🚨 WARNING: DEPRECATED 🚨
This project is deprecated. You should not use it. And if you use it for existing libraries, you should migrate to other projects.
Building an Application
If you are building an application (instead of a library package) and you want to have a lock file with the exact dependencies you use for exact replication, I would recommend you try uv
.
Building a Library
If you are building a library for others to use, you can also use uv
to manage the project and then you can use PDM for the library building part, it has built-in support for dynamic versions.
If you want to extract the version from somewhere else or modify the metadata in any way, PDM also has build hooks that you can use.
Migrating
If you already have a library with Poetry using this, you can migrate to PDM with the import
command.
PDM, uv
and others use a standard for declaring the project metadata and dependencies in pyproject.toml
, so, if you migrate to the standard format with that PDM import
command, you will be able to use any of the compatible tools, for example uv
.
Poetry Alternative
If for some reason you need to stay using Poetry, you can consider poetry-dynamic-versioning. ✨
The information below is kept only for historical reasons. 🤓 🦕
Poetry Version Plugin
A Poetry plugin for dynamically extracting the package version.
It can read the version from a file __init__.py
with:
__version__ = "0.1.0"
Alternatively, it can read it from a git tag, set with a GitHub release or with:
$ git tag 0.1.0
🚨 Consider this in the alpha stage. Read the warning below.
When to use
This is useful mainly if you are building a package library for others to use and you want to set the version in a place different than pyproject.toml
, but you still want to keep a single source of truth.
It won't be helpful in other use cases like managing local app environments with Poetry.
Alternatives
If you are building a package library and want this functionality but you don't really need anything else from Poetry you are probably better off using Hatch, PDM, or another alternative that comes with this functionality built in without requiring plugins.
How to use
Make sure you have Poetry version 1.2.0
or above. Read below for instructions to install it if you haven't.
Install Poetry Version Plugin
Install this plugin to your Poetry:
$ poetry self add poetry-version-plugin
--> 100%
Set version in init file
Set your package version in your file __init__.py
, for example:
from .main import do_awesome_stuff, AwesomeClass
__version__ = "0.2.3"
And then edit your pyproject.toml
with a section containing:
[tool.poetry-version-plugin]
source = "init"
Next, build your project. It will show an output like:
$ poetry build
Using __init__.py file at my_awesome_package/__init__.py for dynamic version
Setting package dynamic version to __version__ variable from __init__.py: 0.1.9
Building my-awesome-package (0.1.9)
- Building sdist
- Built my-awesome-package-0.1.9.tar.gz
- Building wheel
- Built my-awesome-package-0.1.9-py3-none-any.whl
Set the version in a Git tag
Alternatively, to extract the version to use from a Git tag, add a section:
[tool.poetry-version-plugin]
source = "git-tag"
Then create a git tag, for example:
$ git tag 0.1.3
In this case, when building your project, it will show an output like:
$ poetry build
Git tag found, setting dynamic version to: 0.1.3
Building my-awesome-package (0.1.3)
- Building sdist
- Built my-awesome-package-0.1.3.tar.gz
- Building wheel
- Built my-awesome-package-0.1.3-py3-none-any.whl
Version in pyproject.toml
Currently (2021-05-24) Poetry requires a version
configuration in the pyproject.toml
, even if you use this plugin.
When using this plugin, that version
config won't be used, but Poetry still requires it to be present in the pyproject.toml
.
To make it more evident that you are not using that version
you can set it to 0
.
[tool.poetry]
name = "my-awesome-package"
version = "0"
That way, you will more easily notice if the plugin is not installed, as it will show that you are building a package with version 0
instead of the dynamic version set.
An example pyproject.toml
A short, minimal example pyproject.toml
could look like:
[tool.poetry]
name = "my-awesome-package"
version = "0"
description = ""
authors = ["Rick Sanchez <rick@rick-citadel.com>"]
readme = "README.md"
[tool.poetry.dependencies]
python = "^3.7"
[build-system]
requires = ["poetry-core"]
build-backend = "poetry.core.masonry.api"
[tool.poetry-version-plugin]
source = "init"
Why
By default, Poetry expects you to set your package version in pyproject.toml
. And that would work in most cases.
But imagine you want to expose the version of your package in a __version__
variable so that your users can do things like:
import my_awesome_package
print(my_awesome_package.__version__)
You could manually write the __version__
variable and handle the synchronization between it and the pyproject.toml
yourself, which is very error-prone.
The current official way of doing it without duplicating the value is with importlib.metadata
.
But that module is only available in Python 3.8 and above. So, for Python 3.7 you have to install a backport as a dependency of your package:
[tool.poetry.dependencies]
importlib-metadata = {version = "^1.0", python = "<3.8"}
But then, when they release each new version of the backport (currently 4.0.1
), you have to update it (or not). And your users would have to manually handle conflicts with any other packages that also depend on importlib-metadata
which could be multiple, as many packages could be doing the same trick (I've dealt with that).
The other option is not to pin any version range of your importlib-metadata
in your pyproject.toml
and hope for the best.
And then your __init__.py
would have to include code using it, like:
try:
import importlib.metadata as importlib_metadata
except ModuleNotFoundError:
import importlib_metadata
__version__ = importlib_metadata.version(__name__)
But that code is extra complexity and logic needed in your code, in each of your packages.
