| ================================= |
| MEP11: Third-party dependencies |
| ================================= |
|
|
| .. contents:: |
| :local: |
|
|
| This MEP attempts to improve the way in which third-party dependencies |
| in matplotlib are handled. |
|
|
| Status |
| ====== |
|
|
| **Completed** -- needs to be merged |
|
|
| Branches and Pull requests |
| ========================== |
|
|
| #1157: Use automatic dependency resolution |
|
|
| #1290: Debundle pyparsing |
|
|
| #1261: Update six to 1.2 |
|
|
| Abstract |
| ======== |
|
|
| One of the goals of matplotlib has been to keep it as easy to install |
| as possible. To that end, some third-party dependencies are included |
| in the source tree and, under certain circumstances, installed |
| alongside matplotlib. This MEP aims to resolve some problems with |
| that approach, bring some consistency, while continuing to make |
| installation convenient. |
|
|
| At the time that was initially done, setuptools_, easy_install_ and |
| PyPI_ were not mature enough to be relied on. However, at present, |
| we should be able to safely leverage the "modern" versions of those |
| tools, distribute_ and pip_. |
|
|
| While matplotlib has dependencies on both Python libraries and C/C++ |
| libraries, this MEP addresses only the Python libraries so as to not |
| confuse the issue. C libraries represent a larger and mostly |
| orthogonal set of problems. |
|
|
| Detailed description |
| ==================== |
|
|
| matplotlib depends on the following third-party Python libraries: |
|
|
| - Numpy |
| - dateutil (pure Python) |
| - pytz (pure Python) |
| - six -- required by dateutil (pure Python) |
| - pyparsing (pure Python) |
| - PIL (optional) |
| - GUI frameworks: pygtk, gobject, tkinter, PySide, PyQt4, wx (all |
| optional, but one is required for an interactive GUI) |
|
|
| Current behavior |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| When installing from source, a :program:`git` checkout or pip_: |
|
|
| - :file:`setup.py` attempts to ``import numpy``. If this fails, the |
| installation fails. |
|
|
| - For each of dateutil_, pytz_ and six_, :file:`setup.py` attempts to |
| import them (from the top-level namespace). If that fails, |
| matplotlib installs its local copy of the library into the |
| top-level namespace. |
|
|
| - pyparsing_ is always installed inside of the matplotlib |
| namespace. |
|
|
| This behavior is most surprising when used with pip_, because no |
| pip_ dependency resolution is performed, even though it is likely to |
| work for all of these packages. |
|
|
| The fact that pyparsing_ is installed in the matplotlib namespace has |
| reportedly (#1290) confused some users into thinking it is a |
| matplotlib-related module and import it from there rather than the |
| top-level. |
|
|
| When installing using the Windows installer, dateutil_, pytz_ and |
| six_ are installed at the top-level *always*, potentially overwriting |
| already installed copies of those libraries. |
|
|
| TODO: Describe behavior with the OS-X installer. |
|
|
| When installing using a package manager (Debian, RedHat, MacPorts |
| etc.), this behavior actually does the right thing, and there are no |
| special patches in the matplotlib packages to deal with the fact that |
| we handle dateutil_, pytz_ and six_ in this way. However, care |
| should be taken that whatever approach we move to continues to work in |
| that context. |
|
|
| Maintaining these packages in the matplotlib tree and making sure they |
| are up-to-date is a maintenance burden. Advanced new features that |
| may require a third-party pure Python library have a higher barrier to |
| inclusion because of this burden. |
|
|
|
|
| Desired behavior |
| ---------------- |
|
|
| Third-party dependencies are downloaded and installed from their |
| canonical locations by leveraging pip_, distribute_ and PyPI_. |
|
|
| dateutil_, pytz_, and pyparsing_ should be made into optional |
| dependencies -- though obviously some features would fail if they |
| aren't installed. This will allow the user to decide whether they |
| want to bother installing a particular feature. |
|
|
| Implementation |
| ============== |
|
|
| For installing from source, and assuming the user has all of the |
| C-level compilers and dependencies, this can be accomplished fairly |
| easily using distribute_ and following the instructions `here |
| <https://pypi.org/project/distribute/>`_. The only anticipated |
| change to the matplotlib library code will be to import pyparsing_ |
| from the top-level namespace rather than from within matplotlib. Note |
| that distribute_ will also allow us to remove the direct dependency |
| on six_, since it is, strictly speaking, only a direct dependency of |
| dateutil_. |
|
|
| For binary installations, there are a number of alternatives (here |
| ordered from best/hardest to worst/easiest): |
|
|
| 1. The distutils wininst installer allows a post-install script to |
| run. It might be possible to get this script to run pip_ to |
| install the other dependencies. (See `this thread |
| <http://grokbase.com/t/python/distutils-sig/109bdnfhp4/distutils-ann-setuptools-post-install-script-for-bdist-wininst>`_ |
| for someone who has trod that ground before). |
|
|
| 2. Continue to ship dateutil_, pytz_, six_ and pyparsing_ in |
| our installer, but use the post-install-script to install them |
| *only* if they cannot already be found. |
|
|
| 3. Move all of these packages inside a (new) ``matplotlib.extern`` |
| namespace so it is clear for outside users that these are |
| external packages. Add some conditional imports in the core |
| matplotlib codebase so dateutil_ (at the top-level) is tried |
| first, and failing that ``matplotlib.extern.dateutil`` is used. |
|
|
| 2 and 3 are undesirable as they still require maintaining copies of |
| these packages in our tree -- and this is exacerbated by the fact that |
| they are used less -- only in the binary installers. None of these 3 |
| approaches address Numpy, which will still have to be manually |
| installed using an installer. |
|
|
| TODO: How does this relate to the Mac OS-X installer? |
|
|
| Backward compatibility |
| ====================== |
|
|
| At present, matplotlib can be installed from source on a machine |
| without the third party dependencies and without an internet |
| connection. After this change, an internet connection (and a working |
| PyPI) will be required to install matplotlib for the first time. |
| (Subsequent matplotlib updates or development work will run without |
| accessing the network). |
|
|
| Alternatives |
| ============ |
|
|
| Distributing binary eggs doesn't feel like a usable solution. That |
| requires getting easy_install_ installed first, and Windows users |
| generally prefer the well known ``.exe`` or ``.msi`` installer that works |
| out of the box. |
|
|
| .. _PyPI: https://pypi.org |
| .. _dateutil: https://pypi.org/project/python-dateutil/ |
| .. _distribute: https://pypi.org/project/distribute/ |
| .. _pip: https://pypi.org/project/pip/ |
| .. _pyparsing: https://pypi.org/project/pyparsing/ |
| .. _pytz: https://pypi.org/project/pytz/ |
| .. _setuptools: https://pypi.org/project/setuptools/ |
| .. _six: https://pypi.org/project/six/ |
| .. _easy_install: https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/easy_install.html |
|
|