blob: da25ddde59283013eb29b2f4b528c776904d034d [file] [log] [blame]
#!/usr/bin/env python
""" NumPy is the fundamental package for array computing with Python.
It provides:
- a powerful N-dimensional array object
- sophisticated (broadcasting) functions
- tools for integrating C/C++ and Fortran code
- useful linear algebra, Fourier transform, and random number capabilities
- and much more
Besides its obvious scientific uses, NumPy can also be used as an efficient
multi-dimensional container of generic data. Arbitrary data-types can be
defined. This allows NumPy to seamlessly and speedily integrate with a wide
variety of databases.
All NumPy wheels distributed on PyPI are BSD licensed.
"""
from __future__ import division, print_function
DOCLINES = (__doc__ or '').split("\n")
import os
import sys
import subprocess
import textwrap
if sys.version_info[:2] < (3, 5):
raise RuntimeError("Python version >= 3.5 required.")
import builtins
CLASSIFIERS = """\
Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Intended Audience :: Science/Research
Intended Audience :: Developers
License :: OSI Approved
Programming Language :: C
Programming Language :: Python
Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Programming Language :: Python :: 3.7
Programming Language :: Python :: Implementation :: CPython
Topic :: Software Development
Topic :: Scientific/Engineering
Operating System :: Microsoft :: Windows
Operating System :: POSIX
Operating System :: Unix
Operating System :: MacOS
"""
MAJOR = 1
MINOR = 17
MICRO = 0
ISRELEASED = False
VERSION = '%d.%d.%d' % (MAJOR, MINOR, MICRO)
# Return the git revision as a string
def git_version():
def _minimal_ext_cmd(cmd):
# construct minimal environment
env = {}
for k in ['SYSTEMROOT', 'PATH', 'HOME']:
v = os.environ.get(k)
if v is not None:
env[k] = v
# LANGUAGE is used on win32
env['LANGUAGE'] = 'C'
env['LANG'] = 'C'
env['LC_ALL'] = 'C'
out = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, env=env).communicate()[0]
return out
try:
out = _minimal_ext_cmd(['git', 'rev-parse', 'HEAD'])
GIT_REVISION = out.strip().decode('ascii')
except OSError:
GIT_REVISION = "Unknown"
return GIT_REVISION
# BEFORE importing setuptools, remove MANIFEST. Otherwise it may not be
# properly updated when the contents of directories change (true for distutils,
# not sure about setuptools).
if os.path.exists('MANIFEST'):
os.remove('MANIFEST')
# This is a bit hackish: we are setting a global variable so that the main
# numpy __init__ can detect if it is being loaded by the setup routine, to
# avoid attempting to load components that aren't built yet. While ugly, it's
# a lot more robust than what was previously being used.
builtins.__NUMPY_SETUP__ = True
def get_version_info():
# Adding the git rev number needs to be done inside write_version_py(),
# otherwise the import of numpy.version messes up the build under Python 3.
FULLVERSION = VERSION
if os.path.exists('.git'):
GIT_REVISION = git_version()
elif os.path.exists('numpy/version.py'):
# must be a source distribution, use existing version file
try:
from numpy.version import git_revision as GIT_REVISION
except ImportError:
raise ImportError("Unable to import git_revision. Try removing " \
"numpy/version.py and the build directory " \
"before building.")
