diff mbox series

[v2,03/15] python: add VERSION file

Message ID 20201014142957.763624-4-jsnow@redhat.com
State New
Headers show
Series python: create installable package | expand

Commit Message

John Snow Oct. 14, 2020, 2:29 p.m. UTC
Python infrastructure as it exists today is not capable reliably of
single-sourcing a package version from a parent directory. The authors
of pip are working to correct this, but as of today this is not possible
to my knowledge.

The problem is that when using pip to build and install a python
package, it copies files over to a temporary directory and performs its
build there. This loses access to any information in the parent
directory, including git itself.

Further, Python versions have a standard (PEP 440) that may or may not
follow QEMU's versioning. In general, it does; but naturally QEMU does
not follow PEP 440. To avoid any automatically-generated conflict, a
manual version file is preferred.


I am proposing:

- Python core tooling synchronizes with the QEMU version directly
  (5.2.0, 5.1.1, 5.3.0, etc.)

- In the event that a Python package needs to be updated independently
  of the QEMU version, a pre-release alpha version should be preferred,
  but *only* after inclusion to the qemu development or stable branches.

  e.g. 5.2.0a1, 5.2.0a2, and so on should be preferred prior to 5.2.0's
  release.

- The Python core tooling makes absolutely no version compatibility
  checks or constraints. It *may* work with releases of QEMU from the
  past or future, but it is not required to.

  i.e., "qemu.core" will always remain in lock-step with QEMU.

- We reserve the right to split out e.g. qemu.core.qmp to qemu.qmp
  and begin indepedently versioning such a package separately from the
  QEMU version it accompanies.


Implement this versioning scheme by adding a VERSION file and setting it
to 5.2.0a1.

Signed-off-by: John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com>
---
 python/VERSION   | 1 +
 python/setup.cfg | 1 +
 2 files changed, 2 insertions(+)
 create mode 100644 python/VERSION

Comments

John Snow Oct. 14, 2020, 4:03 p.m. UTC | #1
On 10/14/20 10:29 AM, John Snow wrote:
> Python infrastructure as it exists today is not capable reliably of

> single-sourcing a package version from a parent directory. The authors

> of pip are working to correct this, but as of today this is not possible

> to my knowledge.

> 

> The problem is that when using pip to build and install a python

> package, it copies files over to a temporary directory and performs its

> build there. This loses access to any information in the parent

> directory, including git itself.

> 


See also:

https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/7549
https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/7555

> Further, Python versions have a standard (PEP 440) that may or may not

> follow QEMU's versioning. In general, it does; but naturally QEMU does

> not follow PEP 440. To avoid any automatically-generated conflict, a

> manual version file is preferred.

> 

> 

> I am proposing:

> 

> - Python core tooling synchronizes with the QEMU version directly

>    (5.2.0, 5.1.1, 5.3.0, etc.)

> 

> - In the event that a Python package needs to be updated independently

>    of the QEMU version, a pre-release alpha version should be preferred,

>    but *only* after inclusion to the qemu development or stable branches.

> 

>    e.g. 5.2.0a1, 5.2.0a2, and so on should be preferred prior to 5.2.0's

>    release.

> 

> - The Python core tooling makes absolutely no version compatibility

>    checks or constraints. It *may* work with releases of QEMU from the

>    past or future, but it is not required to.

> 

>    i.e., "qemu.core" will always remain in lock-step with QEMU.

> 

> - We reserve the right to split out e.g. qemu.core.qmp to qemu.qmp

>    and begin indepedently versioning such a package separately from the

>    QEMU version it accompanies.

> 

> 

> Implement this versioning scheme by adding a VERSION file and setting it

> to 5.2.0a1.

> 

> Signed-off-by: John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com>

> ---

>   python/VERSION   | 1 +

>   python/setup.cfg | 1 +

>   2 files changed, 2 insertions(+)

>   create mode 100644 python/VERSION

> 

> diff --git a/python/VERSION b/python/VERSION

> new file mode 100644

> index 0000000000..2e81039c82

> --- /dev/null

> +++ b/python/VERSION

> @@ -0,0 +1 @@

> +5.2.0a1

> diff --git a/python/setup.cfg b/python/setup.cfg

> index 12b99a796e..260f7f4e94 100755

> --- a/python/setup.cfg

> +++ b/python/setup.cfg

> @@ -1,5 +1,6 @@

>   [metadata]

>   name = qemu

> +version = file:VERSION

>   maintainer = QEMU Developer Team

>   maintainer_email = qemu-devel@nongnu.org

>   url = https://www.qemu.org/

>
Andrea Bolognani Oct. 19, 2020, 9:45 a.m. UTC | #2
On Wed, 2020-10-14 at 10:29 -0400, John Snow wrote:
> Python infrastructure as it exists today is not capable reliably of

> single-sourcing a package version from a parent directory. The authors

> of pip are working to correct this, but as of today this is not possible

> to my knowledge.

