Project template for a Python Package using Copier.
- Project for Python 3.8+.
- Testing with Pytest using Github actions.
- Packaging powered by poetry
- Follows the black style guide with flake8 and isort, autoflake.
- Comes with pre-commit hook config for black, isort, flake8 and pyupgrade.
- Style guide enforced on CI.
- Dependencies kept up to date by Renovate.
- Follow the all-contributors specification.
- Follow to the conventional commits specification.
- Automated releasing using python-semantic-release.
- Documentation configured with Sphinx and MyST Parser.
- Standardised list of GitHub labels synchronised on push to master using the labels CLI.
copier copy --trust "gh:34j/pypackage-template-fork" <path>Branches/main/Branch protection rules
- Allow force pushes
Actions/General/Workflow permissions
- Read and write permissions
Secrets and variables/Actions/Repository secrets
go to Applications and set up Renovate
go to codecov.io and copy CODECOV_TOKEN and add it
go to Read the Docs and add the project
set up pre-commit-ci
copier --force updateGenerate a new project with:
copier copy --trust "gh:34j/pypackage-template-fork" <name>This will prompt you for a few questions and create new directory with the name you used as project slug.
Note: the
--trustoption is required because this template may execute some tasks after generating the project, like initialising the git repo, installing dependencies and so forth. These are all listed in thecopier.ymlof this repo, under the_taskskey. They are all optional and safe to run. You can take my word for it, or better, check the code yourself!
The project uses Poetry for dependencies management and packaging. Make sure you have it installed in your development machine. To install the development dependencies in a virtual environment, type:
poetry installThis will also generate a poetry.lock file, you should track this file in version control. To execute the test suite, call pytest inside Poetry's virtual environment via poetry run:
poetry run pytestCheck out the Poetry documentation for more information on the available commands.
When you first push to GitHub, it'll start a ci GitHub workflow that you can see in the "Actions" tab of your repository. This workflow runs a couple of jobs:
- The
testjob will run your test suite with Pytest against all Python version from 3.8 to 3.11 - A few things will run in the lint job:
- black in check mode
- isort in check mode
- flake8
- pyupgrade for Python 3.8+
A labels workflow will also run and synchronise the GitHub labels based on the .github/labels.toml file.
The workflows need a few secrets to be setup in your GitHub repository:
PYPI_TOKENto publish releases to PyPI. This one should be created asreleaseenvironment secret.GH_PATa personal access token (PAT) with thereposcope for opening pull requests and updating the repository topics. This is used by thehacktoberfestworkflow.CODECOV_TOKENto upload coverage data to codecov.io in the Test workflow (optional for public repos).
If you have the GitHub CLI installed and chose to set up GitHub, they will be created with a dummy value.
By following the conventional commits specification, we're able to completely automate versioning and releasing to PyPI. This is handled by the semantic-release.yml workflow. It is triggered manually by default, but can be configured to run on every push to your main branch.
Here is an overview of its features:
- Check the commit log since the last release, and determine the next version to be released.
- If no significant change detected, stop here (e.g. just dependencies update).
- Otherwise, bump the version in code locations specified in
setup.cfg. - Update the
CHANGELOG.mdfile. - Commit changes.
- Create a git tag.
- Push to GitHub.
- Create a release in GitHub with the changes as release notes.
- Build the source and binary distribution (wheel).
- Upload the sources to PyPI and attach them to the Github release.
For more details, check out the conventional commits website and Python semantic release Github action.
The project comes with the config for pre-commit. If you're not familiar with it, follow their documentation on how to install it and set it up.
The project assumes that the documentation will be hosted on Read the Docs and written in Markdown with the MyST parser for Sphinx.
To enable it, you might need to go into your dashboard and import the project from Github. Everything else should work out of the box.
The project dependencies are kept up to date with Renovate which requires the Github app to be installed.
The main advantage of Renovate over Dependabot is the auto-merge option, which is configured to automatically merge minor/patch updates with all the CI checks passing. It supports a variety of package managers, including Poetry, GitHub actions and pre-commit hooks which are used by default.
This is a specification that help you highlight every open source contribution in your README. This is easy to maintain as it comes with a GitHub bot to do the updates for you, so more manual updates on the contributors file.
If you never used it before, you will have to install the Github app and give it access to your repo.
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
Bruno Alla 💻 🤔 📖 |
Jeff Tsay 💻 |
34j 💻 |
Stefan Rado 📖 |
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind welcome!