else:
GIT_REVISION = "Unknown"
if not ISRELEASED:
FULLVERSION += '.dev0+' + GIT_REVISION[:7]
return FULLVERSION, GIT_REVISION
def write_version_py(filename='numpy/version.py'):
cnt = """
# THIS FILE IS GENERATED FROM NUMPY SETUP.PY
#
# To compare versions robustly, use `numpy.lib.NumpyVersion`
short_version = '%(version)s'
version = '%(version)s'
full_version = '%(full_version)s'
git_revision = '%(git_revision)s'
release = %(isrelease)s
if not release:
version = full_version
"""
FULLVERSION, GIT_REVISION = get_version_info()
a = open(filename, 'w')
try:
a.write(cnt % {'version': VERSION,
'full_version': FULLVERSION,
'git_revision': GIT_REVISION,
'isrelease': str(ISRELEASED)})
finally:
a.close()
def configuration(parent_package='',top_path=None):
from numpy.distutils.misc_util import Configuration
config = Configuration(None, parent_package, top_path)
config.set_options(ignore_setup_xxx_py=True,
assume_default_configuration=True,
delegate_options_to_subpackages=True,
quiet=True)
config.add_subpackage('numpy')
config.add_data_files(('numpy', 'LICENSE.txt'))
config.get_version('numpy/version.py') # sets config.version
return config
def check_submodules():
""" verify that the submodules are checked out and clean
use `git submodule update --init`; on failure
"""
if not os.path.exists('.git'):
return
with open('.gitmodules') as f:
for l in f:
if 'path' in l:
p = l.split('=')[-1].strip()
if not os.path.exists(p):
raise ValueError('Submodule %s missing' % p)
proc = subprocess.Popen(['git', 'submodule', 'status'],
stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
status, _ = proc.communicate()
status = status.decode("ascii", "replace")
for line in status.splitlines():
if line.startswith('-') or line.startswith('+'):
raise ValueError('Submodule not clean: %s' % line)
from distutils.command.sdist import sdist
class sdist_checked(sdist):
""" check submodules on sdist to prevent incomplete tarballs """
def run(self):
check_submodules()
sdist.run(self)
def generate_cython():
cwd = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__))
print("Cythonizing sources")
p = subprocess.call([sys.executable,
os.path.join(cwd, 'tools', 'cythonize.py'),
'numpy/random'],
cwd=cwd)
if p != 0:
raise RuntimeError("Running cythonize failed!")
def parse_setuppy_commands():
"""Check the commands and respond appropriately. Disable broken commands.
Return a boolean value for whether or not to run the build or not (avoid
parsing Cython and template files if False).
"""
args = sys.argv[1:]
if not args:
# User forgot to give an argument probably, let setuptools handle that.
return True
info_commands = ['--help-commands', '--name', '--version', '-V',
'--fullname', '--author', '--author-email',
'--maintainer', '--maintainer-email', '--contact',
'--contact-email', '--url', '--license', '--description',
'--long-description', '--platforms', '--classifiers',
'--keywords', '--provides', '--requires', '--obsoletes']
for command in info_commands:
if command in args:
return False
# Note that 'alias', 'saveopts' and 'setopt' commands also seem to work
# fine as they are, but are usually used together with one of the commands
# below and not standalone. Hence they're not added to good_commands.
good_commands = ('develop', 'sdist', 'build', 'build_ext', 'build_py',
'build_clib', 'build_scripts', 'bdist_wheel', 'bdist_rpm',
'bdist_wininst', 'bdist_msi', 'bdist_mpkg')
for command in good_commands:
if command in args:
return True
# The following commands are supported, but we need to show more
# useful messages to the user
if 'install' in args:
print(textwrap.dedent("""
Note: if you need reliable uninstall behavior, then install
with pip instead of using `setup.py install`:
- `pip install .` (from a git repo or downloaded source
release)
- `pip install numpy` (last NumPy release on PyPi)
"""))
return True
if '--help' in args or '-h' in sys.argv[1]:
print(textwrap.dedent("""
NumPy-specific help
-------------------
To install NumPy from here with reliable uninstall, we recommend
that you use `pip install .`. To install the latest NumPy release
from PyPi, use `pip install numpy`.
For help with build/installation issues, please ask on the
numpy-discussion mailing list. If you are sure that you have run
into a bug, please report it at https://github.com/numpy/numpy/issues.
Setuptools commands help
------------------------
"""))
return False
# The following commands aren't supported. They can only be executed when
# the user explicitly adds a --force command-line argument.
bad_commands = dict(
test="""
`setup.py test` is not supported. Use one of the following
instead:
- `python runtests.py` (to build and test)
- `python runtests.py --no-build` (to test installed numpy)
- `>>> numpy.test()` (run tests for installed numpy
from within an interpreter)
""",
upload="""
`setup.py upload` is not supported, because it's insecure.
