Changelog#
This project follows the semantic versioning and pre-release versioning schemes recommended by the Python Packaging Authority.
Twine 4.0.2 (2022-11-30)#
Bugfixes#
Remove deprecated function to fix
twine check
with pkginfo 1.9.0. (#941)
Twine 4.0.1 (2022-06-01)#
Bugfixes#
Twine 4.0.0 (2022-03-31)#
Features#
Bugfixes#
Twine 3.8.0 (2022-02-02)#
Features#
Bugfixes#
Require a recent version of urllib3. (#858)
Twine 3.7.1 (2021-12-07)#
Improved Documentation#
Fix broken link to packaging tutorial. (#844)
Twine 3.7.0 (2021-12-01)#
Features#
Add support for core metadata version 2.2, defined in PEP 643. (#833)
Twine 3.6.0 (2021-11-10)#
Features#
Add support for Python 3.10. (#827)
Twine 3.5.0 (2021-11-02)#
Features#
Bugfixes#
Twine 3.4.2 (2021-07-20)#
Bugfixes#
Twine 3.4.1 (2021-03-16)#
Bugfixes#
Fix a regression that was causing some namespace packages with dots in them fail to upload to PyPI. (#745)
Twine 3.4.0 (2021-03-15)#
Features#
Twine 3.3.0 (2020-12-23)#
Features#
Bugfixes#
Improved Documentation#
Twine 3.2.0 (2020-06-24)#
Features#
Improve display of HTTP errors during upload (#666)
Print packages and signatures to be uploaded when using
--verbose
option (#652)Use red text when printing errors on the command line (#649)
Require repository URL scheme to be
http
orhttps
(#602)Add type annotations, checked with mypy, with PEP 561 support for users of Twine’s API (#231)
Bugfixes#
Twine 3.1.1 (2019-11-27)#
Bugfixes#
Restore
--non-interactive
as a flag not expecting an argument. (#548)
Twine 3.1.0 (2019-11-23)#
Features#
Add support for specifying
--non-interactive
as an environment variable. (#547)
Twine 3.0.0 (2019-11-18)#
Features#
When a client certificate is indicated, all password processing is disabled. (#336)
Add
--non-interactive
flag to abort upload rather than interactively prompt if credentials are missing. (#489)Twine now unconditionally requires the keyring library and no longer supports uninstalling
keyring
as a means to disable that functionality. Instead, usekeyring --disable
keyring functionality if necessary. (#524)Add Python 3.8 to classifiers. (#518)
Bugfixes#
More robust handling of server response in
--skip-existing
(#332)
Twine 2.0.0 (2019-09-24)#
Features#
Twine now requires Python 3.6 or later. Use pip 9 or pin to “twine<2” to install twine on older Python versions. (#437)
Bugfixes#
Require requests 2.20 or later to avoid reported security vulnerabilities in earlier releases. (#491)
Twine 1.15.0 (2019-09-17)#
Features#
Improved output on
check
command: Prints a message when there are no distributions given to check. Improved handling of errors in a distribution’s markup, avoiding messages flowing through to the next distribution’s errors. (#488)
Twine 1.14.0 (2019-09-06)#
Features#
Bugfixes#
Fail more gracefully when encountering bad metadata (#341)
Twine 1.13.0 (2019-02-13)#
Features#
Bugfixes#
Restore prompts while retaining support for suppressing prompts. (#452)
Avoid requests-toolbelt to 0.9.0 to prevent attempting to use openssl when it isn’t available. (#447)
Use io.StringIO instead of StringIO. (#444)
Only install pyblake2 if needed. (#441)
Use modern Python language features. (#436)
Specify python_requires in setup.py (#435)
Use https URLs everywhere. (#432)
Fix –skip-existing for Nexus Repos. (#428)
Remove unnecessary usage of readme_render.markdown. (#421)
Don’t crash if there’s no package description. (#412)
Fix keyring support. (#408)
Misc#
Refactor tox env and travis config. (#439)
Twine 1.12.1 (2018-09-24)#
Bugfixes#
Fix regression with upload exit code (#404)
Twine 1.12.0 (2018-09-24)#
Features#
Bugfixes#
Avoid MD5 when Python is compiled in FIPS mode (#367)
Twine 1.11.0 (2018-03-19)#
Features#
Bugfixes#
Misc#
Twine 1.10.0 (2018-03-07)#
Features#
Bugfixes#
Degrade gracefully when keyring is unavailable (#315)
Fix changelog formatting (#299)
Fix syntax highlighting in
README
(#298)Fix Read the Docs, tox, Travis configuration (#297)
Fix Travis CI and test configuration (#286)
Print progress to
stdout
, notstderr
(#268)Fix
--repository[-url]
help text (#265)Remove obsolete registration guidance (#200)
Twine 1.9.1 (2017-05-27)#
Bugfixes#
Blacklist known bad versions of Requests. (#253)
Twine 1.9.0 (2017-05-22)#
Bugfixes#
Misc#
Twine will now resolve passwords using the keyring if available. Module can be required with the
keyring
extra.Twine will use
hashlib.blake2b
on Python 3.6+ instead of pyblake2
Twine 1.8.1 (2016-08-09)#
Misc#
Check if a package exists if the URL is one of:
https://pypi.python.org/pypi/
https://upload.pypi.org/
https://upload.pypi.io/
This helps people with
https://upload.pypi.io
still in their.pypirc
file.
