Setuptools_git Manual ===================== About ----- This is a plugin for setuptools that enables git integration. Once installed, Setuptools can be told to include in a package distribution all the files tracked by git. This is an alternative to explicit inclusion specifications with `MANIFEST.in`. A package distribution here refers to a package that you create using setup.py, ex: python setup.py sdist python setup.py bdist_rpm python setup.py bdist_egg This package was formerly known as gitlsfiles. The name change is the result of an effort by the setuptools plugin developers to provide a uniform naming convention. Installation ------------ With easy_install: easy_install setuptools_git Alternative manual installation: tar -zxvf setuptools_git-X.Y.Z.tar.gz cd setuptools_git-X.Y.Z python setup.py install Where X.Y.Z is a version number. Usage ----- To activate this plugin, you must first package your python module with `setup.py` and use setuptools. The former is well documented in the distutils manual: http://docs.python.org/dist/dist.html To use setuptools instead of distutils, just edit `setup.py` and change from distutils.core import setup to from setuptools import setup, find_packages When Setuptools builds a source package, it always includes all files tracked by your revision control system, if it knows how to learn what those files are. When Setuptools builds a binary package, you can ask it to include all files tracked by your revision control system, by adding these argument to your invocation of `setup()`: setup(..., packages=find_packages(), include_package_data=True, ...) which will detect that a directory is a package if it contains a `__init__.py` file. Alternatively, you can do without `__init__.py` files and tell Setuptools explicitly which packages to process: setup(..., packages=["a_package", "another_one"], include_package_data=True, ...) This plugin lets setuptools know what files are tracked by your git revision control tool. Setuptools ships with support for cvs and subversion. Other plugins like this one are available for bzr, darcs, monotone, mercurial, and many others. It might happen that you track files with your revision control system that you don't want to include in your packages. In that case, you can prevent setuptools from packaging those files with a directive in your `MANIFEST.in`, ex: exclude .gitignore recursive-exclude images *.xcf *.blend In this example, we prevent setuptools from packaging `.gitignore` and the Gimp and Blender source files found under the `images` directory. Files to exclude from the package can also be listed in the `setup()` directive. To do the same as the MANIFEST.in above, do: setup(..., exclude_package_data = {'': ['.gitignore'], 'images': ['*.xcf', '*.blend']}, ...) Here is another example: setup(..., exclude_package_data = {'': ['.gitignore', 'artwork/*'], 'model': ['config.py']}, ...) Gotchas ------- Be aware that for this module to work properly, git and the git meta-data must be available. That means that if someone tries to make a package distribution out of a non-git distribution of yours, say a tarball, setuptools will lack the information necessary to know which files to include. A similar problem will happen if someone clones your git repository but does not install this plugin. Resolving those problems is out of the scope of this plugin; you should add relevant warnings to your documentation if those situations are a concern to you. You can make sure that anyone who clones your git repository and uses your setup.py file has this plugin by adding a `setup_requires` argument: setup(..., setup_requires = [ "setuptools_git >= 0.3", ], ...) References ---------- How to distribute Python modules with Distutils: http://docs.python.org/dist/dist.html Setuptools complete manual: http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/setuptools Thanks to Zooko O'Whielacronx for many improvements to this README.txt.