Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: pyp2spec
Version: 0.11.1
Summary: Generate a valid Fedora specfile from Python package from PyPI
Author-email: Karolina Surma <ksurma@redhat.com>
License: MIT AND MIT-0
Project-URL: homepage, https://github.com/befeleme/pyp2spec/
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.12
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.13
Classifier: Operating System :: POSIX :: Linux
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: MIT No Attribution License (MIT-0)
Classifier: Development Status :: 3 - Alpha
Requires-Python: >=3.9
Description-Content-Type: text/markdown
License-File: LICENSE-MIT
License-File: LICENSE-MIT-0
Requires-Dist: click
Requires-Dist: jinja2
Requires-Dist: license-expression
Requires-Dist: packaging
Requires-Dist: requests
Requires-Dist: tomli-w
Requires-Dist: tomli ; python_version < "3.11"
Provides-Extra: test
Requires-Dist: pytest ; extra == 'test'
Requires-Dist: pytest-regressions ; extra == 'test'
Requires-Dist: betamax ; extra == 'test'

# pyp2spec

This project is a thought descendant of [specfile_generator](https://github.com/frenzymadness/specfile_generator).

It generates working Fedora RPM spec file for Python projects.
The produced spec files must be compliant with the current [Python Packaging Guidelines](https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/packaging-guidelines/Python/) (in effect since 2021).
It utilizes the benefits of [pyproject-rpm-macros](https://src.fedoraproject.org/rpms/pyproject-rpm-macros).

This project's maturity state is alpha.
Its API may be a subject of change.

## What it does

`pyp2spec` gathers all the necessary information from PyPI to produce a valid
Fedora spec file and stores it in the current directory alongside with
the config file used to produce the spec file.

Inside, there are two parts:
- *pyp2conf*: gathers of all the necessary information to produce a spec file and stores it in a configuration file
- *conf2spec*: produces working spec file using all the information from configuration file

### Standard mode

pyp2spec attempts to detect all unambiguous information from the package
metadata, but avoids applying complicated heuristics to provide *at least
somewhat accurate* results.
In the standard mode it generates files with all the detected information which
may not be enough to generate a valid RPM immediately. There are placeholders
in the fields that couldn't be determined automatically which are left for
the packager to fill in.
The generated spec contains comments helping to locate the missing pieces.
This is the default mode of pyp2spec.

### Automode

Automode, invoked with `--automode` or `-a` command-line options,
is the preferred way of generating spec files in the automated environments.
It sets the convenient defaults that increase the chance of creating a buildable package.
The defaults:
- import check attempts to import the the top-level modules only
  (since importing all of the detected modules can fail on e.g. OS-related dependencies)
- all the found license names are validated as existing SPDX identifiers and
  checked for compliance with Fedora Legal data - the script warns about
  the incorrectness but creates a spec file anyways
- the license string, if not a valid SPDX expression already, is a combination
  of all detected identifiers joined with the "AND" operator

The generated spec files don't fulfill all the necessities of the official
Fedora packages and hence cannot be submitted for review.

## How to run

To run whatever this project offers at this point,
install package `pyp2spec` from PyPI with the command:
```
pip install pyp2spec
```
Then you can run:
```
pyp2spec <pypi_package_name>
```
or those two commands which will together produce the same result as `pyp2spec`:
```
pyp2conf <pypi_package_name>
conf2spec <config_file>
```

To see all available command-line options, run `--help` with the respective commands.

## Development

Alternatively, you can clone the project from GitHub and install
the dependencies to you virtual environment:
```
python -m pip install -r requirements.txt
```

To run the script and generate both the config and spec file, type:
```
python -m pyp2spec.pyp2spec <pypi_package_name>
```

You can run either of the tools separately to generate partial results:
```
python -m pyp2spec.pyp2conf <pypi_package_name>
python -m pyp2spec.conf2spec <config_file>
```

### Tests

To run the tests, run [tox](https://tox.wiki/en/stable/index.html):

```
tox
```

You can install `tox` from your OS repository or PyPI.
Test dependencies are defined in the project's `[test]` extra.


## Configuration file specification

Configuration data is stored in a TOML file.

### Fields generated by pyp2conf


| Field  | Description | Type |
| -------- | -------- | -------- |
| pypi_name | package name as stored in PyPI  | string   |
| python_name | pypi_name prepended with `python-` and alternative Python version, if `python_alt_version` is defined| string |
| pypi_version | package version string as on PyPI | string
| summary | short package summary | string |
| license | license name | string |
| url | project URL | string |
| source | source of the sdist tarball, currently only "PyPI" supported | string |
| extras | extra subpackages names | list of strings |
| archful | package contains compiled extensions, implies not using `BuildArch: noarch` and adding `BuildRequires: gcc` | bool |
| python_alt_version | specific Python version to create the spec file for, e.g. 3.9, 3.10, 3.12 | string |
| automode | create buildable spec files that don't have to fully comply with Fedora Guidelines; useful for automatic build environments | bool |
| license_files_present | `License-File` field was detected in the package metadata | bool |
| archive_name | filename of the sdist | string |


### Example config file generated by pyp2spec

```
license = "MIT"
archful = false
summary = "A simple Python 3 library for Notion Home Monitoring"
pypi_version = "2024.3.1"
pypi_name = "aionotion"
python_name = "python-aionotion"
url = "https://github.com/bachya/aionotion"
source = "PyPI"
extras = []
license_files_present = true
archive_name = "aionotion-2.0.3.tar.gz"
```

### Spec file generated using the example config

```
Name:           python-aionotion
Version:        2024.3.1
Release:        %autorelease
# Fill in the actual package summary to submit package to Fedora
Summary:        A simple Python 3 library for Notion Home Monitoring

# Check if the automatically generated License and its spelling is correct for Fedora
# https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/packaging-guidelines/LicensingGuidelines/
License:        MIT
URL:            https://github.com/bachya/aionotion
Source:         %{pypi_source aionotion}

BuildArch:      noarch
BuildRequires:  python3-devel


# Fill in the actual package description to submit package to Fedora
%global _description %{expand:
This is package 'aionotion' generated automatically by pyp2spec.}

%description %_description

%package -n     python3-aionotion
Summary:        %{summary}

%description -n python3-aionotion %_description


%prep
%autosetup -p1 -n aionotion-%{version}


%generate_buildrequires
%pyproject_buildrequires


%build
%pyproject_wheel


%install
%pyproject_install
# Add top-level Python module names here as arguments, you can use globs
%pyproject_save_files -l ...


%check
%pyproject_check_import


%files -n python3-aionotion -f %{pyproject_files}


%changelog
%autochangelog
```


## License

The code is licensed under **MIT**.

The spec file template - `template.spec` and the files generated by the tool are licensed under **MIT-0 (No Attribution)**.