Twine 1.8.0 (2016-08-08)#
Features#
Switch from upload.pypi.io to upload.pypi.org. (#201)
Retrieve configuration from the environment as a default. (#144)
Repository URL will default to
TWINE_REPOSITORY
Username will default to
TWINE_USERNAME
Password will default to
TWINE_PASSWORD
Allow the Repository URL to be provided on the command-line (
--repository-url
) or via an environment variable (TWINE_REPOSITORY_URL
). (#166)Generate Blake2b 256 digests for packages if
pyblake2
is installed. Users can usepython -m pip install twine[with-blake2]
to havepyblake2
installed with Twine. (#171)
Misc#
Generate SHA256 digest for all packages by default.
Stop testing on Python 2.6.
Warn users if they receive a 500 error when uploading to
*pypi.python.org
(#199)
Twine 1.7.4 (2016-07-09)#
Bugfixes#
Correct a packaging error.
Twine 1.7.3 (2016-07-08)#
Bugfixes#
Fix uploads to instances of pypiserver using
--skip-existing
. We were not properly checking the return status code on the response after attempting an upload. (#195)
Misc#
Avoid attempts to upload a package if we can find it on Legacy PyPI.
Twine 1.7.2 (2016-07-05)#
Bugfixes#
Twine 1.7.1 (2016-07-05)#
Bugfixes#
Clint was not specified in the wheel metadata as a dependency. (#187)
Twine 1.7.0 (2016-07-04)#
Features#
Support
--cert
and--client-cert
command-line flags and config file options for feature parity with pip. This allows users to verify connections to servers other than PyPI (e.g., local package repositories) with different certificates. (#142)Add progress bar to uploads. (#152)
Allow
--skip-existing
to work for 409 status codes. (#162)Implement retries when the CDN in front of PyPI gives us a 5xx error. (#167)
Switch Twine to upload to pypi.io instead of pypi.python.org. (#177)
Bugfixes#
Allow passwords to have
%
s in them. (#186)
Twine 1.6.5 (2015-12-16)#
Bugfixes#
Bump requests-toolbelt version to ensure we avoid ConnectionErrors (#155)
Twine 1.6.4 (2015-10-27)#
Bugfixes#
Twine 1.6.3 (2015-10-05)#
Bugfixes#
Twine 1.6.2 (2015-09-28)#
Bugfixes#
Upload signatures with packages appropriately (#132)
As part of the refactor for the 1.6.0 release, we were using the wrong name to find the signature file.
This also uncovered a bug where if you’re using twine in a situation where
*
is not expanded by your shell, we might also miss uploading signatures to PyPI. Both were fixed as part of this.
Twine 1.6.1 (2015-09-18)#
Bugfixes#
Fix signing support for uploads (#130)
Twine 1.6.0 (2015-09-14)#
Features#
Allow the user to specify the location of their
.pypirc
(#97)Support registering new packages with
twine register
(#8)Add the
--skip-existing
flag totwine upload
to allow users to skip releases that already exist on PyPI. (#115)Upload wheels first to PyPI (#106)
Large file support via the
requests-toolbelt
(#104)
Bugfixes#
Twine 1.5.0 (2015-03-10)#
Features#
Support commands not named “gpg” for signing (#29)
Bugfixes#
Misc#
Add lower-limit to requests dependency
Twine 1.4.0 (2014-12-12)#
Features#
Bugfixes#
Expand globs and check for existence of dists to upload (#65)
Fix issue uploading packages with
_
s in the name (#47)List registered commands in help text (#34)
Use
pkg_resources
to load registered commands (#32)Prevent ResourceWarning from being shown (#28)
Add support for uploading Windows installers (#26)
Twine 1.3.0 (2014-03-31)#
Features#
Additional functionality.