Instead, build what you want to upload and upload those files
with `twine upload -s <filenames>` instead.
""",
upload_docs="`setup.py upload_docs` is not supported",
easy_install="`setup.py easy_install` is not supported",
clean="""
`setup.py clean` is not supported, use one of the following instead:
- `git clean -xdf` (cleans all files)
- `git clean -Xdf` (cleans all versioned files, doesn't touch
files that aren't checked into the git repo)
""",
check="`setup.py check` is not supported",
register="`setup.py register` is not supported",
bdist_dumb="`setup.py bdist_dumb` is not supported",
bdist="`setup.py bdist` is not supported",
build_sphinx="""
`setup.py build_sphinx` is not supported, use the
Makefile under doc/""",
flake8="`setup.py flake8` is not supported, use flake8 standalone",
)
bad_commands['nosetests'] = bad_commands['test']
for command in ('upload_docs', 'easy_install', 'bdist', 'bdist_dumb',
'register', 'check', 'install_data', 'install_headers',
'install_lib', 'install_scripts', ):
bad_commands[command] = "`setup.py %s` is not supported" % command
for command in bad_commands.keys():
if command in args:
print(textwrap.dedent(bad_commands[command]) +
"\nAdd `--force` to your command to use it anyway if you "
"must (unsupported).\n")
sys.exit(1)
# Commands that do more than print info, but also don't need Cython and
# template parsing.
other_commands = ['egg_info', 'install_egg_info', 'rotate']
for command in other_commands:
if command in args:
return False
# If we got here, we didn't detect what setup.py command was given
import warnings
warnings.warn("Unrecognized setuptools command, proceeding with "
"generating Cython sources and expanding templates", stacklevel=2)
return True
def setup_package():
src_path = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(sys.argv[0]))
old_path = os.getcwd()
os.chdir(src_path)
sys.path.insert(0, src_path)
# Rewrite the version file everytime
write_version_py()
# The f2py scripts that will be installed
if sys.platform == 'win32':
f2py_cmds = [
'f2py = numpy.f2py.f2py2e:main',
]
else:
f2py_cmds = [
'f2py = numpy.f2py.f2py2e:main',
'f2py%s = numpy.f2py.f2py2e:main' % sys.version_info[:1],
'f2py%s.%s = numpy.f2py.f2py2e:main' % sys.version_info[:2],
]
metadata = dict(
name = 'numpy',
maintainer = "NumPy Developers",
maintainer_email = "numpy-discussion@python.org",
description = DOCLINES[0],
long_description = "\n".join(DOCLINES[2:]),
url = "https://www.numpy.org",
author = "Travis E. Oliphant et al.",
download_url = "https://pypi.python.org/pypi/numpy",
license = 'BSD',
classifiers=[_f for _f in CLASSIFIERS.split('\n') if _f],
platforms = ["Windows", "Linux", "Solaris", "Mac OS-X", "Unix"],
test_suite='nose.collector',
cmdclass={"sdist": sdist_checked},
python_requires='>=3.5',
zip_safe=False,
entry_points={
'console_scripts': f2py_cmds
},
)
if "--force" in sys.argv:
run_build = True
sys.argv.remove('--force')
else:
# Raise errors for unsupported commands, improve help output, etc.
run_build = parse_setuppy_commands()
from setuptools import setup
if run_build:
from numpy.distutils.core import setup
cwd = os.path.abspath(os.path.dirname(__file__))
if not os.path.exists(os.path.join(cwd, 'PKG-INFO')):
# Generate Cython sources, unless building from source release
generate_cython()
metadata['configuration'] = configuration
else:
# Version number is added to metadata inside configuration() if build
# is run.
metadata['version'] = get_version_info()[0]
try:
setup(**metadata)
finally:
del sys.path[0]
os.chdir(old_path)
return
if __name__ == '__main__':
setup_package()
# This may avoid problems where numpy is installed via ``*_requires`` by
# setuptools, the global namespace isn't reset properly, and then numpy is
# imported later (which will then fail to load numpy extension modules).
# See gh-7956 for details
del builtins.__NUMPY_SETUP__