This is a quick cheat sheet for developers on how to use poetry
.
See the contributing guide.
Developers should use Poetry 1.3.2 or higher. If you encounter problems related to poetry, please double-check your poetry version.
Synapse uses a variety of third-party Python packages to function as a homeserver.
Some of these are direct dependencies, listed in pyproject.toml
under the
[tool.poetry.dependencies]
section. The rest are transitive dependencies (the
things that our direct dependencies themselves depend on, and so on recursively.)
We maintain a locked list of all our dependencies (transitive included) so that
we can track exactly which version of each dependency appears in a given release.
See here
for discussion of why we wanted this for Synapse. We chose to use
poetry
to manage this locked list; see
this comment
for the reasoning.
The locked dependencies get included in our "self-contained" releases: namely, our docker images and our debian packages. We also use the locked dependencies in development and our continuous integration.
Separately, our "broad" dependencies—the version ranges specified in
pyproject.toml
—are included as metadata in our "sdists" and "wheels" uploaded
to PyPI. Installing from PyPI or from
the Synapse source tree directly will not use the locked dependencies; instead,
they'll pull in the latest version of each package available at install time.
An example may help. We have a broad dependency on
phonenumbers
, as declared in
this snippet from pyproject.toml as of Synapse 1.57:
[tool.poetry.dependencies]
# ...
phonenumbers = ">=8.2.0"
In our lockfile this is pinned to version 8.12.44, even though newer versions are available.
[[package]]
name = "phonenumbers"
version = "8.12.44"
description = "Python version of Google's common library for parsing, formatting, storing and validating international phone numbers."
category = "main"
optional = false
python-versions = "*"
The lockfile also includes a
cryptographic checksum
of the sdists and wheels provided for this version of phonenumbers
.
[metadata.files]
# ...
phonenumbers = [
{file = "phonenumbers-8.12.44-py2.py3-none-any.whl", hash = "sha256:cc1299cf37b309ecab6214297663ab86cb3d64ae37fd5b88e904fe7983a874a6"},
{file = "phonenumbers-8.12.44.tar.gz", hash = "sha256:26cfd0257d1704fe2f88caff2caabb70d16a877b1e65b6aae51f9fbbe10aa8ce"},
]
We can see this pinned version inside the docker image for that release:
$ docker pull matrixdotorg/synapse:v1.57.0
...
$ docker run --entrypoint pip matrixdotorg/synapse:v1.57.0 show phonenumbers
Name: phonenumbers
Version: 8.12.44
Summary: Python version of Google's common library for parsing, formatting, storing and validating international phone numbers.
Home-page: https://github.com/daviddrysdale/python-phonenumbers
Author: David Drysdale
Author-email: dmd@lurklurk.org
License: Apache License 2.0
Location: /usr/local/lib/python3.9/site-packages
Requires:
Required-by: matrix-synapse
Whereas the wheel metadata just contains the broad dependencies:
$ cd /tmp
$ wget https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/ca/5e/d722d572cc5b3092402b783d6b7185901b444427633bd8a6b00ea0dd41b7/matrix_synapse-1.57.0rc1-py3-none-any.whl
...
$ unzip -c matrix_synapse-1.57.0rc1-py3-none-any.whl matrix_synapse-1.57.0rc1.dist-info/METADATA | grep phonenumbers
Requires-Dist: phonenumbers (>=8.2.0)
direnv
is a tool for activating environments in your
shell inside a given directory. Its support for poetry is unofficial (a
community wiki recipe only), but works solidly in our experience. We thoroughly
recommend it for daily use. To use it:
direnv
- it's likely
packaged for your system already.~/.config/direnv/direnvrc
(or more generally $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/direnv/direnvrc
).echo layout poetry > .envrc
..envrc
configuration and project.
