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When releasing a Python egg with support for both Python 2 and 3, can you specify dependencies that change depending on which version you're using? For example, if you use dnspython for Python 2, there is a Python 3 version that is called dnspython3.

Can you write your setuptools.setup() function in such a way that your egg is useable to both versions if that is the only roadblock, i.e., if you have run 2to3 to ensure that the rest of your library is compatible with both versions.

I have looked through these documents and can't seem to find the answer this question:

3
  • 2
    Perhaps I'm not understanding your question correctly, but can't you just query the Python version in setup.py (via sys.version_info) and feed different dependency sets to setup() depending on the result?
    – fjarri
    Oct 30, 2013 at 3:11
  • I thought of that earlier and forgot to mention it. I don't know that this solution would solve the related problem of Travis seeing the dependency change, since it relies on pip's requirements files. Am I wrong about that? Oct 30, 2013 at 3:31
  • 1
    I do not know much about Travis, but pip generates requirements by running setup.py, so if Travis gets the requirements file with the same Python version it is going to use for installation, this solution will work.
    – fjarri
    Oct 30, 2013 at 4:16

3 Answers 3

23

Bogdan's comment helped point me on my way. I thought I'd post what I did in case anyone else has my problem.

For the example in the question, I did exactly what Bogdan suggested:

setup.py

import sys

if sys.version_info[0] == 2:
    dnspython = "dnspython"
elif sys.version_info[0] == 3:
    dnspython = "dnspython3"

setup(
    ... <snip> ...
    install_requires=[
        "%s >= 1.10.0" % dnspython,
    ]
)

However, this still has the issue of pip-style dependencies for Travis and tox (I'm not sure why, given Bogdan's second comment). To work around this problem, I created two extra requirements files, as shown below:

requirements-py2.txt

dnspython>=1.10.0

requirements-py3.txt

dnspython3>=1.10.0

Then for Travis, I made use of some environment variables that I gleaned from the tornado .travis.yml:

.travis.yml

install:
  - if [[ $TRAVIS_PYTHON_VERSION == 2* ]]; then pip install -r requirements-py2.txt --use-mirrors; fi
  - if [[ $TRAVIS_PYTHON_VERSION == 3* ]]; then pip install -r requirements-py3.txt --use-mirrors; fi

Lastly, for tox, I had to use a rather hackish method of using these multiple requirements files.

tox.ini

[testenv:py27]
deps = -rrequirements-py2.txt

[testenv:py33]
deps = -rrequirements-py3.txt
1
  • 2
    It somehow boils down to the same question again and again: How to do dependency management in python at all ....
    – guettli
    Nov 3, 2017 at 15:19
4

The setup.py portion of the answer by @Harold did not work for me: pip install distribution.whl still installs the dependency that the if code says it shouldn't. I will further update this answer in a few days when I have this issue resolved.

Here are some links that may provide additional ways to deal with this ():

3
1

For something mostly related but not exactly to the point see my answer https://stackoverflow.com/a/25078063/302521 and this script: https://gist.github.com/pombredanne/72130ee6f202e89c13bb

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