🚨 Additionally, this only works when your package is installed in a Python environment. It won't work if, for example, you simply put your code in a container, which is common for web apps and distributed systems.
How this plugin solves it
With this plugin, your package doesn't depend on importlib-metadata
, so your users won't need to handle conflicts or extra dependencies.
Instead, your build system (Poetry) is what needs to have this plugin installed.
That avoids the extra code complexity on your side, dependency conflicts for your users, and support for other use cases like code copied directly inside a container.
Version from Git tag
Alternatively, this plugin can also extract the version from a Git tag.
So, you could only create each version in a Git tag (for example, a GitHub release) instead of writing it in code.
And then build the package on Continuous Integration (e.g. GitHub Actions). And this plugin would get the version of the package from that Git tag.
Install Poetry 1.2.0
For this plugin to work, you need Poetry version 1.2.0
or above.
Poetry 1.2.0
was released recently.
There's a high chance you already have installed Poetry 1.1.x
.
The first step is to uninstall it:
$ curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/python-poetry/poetry/master/get-poetry.py -O
--> 100%
$ python get-poetry.py --uninstall
--> 100%
And then install the new Poetry with the new installer:
$ curl -sSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/python-poetry/poetry/master/install-poetry.py -O
--> 100%
$ python install-poetry.py --preview
--> 100%
🔍 Notice that the new installer file is named install-poetry.py
instead of get-poetry.py
. Also, notice that, currently, you need to set --preview
for it to install the alpha version 1.2.0
.
You can check that it worked with:
$ poetry --version
Poetry (version 1.2.0)
Support for version in init file
When using a __version__
variable in your __init__.py
you can have more logic in that file, import modules, and do more things above and below the declaration of that variable.
But the value has to be a literal string, like:
___version___ = "0.2.0"
...instead of calling a function or something similar.
And the variable has to be at the top-level, so it can't be inside an if
statement or similar.
This is all fine and supported in your __init__.py
:
from .main import do_awesome_stuff, AwesomeClass
awesome = AwesomeClass()
__version__ = "0.2.3"
if __name__ == "__main__":
awesome.run()
This example is all valid and supported, and it includes:
- Imports
- Other objects and variables
- Comments
- The same string
__version__
inside a comment - If blocks around
But this is not supported:
if 2 == 2:
__version__ = "0.1.0
And this is not supported:
def get_version():
return "0.2.0"
__version__ = get_version()
How the plugin works
Poetry runs the plugin when building a package, and it sets the version right before creating the "package distributable" (e.g., the wheel).
How the version variable works
If you have a package (a single package) declared in the packages
config in your pyproject.toml
, the plugin will use that package's __init__.py
to find the __version__
variable.
If you don't have any packages
config, the plugin will assume that you have a single package named as your project, but in the module version (changing -
for _
). So, if your package is my-awesome-project
, the plugin will use the file at my_awesome_project/__init__.py
to find the __version__
variable.
This file structure is the default if you create a new project with the command poetry new
, so it should work as expected. ✨
The way the plugin works internally is by parsing the __init__.py
file. Reading the Python's "Abstract Syntax Tree" using the ast
standard module and extracting the literal value of the string. So, it doesn't execute the code in __init__.py
, it only reads it as Python code.
The plugin doesn't try to import and execute that __init__.py
file because that could require extra computation, external dependencies, etc. And it doesn't try to extract the __version__
with regular expressions, as that would be prone to errors if, for example, there was some other __version__
somewhere in the code, in a comment or inside a string.
Warning
🚨 Consider this in the alpha stage. Poetry 1.2.0a1
with support for plugins was released on 2021-05-21. I started writing this plugin 3 days later, on 2021-05-24.
Things might break in Poetry or in this plugin. So, please try it and test it very carefully before fully adopting it for delicate systems.
The way it works might change, and the specific configuration might change.
Also, if you don't find the following sections intuitive:
[tool.poetry-version-plugin]
source = "init"
and
[tool.poetry-version-plugin]
source = "git-tag"
let me know what alternative configuration would make more sense and be more intuitive to you.
👍 The good news is, assuming you are building packages to then upload them to PyPI for your users to download and use them, the worst that could happen if something broke is that you wouldn't be able to build a new version until something is fixed or changed. But your users shouldn't be affected in any way.
Release Notes
Latest Changes
0.2.1
🚨 WARNING: DEPRECATED 🚨
This project is deprecated. You should not use it. And if you use it for existing libraries, you should migrate to other projects.
You can read more about it in the README: https://github.com/tiangolo/poetry-version-plugin.
Docs
- 📝 Update README, update install command, recommend Hatch and PDM. PR #31 by @tiangolo.
- 📝 Add mention about poetry-dynamic-versioning. PR #63 by @tiangolo.
- 📝 Deprecate poetry-version-plugin, recommend uv, PDM. PR #62 by @tiangolo.
Internal
0.2.0
- ✨ Add support for Poetry 1.2.0 and above (including 1.5.1), deprecate support for Python 3.6. PR #28 by @mbeacom.
- ⬆️ Deprecate Python 3.6 and add CI for latest versions. PR #32 by @tiangolo.
- ✏️ Fix typos and rewording in README.md. PR #8 by @Gl0deanR.
0.1.3
License
This project is licensed under the terms of the MIT license.