> 

> The problem is that when using pip to build and install a python

> package, it copies files over to a temporary directory and performs its

> build there. This loses access to any information in the parent

> directory, including git itself.

> 

> Further, Python versions have a standard (PEP 440) that may or may not

> follow QEMU's versioning. In general, it does; but naturally QEMU does

> not follow PEP 440. To avoid any automatically-generated conflict, a

> manual version file is preferred.

> 

> 

> I am proposing:

> 

> - Python core tooling synchronizes with the QEMU version directly

>   (5.2.0, 5.1.1, 5.3.0, etc.)

> 

> - In the event that a Python package needs to be updated independently

>   of the QEMU version, a pre-release alpha version should be preferred,

>   but *only* after inclusion to the qemu development or stable branches.

> 

>   e.g. 5.2.0a1, 5.2.0a2, and so on should be preferred prior to 5.2.0's

>   release.

> 

> - The Python core tooling makes absolutely no version compatibility

>   checks or constraints. It *may* work with releases of QEMU from the

>   past or future, but it is not required to.

> 

>   i.e., "qemu.core" will always remain in lock-step with QEMU.

> 

> - We reserve the right to split out e.g. qemu.core.qmp to qemu.qmp

>   and begin indepedently versioning such a package separately from the

>   QEMU version it accompanies.


I think this need to be considered very carefully.

I'm not overly familiar with the Python ecosystem but it would appear
that, despite PEP 440 not mandating this, many (most?) of the
packages uploaded to PyPi are using semantic versioning.

With that in mind, I think it would be unwise for qemu.* not to do
the same; in particular, using a version number that's not <1.0.0 for
a package that is very much in flux will almost certainly break
people's expectations, and is also not something that you can easily
take back at a later time.

-- 
Andrea Bolognani / Red Hat / Virtualization
Daniel P. Berrangé Oct. 19, 2020, 10:02 a.m. UTC | #3
On Mon, Oct 19, 2020 at 11:45:09AM +0200, Andrea Bolognani wrote:
> On Wed, 2020-10-14 at 10:29 -0400, John Snow wrote:

> > Python infrastructure as it exists today is not capable reliably of

> > single-sourcing a package version from a parent directory. The authors

> > of pip are working to correct this, but as of today this is not possible

> > to my knowledge.

> > 

> > The problem is that when using pip to build and install a python

> > package, it copies files over to a temporary directory and performs its

> > build there. This loses access to any information in the parent

> > directory, including git itself.

> > 

> > Further, Python versions have a standard (PEP 440) that may or may not

> > follow QEMU's versioning. In general, it does; but naturally QEMU does

> > not follow PEP 440. To avoid any automatically-generated conflict, a

> > manual version file is preferred.

> > 

> > 

> > I am proposing:

> > 

> > - Python core tooling synchronizes with the QEMU version directly

> >   (5.2.0, 5.1.1, 5.3.0, etc.)

> > 

> > - In the event that a Python package needs to be updated independently

> >   of the QEMU version, a pre-release alpha version should be preferred,

> >   but *only* after inclusion to the qemu development or stable branches.

> > 

> >   e.g. 5.2.0a1, 5.2.0a2, and so on should be preferred prior to 5.2.0's

> >   release.

> > 

> > - The Python core tooling makes absolutely no version compatibility

> >   checks or constraints. It *may* work with releases of QEMU from the

> >   past or future, but it is not required to.

> > 

> >   i.e., "qemu.core" will always remain in lock-step with QEMU.

> > 

> > - We reserve the right to split out e.g. qemu.core.qmp to qemu.qmp

> >   and begin indepedently versioning such a package separately from the

> >   QEMU version it accompanies.

> 

> I think this need to be considered very carefully.

> 

> I'm not overly familiar with the Python ecosystem but it would appear

> that, despite PEP 440 not mandating this, many (most?) of the

> packages uploaded to PyPi are using semantic versioning.


  https://packaging.python.org/guides/distributing-packages-using-setuptools/#choosing-a-versioning-scheme

Semver is the recommended approach, but they explicitly list date
based versioning as a valid alternative

  "Semantic versioning is not a suitable choice for all projects, 
   such as those with a regular time based release cadence and a 
   deprecation process that provides warnings for a number of 
   releases prior to removal of a feature."

That paragraph describes QEMU's scenario.

NB, historically we've made arbitrary changes to the python code
since it was not considered public API. If we make it official
public API, then we would actually need to start following our
deprecation process for the python code too.

> With that in mind, I think it would be unwise for qemu.* not to do

> the same; in particular, using a version number that's not <1.0.0 for

> a package that is very much in flux will almost certainly break

> people's expectations, and is also not something that you can easily

> take back at a later time.


