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pyproject-metadata

pre-commit.ci status checks tests codecov Documentation Status PyPI version

Dataclass for PEP 621 metadata with support for core metadata generation

This project does not implement the parsing of pyproject.toml containing PEP 621 metadata.

Instead, given a Python data structure representing PEP 621 metadata (already parsed), it will validate this input and generate a PEP 643-compliant metadata file (e.g. PKG-INFO).

Usage

After installing pyproject-metadata, you can use it as a library in your scripts and programs:

from pyproject_metadata import StandardMetadata

parsed_pyproject = {...}  # you can use parsers like `tomli` to obtain this dict
metadata = StandardMetadata.from_pyproject(parsed_pyproject, allow_extra_keys=False)
print(metadata.entrypoints)  # same fields as defined in PEP 621

pkg_info = metadata.as_rfc822()
print(str(pkg_info))  # core metadata

SPDX licenses (METADATA 2.4+)

If project.license is a string or project.license-files is present, then METADATA 2.4+ will be used. A user is expected to validate and normalize metadata.license with an SPDX validation tool, such as the one being added to packaging. Add something like this (requires packaging 24.2+):

if isinstance(metadata.license, str):
    metadata.license = packaging.licenses.canonicalize_license_expression(
        metadata.license
    )

A backend is also expected to copy entries from project.licence_files, which are paths relative to the project directory, into the dist-info/licenses folder, preserving the original source structure.

Dynamic Metadata (METADATA 2.2+)

Pyproject-metadata supports dynamic metadata. To use it, specify your METADATA fields in dynamic_metadata. If you want to convert pyproject.toml field names to METADATA field(s), use pyproject_metadata.pyproject_to_metadata("field-name"), which will return a frozenset of metadata names that are touched by that field.

Adding extra fields

You can add extra fields to the Message returned by to_rfc822(), as long as they are valid metadata entries.

Collecting multiple errors

You can use the all_errors argument to from_pyproject to show all errors in the metadata parse at once, instead of raising an exception on the first one. The exception type will be pyproject_metadata.errors.ExceptionGroup (which is just ExceptionGroup on Python 3.11+).

Validating extra fields

By default, a warning (pyproject_metadata.errors.ExtraKeyWarning) will be issued for extra fields at the project table. You can pass allow_extra_keys= to either avoid the check (True) or hard error (False). If you want to detect extra keys, you can get them with pyproject_metadata.extra_top_level and pyproject_metadata.extra_build_system. It is recommended that build systems only warn on failures with these extra keys.

Validating classifiers

If you want to validate classifiers, then install the trove_classifiers library (the canonical source for classifiers), and run:

import trove_classifiers

metadata_classifieres = {
    c for c in metadata.classifiers if not c.startswith("Private ::")
}
invalid_classifiers = set(metadata.classifiers) - trove_classifiers.classifiers

# Also the deprecated dict if you want it
dep_names = set(metadata.classifiers) & set(trove_classifiers.deprecated_classifiers)
deprecated_classifiers = {
    k: trove_classifiers.deprecated_classifiers[k] for k in dep_names
}

If you are writing a build backend, you should not validate classifiers with a Private :: prefix; these are only restricted for upload to PyPI (such as Private :: Do Not Upload).

Since classifiers are a moving target, it is probably best for build backends (which may be shipped by third party distributors like Debian or Fedora) to either ignore or have optional classifier validation.