Twine 1.2.2 (2013-10-03)#
Features#
Basic functionality.
Contributing#
We are happy you have decided to contribute to Twine.
Please see the GitHub repository for code and more documentation,
and the official Python Packaging User Guide for user documentation.
To ask questions or get involved, you can join the Python Packaging
Discourse forum, #pypa
or #pypa-dev
on IRC, or the
distutils-sig mailing list.
Everyone interacting in the Twine project’s codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms, and mailing lists is expected to follow the PSF Code of Conduct.
Getting started#
We use tox to run tests, check code style, and build the documentation.
To install tox
, run:
python3 -m pip install tox
Clone the twine repository from GitHub, then run:
cd /path/to/your/local/twine
tox -e dev
This creates a virtual environment, so that twine and its
dependencies do not interfere with other packages installed on your
machine. In the virtual environment, twine
is pointing at your
local copy, so when you make changes, you can easily see their effect.
The virtual environment also contains the tools for running tests
and checking code style, so you can run them on single files directly or
in your code editor. However, we still encourage using the tox
commands
below on the whole codebase.
To use the virtual environment, run:
source venv/bin/activate
Building the documentation#
Additions and edits to twine’s documentation are welcome and appreciated.
To preview the docs while you’re making changes, run:
tox -e watch-docs
Then open a web browser to http://127.0.0.1:8000.
When you’re done making changes, lint and build the docs locally before making a pull request. In your active virtual environment, run:
tox -e docs
The HTML of the docs will be written to docs/_build/html
.
Code style#
To automatically reformat your changes with isort and black, run:
tox -e format
To detect any remaining code smells with flake8, run:
tox -e lint
To perform strict type-checking using mypy, run:
tox -e types
Any errors from lint
or types
need to be fixed manually.
Additionally, we prefer that import
statements be used for packages and
modules only, rather than individual classes or functions.
Testing#
We use pytest for writing and running tests.
To run the tests in your virtual environment, run:
tox -e py
To pass options to pytest
, e.g. the name of a test, run:
tox -e py -- tests/test_upload.py::test_exception_for_http_status
Twine is continuously tested against supported versions of Python using GitHub Actions. To run the tests against a specific version, e.g. Python 3.8, you will need it installed on your machine. Then, run:
tox -e py38
To run the “integration” tests of uploading to real package indexes, run:
tox -e integration
To run the tests against all supported Python versions, check code style, and build the documentation, run:
tox
Submitting changes#
Fork the GitHub repository.
Make a branch off of
main
and commit your changes to it.Run the tests, check code style, and build the docs as described above.
Optionally, add your name to the end of the
AUTHORS
file using the formatName <email@domain.com> (url)
, where the(url)
portion is optional.Submit a pull request to the
main
branch on GitHub, referencing an open issue.Add a changelog entry.
Changelog entries#
The docs/changelog.rst
file is built by towncrier from files in the
changelog/
directory. To add an entry, create a file in that directory
named {number}.{type}.rst
, where {number}
is the pull request number,
and {type}
is feature
, bugfix
, doc
, removal
, or misc
.
For example, if your PR number is 1234 and it’s fixing a bug, then you
would create changelog/1234.bugfix.rst
. PRs can span multiple categories by
creating multiple files: if you added a feature and deprecated/removed an old
feature in PR #5678, you would create changelog/5678.feature.rst
and
changelog/5678.removal.rst
.
A changelog entry is meant for end users and should only contain details relevant to them. In order to maintain a consistent style, please keep the entry to the point, in sentence case, shorter than 80 characters, and in an imperative tone. An entry should complete the sentence “This change will …”. If one line is not enough, use a summary line in an imperative tone, followed by a description of the change in one or more paragraphs, each wrapped at 80 characters and separated by blank lines.
You don’t need to reference the pull request or issue number in a changelog entry, since towncrier will add a link using the number in the file name, and the pull request should reference an issue number. Similarly, you don’t need to add your name to the entry, since that will be associated with the pull request.
Changelog entries are rendered using reStructuredText, but they should only
have minimal formatting (such as ``monospaced text``
).
Architectural overview#
Twine is a command-line tool for interacting with PyPI securely over HTTPS. Its three purposes are to be:
A user-facing tool for publishing on pypi.org
A user-facing tool for publishing on other Python package indexes (e.g.,
devpi
instances)A useful API for other programs (e.g.,
zest.releaser
) to call for publishing on any Python package index
Currently, twine has two principle functions: uploading new packages
and registering new projects (register
is no longer supported
on PyPI, and is in Twine for use with other package indexes).