I don't think it is that big a deal, and there is clear benefit to
having the python code version match the QEMU version that it is
the companioon to.

Ultimately the versioning scheme just impacts on the version string
conditionals people list for their dependancies. Apps consuming QEMU
can handle any of the version schemes without much difference.

Regards,
Daniel
-- 
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John Snow Oct. 19, 2020, 4:13 p.m. UTC | #4
On 10/19/20 6:02 AM, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 19, 2020 at 11:45:09AM +0200, Andrea Bolognani wrote:

>> On Wed, 2020-10-14 at 10:29 -0400, John Snow wrote:

>>> Python infrastructure as it exists today is not capable reliably of

>>> single-sourcing a package version from a parent directory. The authors

>>> of pip are working to correct this, but as of today this is not possible

>>> to my knowledge.

>>>

>>> The problem is that when using pip to build and install a python

>>> package, it copies files over to a temporary directory and performs its

>>> build there. This loses access to any information in the parent

>>> directory, including git itself.

>>>

>>> Further, Python versions have a standard (PEP 440) that may or may not

>>> follow QEMU's versioning. In general, it does; but naturally QEMU does

>>> not follow PEP 440. To avoid any automatically-generated conflict, a

>>> manual version file is preferred.

>>>

>>>

>>> I am proposing:

>>>

>>> - Python core tooling synchronizes with the QEMU version directly

>>>    (5.2.0, 5.1.1, 5.3.0, etc.)

>>>

>>> - In the event that a Python package needs to be updated independently

>>>    of the QEMU version, a pre-release alpha version should be preferred,

>>>    but *only* after inclusion to the qemu development or stable branches.

>>>

>>>    e.g. 5.2.0a1, 5.2.0a2, and so on should be preferred prior to 5.2.0's

>>>    release.

>>>

>>> - The Python core tooling makes absolutely no version compatibility

>>>    checks or constraints. It *may* work with releases of QEMU from the

>>>    past or future, but it is not required to.

>>>

>>>    i.e., "qemu.core" will always remain in lock-step with QEMU.

>>>

>>> - We reserve the right to split out e.g. qemu.core.qmp to qemu.qmp

>>>    and begin indepedently versioning such a package separately from the

>>>    QEMU version it accompanies.

>>

>> I think this need to be considered very carefully.

>>

>> I'm not overly familiar with the Python ecosystem but it would appear

>> that, despite PEP 440 not mandating this, many (most?) of the

>> packages uploaded to PyPi are using semantic versioning.

> 

>    https://packaging.python.org/guides/distributing-packages-using-setuptools/#choosing-a-versioning-scheme

> 

> Semver is the recommended approach, but they explicitly list date

> based versioning as a valid alternative

> 

>    "Semantic versioning is not a suitable choice for all projects,

>     such as those with a regular time based release cadence and a

>     deprecation process that provides warnings for a number of

>     releases prior to removal of a feature."

> 

> That paragraph describes QEMU's scenario.

> 

> NB, historically we've made arbitrary changes to the python code

> since it was not considered public API. If we make it official

> public API, then we would actually need to start following our

> deprecation process for the python code too.

> 


I think our deprecation process is not tightly compatible with how 
Python programmers at-large expect packages to work. Semver is more or 
less the norm, despite the fact that it isn't explicitly required.

setting requirements in requirements.txt, setup.[cfg|py], Pipfile, etc 
often hinge on a major version, e.g.

qemu >= 5.0
qemu >= 3.0, < 6.0

would both be common forms of describing a requirement.

Pinning specific versions is considered bad form, but in the context of 
releasing a package, I often see maintainers hedging their bets and 
preventing upgrades across a major version line.

For that reason I am a little weary of adopting the deprecation policy 
as it exists in QEMU directly, and would propose a modification for my 
purposes here:

- Features must be marked as deprecated
- They must remain in a deprecated state for [at least] 2 releases
- Deprecated features may not be removed until a major version change.

In practice, this modification is a change from "2 releases" to "at 
least 2".

However, I didn't intend to pay any mind to the deprecation policy 
"yet", as I have the package metadata listing the package status as 
"Alpha", see below:

>> With that in mind, I think it would be unwise for qemu.* not to do

>> the same; in particular, using a version number that's not <1.0.0 for

>> a package that is very much in flux will almost certainly break

>> people's expectations, and is also not something that you can easily

>> take back at a later time.

> 

> I don't think it is that big a deal, and there is clear benefit to

> having the python code version match the QEMU version that it is

> the companioon to.

> 


Do you think it's fine if I start versioning at, say, "0.5.2", I could 
ignore a deprecation policy for now? I have a lot of changes I want to 
make and expect a lot of breaking changes very quickly.

