use the results: 1666 | 1667 | import versioneer 1668 | setup(version=versioneer.get_version(), 1669 | cmdclass=versioneer.get_cmdclass(), ...) 1670 | 1671 | Please read the docstring in ./versioneer.py for configuration instructions, 1672 | edit setup.cfg, and re-run the installer or 'python versioneer.py setup'. 1673 | """ 1674 | 1675 | SAMPLE_CONFIG = """ 1676 | # See the docstring in versioneer.py for instructions. Note that you must 1677 | # re-run 'versioneer.py setup' after changing this section, and commit the 1678 | # resulting files. 1679 | 1680 | [versioneer] 1681 | #VCS = git 1682 | #style = pep440 1683 | #versionfile_source = 1684 | #versionfile_build = 1685 | #tag_prefix = 1686 | #parentdir_prefix = 1687 | 1688 | """ 1689 | 1690 | INIT_PY_SNIPPET = """ 1691 | from ._version import get_versions 1692 | __version__ = get_versions()['version'] 1693 | del get_versions 1694 | """ 1695 | 1696 | 1697 | def do_setup(): 1698 | """Main VCS-independent setup function for installing Versioneer.""" 1699 | root = get_root() 1700 | try: 1701 | cfg = get_config_from_root(root) 1702 | except (EnvironmentError, configparser.NoSectionError, 1703 | configparser.NoOptionError) as e: 1704 | if isinstance(e, (EnvironmentError, configparser.NoSectionError)): 1705 | print("Adding sample versioneer config to setup.cfg", 1706 | file=sys.stderr) 1707 | with open(os.path.join(root, "setup.cfg"), "a") as f: 1708 | f.write(SAMPLE_CONFIG) 1709 | print(CONFIG_ERROR, file=sys.stderr) 1710 | return 1 1711 | 1712 | print(" creating %s" % cfg.versionfile_source) 1713 | with open(cfg.versionfile_source, "w") as f: 1714 | LONG = LONG_VERSION_PY[cfg.VCS] 1715 | f.write(LONG % {"DOLLAR": "$", 1716 | "STYLE": cfg.style, 1717 | "TAG_PREFIX": cfg.tag_prefix, 1718 | "PARENTDIR_PREFIX": cfg.parentdir_prefix, 1719 | "VERSIONFILE_SOURCE": cfg.versionfile_source, 1720 | }) 1721 | 1722 | ipy = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(cfg.versionfile_source), 1723 | "__init__.py") 1724 | if os.path.exists(ipy): 1725 | try: 1726 | with open(ipy, "r") as f: 1727 | old = f.read() 1728 | except EnvironmentError: 1729 | old = "" 1730 | if INIT_PY_SNIPPET not in old: 1731 | print(" appending to %s" % ipy) 1732 | with open(ipy, "a") as f: 1733 | f.write(INIT_PY_SNIPPET) 1734 | else: 1735 | print(" %s unmodified" % ipy) 1736 | else: 1737 | print(" %s doesn't exist, ok" % ipy) 1738 | ipy = None 1739 | 1740 | # Make sure both the top-level "versioneer.py" and versionfile_source 1741 | # (PKG/_version.py, used by runtime code) are in MANIFEST.in, so 1742 | # they'll be copied into source distributions. Pip won't be able to 1743 | # install the package without this. 1744 | manifest_in = os.path.join(root, "MANIFEST.in") 1745 | simple_includes = set() 1746 | try: 1747 | with open(manifest_in, "r") as f: 1748 | for line in f: 1749 | if line.startswith("include "): 1750 | for include in line.split()[1:]: 1751 | simple_includes.add(include) 1752 | except EnvironmentError: 1753 | pass 1754 | # That doesn't cover everything MANIFEST.in can do 1755 | # (http://docs.python.org/2/distutils/sourcedist.html#commands), so 1756 | # it might give some false negatives. Appending redundant 'include' 1757 | # lines is safe, though. 1758 | if "versioneer.py" not in simple_includes: 1759 | print(" appending 'versioneer.py' to MANIFEST.in") 1760 | with open(manifest_in, "a") as f: 1761 | f.write("include versioneer.py\n") 1762 | else: 1763 | print(" 'versioneer.py' already in MANIFEST.in") 1764 | if cfg.versionfile_source not in simple_includes: 1765 | print(" appending versionfile_source ('%s') to MANIFEST.in" % 1766 | cfg.versionfile_source) 1767 | with open(manifest_in, "a") as f: 1768 | f.write("include %s\n" % cfg.versionfile_source) 1769 | else: 1770 | print(" versionfile_source already in MANIFEST.in") 1771 | 1772 | # Make VCS-specific changes. For git, this means creating/changing 1773 | # .gitattributes to mark _version.py for export-subst keyword 1774 | # substitution. 1775 | do_vcs_install(manifest_in, cfg.versionfile_source, ipy) 1776 | return 0 1777 | 1778 | 1779 | def scan_setup_py(): 1780 | """Validate the contents of setup.py against Versioneer's expectations.""" 1781 | found = set() 1782 | setters = False 1783 | errors = 0 1784 | with open("setup.py", "r") as f: 1785 | for line in f.readlines(): 1786 | if "import versioneer" in line: 1787 | found.add("import") 1788 | if "versioneer.get_cmdclass()" in line: 1789 | found.add("cmdclass") 1790 | if "versioneer.get_version()" in line: 1791 | found.add("get_version") 1792 | if "versioneer.VCS" in line: 1793 | setters = True 1794 | if "versioneer.versionfile_source" in line: 1795 | setters = True 1796 | if len(found) != 3: 1797 | print("") 1798 | print("Your setup.py appears to be missing some important items") 1799 | print("(but I might be wrong). Please make sure it has something") 1800 | print("roughly like the following:") 1801 | print("") 1802 | print(" import versioneer") 1803 | print(" setup( version=versioneer.get_version(),") 1804 | print(" cmdclass=versioneer.get_cmdclass(), ...)") 1805 | print("") 1806 | errors += 1 1807 | if setters: 1808 | print("You should remove lines like 'versioneer.VCS = ' and") 1809 | print("'versioneer.versionfile_source = ' . This configuration") 1810 | print("now lives in setup.cfg, and should be removed from setup.py") 1811 | print("") 1812 | errors += 1 1813 | return errors 1814 | 1815 | 1816 | if __name__ == "__main__": 1817 | cmd = sys.argv[1] 1818 | if cmd == "setup": 1819 | errors = do_setup() 1820 | errors += scan_setup_py() 1821 | if errors: 1822 | sys.exit(1) 1823 | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------