Then formally confirm this to direnv
by running direnv allow
.Then whenever you navigate to the synapse checkout, you should be able to run
e.g. mypy
instead of poetry run mypy
; python
instead of
poetry run python
; and your shell commands will automatically run in the
context of poetry's venv, without having to run poetry shell
beforehand.
poetry install --all-extras --sync
# Stop the current virtualenv if active
$ deactivate
# Remove all of the files from the current environment.
# Don't worry, even though it says "all", this will only
# remove the Poetry virtualenvs for the current project.
$ poetry env remove --all
# Reactivate Poetry shell to create the virtualenv again
$ poetry shell
# Install everything again
$ poetry install --extras all
poetry
virtualenv?Use poetry run cmd args
when you need the python virtualenv context.
To avoid typing poetry run
all the time, you can run poetry shell
to start a new shell in the poetry virtualenv context. Within poetry shell
,
python
, pip
, mypy
, trial
, etc. are all run inside the project virtualenv
and isolated from the rest o the system.
Roughly speaking, the translation from a traditional virtualenv is:
env/bin/activate
-> poetry shell
, anddeactivate
-> close the terminal (Ctrl-D, exit
, etc.)See also the direnv recommendation above, which makes poetry run
and
poetry shell
unnecessary.
poetry
virtualenv?Some suggestions:
# Current env only
poetry env info
# All envs: this allows you to have e.g. a poetry managed venv for Python 3.7,
# and another for Python 3.10.
poetry env list --full-path
poetry run pip list
Note that poetry show
describes the abstract lock file rather than your
on-disk environment. With that said, poetry show --tree
can sometimes be
useful.
Either:
pyproject.toml
; then poetry lock --no-update
; or elsepoetry add packagename
. See poetry add --help
; note the --dev
,
--extras
and --optional
flags in particular.Include the updated pyproject.toml
and poetry.lock
files in your commit.
This is not done often and is untested, but
poetry remove packagename
ought to do the trick. Alternatively, manually update pyproject.toml
and
poetry lock --no-update
. Include the updated pyproject.toml
and poetry.lock
files in your commit.
Best done by manually editing pyproject.toml
, then poetry lock --no-update
.
Include the updated pyproject.toml
and poetry.lock
in your commit.
Use
poetry update packagename
to use the latest version of packagename
in the locked environment, without
affecting the broad dependencies listed in the wheel.
There doesn't seem to be a way to do this whilst locking a specific version of
packagename
. We can workaround this (crudely) as follows:
poetry add packagename==1.2.3
# This should update pyproject.lock.
# Now undo the changes to pyproject.toml. For example
# git restore pyproject.toml
# Get poetry to recompute the content-hash of pyproject.toml without changing
# the locked package versions.
poetry lock --no-update
Either way, include the updated poetry.lock
file in your commit.
requirements.txt
file?poetry export --extras all
Be wary of bugs in poetry export
and pip install -r requirements.txt
.
I usually use
poetry run pip install build && poetry run python -m build
because build
is a standardish tool which
doesn't require poetry. (It's what we use in CI too). However, you could try
poetry build
too.
Synapse uses Dependabot to keep the poetry.lock
file up-to-date. When it
creates a pull request a GitHub Action will run to automatically create a changelog
file. Ensure that:
In particular, any updates to the type hints (usually packages which start with types-
)
should be safe to merge if linting passes.
poetry --version
.The minimum version of poetry supported by Synapse is 1.3.2.
It can also be useful to check the version of poetry-core
in use. If you've
installed poetry
with pipx
, try pipx runpip poetry list | grep
poetry-core
.
poetry cache clear --all pypi
.Poetry caches a bunch of information about packages that isn't readily available
from PyPI. (This is what makes poetry seem slow when doing the first
poetry install
.) Try poetry cache list
and poetry cache clear --all
<name of cache>
to see if that fixes things.
Delete the matrix_synapse.egg-info/
directory from the root of your Synapse
install.
This stores some cached information about dependencies and often conflicts with letting Poetry do the right thing.
--verbose
or --dry-run
arguments.Sometimes useful to see what poetry's internal logic is.