I just wanted to try -- somehow -- to conjure up a relationship to the 
QEMU package it's designed to work with.

> Ultimately the versioning scheme just impacts on the version string

> conditionals people list for their dependancies. Apps consuming QEMU

> can handle any of the version schemes without much difference.

> 

> Regards,

> Daniel

> 


Thanks for your input. This is the trickiest part of the process for me.

I believe there is value in distributing these tools for other 
developers to help them prototype and experiment with new features, but 
realize it's a tightrope walk because we're flying dangerously close to 
providing a management utility that needs to care about cross-version 
compatibility and so on.

I have no interest in providing stringent cross-version compatibility, 
but at the same time, libraries like QMP are not really at risk of 
changing all that much, actually. It will *probably* work for most QEMU 
versions.

I have some further patches where I clean up the scripts in 
./scripts/qmp and move them to ./python/qemu/qmp -- and that work is 
making me consider a rework to this series. I think that rework matches 
the spirit of an earlier suggestion of yours:

- move ./python/qemu/core/qmp.py to ./python/qemu/qmp/qmp.py
- (in a follow-up series) move ./scripts/qmp/* to ./python/qemu/qmp/*
- rename ./python/qemu/core/ to ./python/qemu/machine
     (move accel.py, machine.py and qtest.py to a 'machine' pkg.)


In effect, we'd then have:

qemu.machine -- primarily a test interface for QEMU instances
qemu.qmp -- fairly ageless QMP tools/lib for talking to QEMU

and the different levels of support and "use at your own risk" become 
slightly more clear between the two packages.

--js
Andrea Bolognani Oct. 20, 2020, 8:52 a.m. UTC | #5
On Mon, 2020-10-19 at 11:02 +0100, Daniel P. Berrangé wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 19, 2020 at 11:45:09AM +0200, Andrea Bolognani wrote:

> > I think this need to be considered very carefully.

> > 

> > I'm not overly familiar with the Python ecosystem but it would appear

> > that, despite PEP 440 not mandating this, many (most?) of the

> > packages uploaded to PyPi are using semantic versioning.

> 

>   https://packaging.python.org/guides/distributing-packages-using-setuptools/#choosing-a-versioning-scheme

> 

> Semver is the recommended approach, but they explicitly list date

> based versioning as a valid alternative

> 

>   "Semantic versioning is not a suitable choice for all projects, 

>    such as those with a regular time based release cadence and a 

>    deprecation process that provides warnings for a number of 

>    releases prior to removal of a feature."

> 

> That paragraph describes QEMU's scenario.


The section on date based versioning continues with

  A key advantage of date based versioning is that it is
  straightforward to tell how old the base feature set of a
  particular release is given just the version number.

  Version numbers for date based projects typically take the form of
  YEAR.MONTH (for example, 12.04, 15.10).

The problem with QEMU's version numbers is that, while they are date
based, they still *look* like semver, so it wouldn't be at all
unreasonable for the user to expect that they also *behave* like
semver.

This is not much of a problem when it comes to the main binary, but
it is certainly much more confusing when you start using the same
version number for a Python library.

> > With that in mind, I think it would be unwise for qemu.* not to do

> > the same; in particular, using a version number that's not <1.0.0 for

> > a package that is very much in flux will almost certainly break

> > people's expectations, and is also not something that you can easily

> > take back at a later time.

> 

> I don't think it is that big a deal, and there is clear benefit to

> having the python code version match the QEMU version that it is

> the companioon to.

> 

> Ultimately the versioning scheme just impacts on the version string

> conditionals people list for their dependancies. Apps consuming QEMU

> can handle any of the version schemes without much difference.


The problem comes from the expectations: a Python programmer, who is
used to semver due to its prominence on PyPi, when deciding whether
to move from qemu.core 4.2.0 to 5.0.0 might expect to need code
changes to cope with API-breaking changes - where in fact there are
none, and at the same time might expect upgrading to 5.2.0 from 5.0.0
to be completely straightforward when in reality a feature their
application depends on might have been removed after the usual
deprecation period.

-- 
Andrea Bolognani / Red Hat / Virtualization
diff mbox series

Patch

diff --git a/python/VERSION b/python/VERSION
new file mode 100644
index 0000000000..2e81039c82
--- /dev/null
+++ b/python/VERSION
@@ -0,0 +1 @@ 
+5.2.0a1
diff --git a/python/setup.cfg b/python/setup.cfg
index 12b99a796e..260f7f4e94 100755
--- a/python/setup.cfg
+++ b/python/setup.cfg
@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@ 
 [metadata]
 name = qemu
+version = file:VERSION
 maintainer = QEMU Developer Team
 maintainer_email = qemu-devel@nongnu.org
 url = https://www.qemu.org/