7

I'd like Travis CI to build and deploy the following artefacts to PyPI whenever a new commit hits the master branch:

  • Python 2 wheel
  • Python 3 wheel
  • Source

To make this happen, I've added the following to .travis.yml:

language: python
python:
  - '2.7'
  - '3.5'
  - '3.6'
deploy:
  on:
    branch: master
  provider: pypi
  distribution: bdist_wheel sdist

For normal build/test, the configuration works great. However, it introduces a race condition when deploying to PyPI:

Uploading distributions to https://upload.pypi.org/legacy/
Uploading PyOTA-2.0.0b1.tar.gz
HTTPError: 400 Client Error: File already exists. for url: https://upload.pypi.org/legacy/

What changes should I make to .travis.yml to get Travis CI to deploy the correct artefacts to PyPI?

2 Answers 2

5

I ran into this problem today and eventually found this under-documented gem:

deploy:
  provider: pypi
  skip_existing: true
  ...

I use skip_existing: true on a project to get source and wheels published once even though I test across a couple of different configurations and python versions. Handy. More details in this resolved github issue. I also submitted a documentation diff.

5

Some days I think outside the box; other days it's just a really big box.

Previously, this project needed separate wheels for Python 2 and Python 3, so I needed Travis CI to build wheels using different versions of Python.

But recently I got the project to build universal wheels correctly, so now Travis can build all of the deployment artefacts using any one version of Python.

I modified .travis.yml accordingly, and everything is working great:

deploy:
  on:
    branch: master
    python: '3.6'
2
  • 1
    This is a good answer. It is not what I was expecting, but based on my research, this is the correct answer. I was looking for a way to separate the build and testing from the deployment, and this achieves that, but not in the way I was expecting. Thanks for helping out! Like you, I was already building universal wheels, but is it worth updating your response to include how you did that in setup.py with options={'bdist_wheel': {'universal': True}}?
    – JGC
    Feb 10, 2018 at 1:32
  • Ah, interesting; I didn't know that was an option. I put that in setup.cfg. Feb 11, 2018 at 18:20

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