Its command line arguments are parsed in twine/cli.py
. The
code for registering new projects is in
twine/commands/register.py
, and the code for uploading is in
twine/commands/upload.py
. The file twine/package.py
contains a single class, PackageFile
, which hashes the project
files and extracts their metadata. The file
twine/repository.py
contains the Repository
class, whose
methods control the URL the package is uploaded to (which the user can
specify either as a default, in the .pypirc
file, or pass on
the command line), and the methods that upload the package securely to
a URL.
For more details, refer to the source documentation (currently a work in progress):
twine package#
Top-level module for Twine.
The contents of this package are not a public API. For more details, see https://github.com/pypa/twine/issues/194 and https://github.com/pypa/twine/issues/665.
twine.commands package#
Module containing the logic for the twine
sub-commands.
The contents of this package are not a public API. For more details, see https://github.com/pypa/twine/issues/194 and https://github.com/pypa/twine/issues/665.
twine.commands.check module#
Module containing the logic for twine check
.
- twine.commands.check._parse_content_type(value: str) Tuple[str, Dict[str, str]] [source]#
Implement logic of deprecated cgi.parse_header().
From https://docs.python.org/3.11/library/cgi.html#cgi.parse_header.
- twine.commands.check._check_file(filename: str, render_warning_stream: _WarningStream) Tuple[List[str], bool] [source]#
Check given distribution.
- twine.commands.check.check(dists: List[str], strict: bool = False) bool [source]#
Check that a distribution will render correctly on PyPI and display the results.
This is currently only validates
long_description
, but more checks could be added; see https://github.com/pypa/twine/projects/2.- Parameters:
dists – The distribution files to check.
output_stream – The destination of the resulting output.
strict – If
True
, treat warnings as errors.
- Returns:
True
if there are rendering errors, otherwiseFalse
.
twine.commands.register module#
Module containing the logic for twine register
.
- twine.commands.register.register(register_settings: Settings, package: str) None [source]#
Pre-register a package name with a repository before uploading a distribution.
Pre-registration is not supported on PyPI, so the
register
command is only necessary if you are using a different repository that requires it.- Parameters:
register_settings – The configured options relating to repository registration.
package – The path of the distribution to use for package metadata.
- Raises:
twine.exceptions.TwineException – The registration failed due to a configuration error.
requests.HTTPError – The repository responded with an error.
twine.commands.upload module#
Module containing the logic for twine upload
.
- twine.commands.upload.skip_upload(response: Response, skip_existing: bool, package: PackageFile) bool [source]#
Determine if a failed upload is an error or can be safely ignored.
- Parameters:
response – The response from attempting to upload
package
to a repository.skip_existing – If
True
, use the status and content ofresponse
to determine if the package already exists on the repository. If so, then a failed upload is safe to ignore.package – The package that was being uploaded.
- Returns:
True
if a failed upload can be safely ignored, otherwiseFalse
.
- twine.commands.upload._make_package(filename: str, signatures: Dict[str, str], upload_settings: Settings) PackageFile [source]#
Create and sign a package, based off of filename, signatures and settings.
- twine.commands.upload.upload(upload_settings: Settings, dists: List[str]) None [source]#
Upload one or more distributions to a repository, and display the progress.
If a package already exists on the repository, most repositories will return an error response. However, if
upload_settings.skip_existing
isTrue
, a message will be displayed and any remaining distributions will be uploaded.For known repositories (like PyPI), the web URLs of successfully uploaded packages will be displayed.
- Parameters:
upload_settings – The configured options related to uploading to a repository.
dists – The distribution files to upload to the repository. This can also include
.asc
files; the GPG signatures will be added to the corresponding uploads.
- Raises:
twine.exceptions.TwineException – The upload failed due to a configuration error.
requests.HTTPError – The repository responded with an error.
twine.auth module#
twine.cli module#
twine.exceptions module#
Module containing exceptions raised by twine.
- exception twine.exceptions.RedirectDetected[source]#
A redirect was detected that the user needs to resolve.
In some cases, requests refuses to issue a new POST request after a redirect. In order to prevent a confusing user experience, we raise this exception to allow users to know the index they’re uploading to is redirecting them.
- classmethod from_args(repository_url: str, redirect_url: str) RedirectDetected [source]#
- exception twine.exceptions.PackageNotFound[source]#
A package file was provided that could not be found on the file system.
This is only used when attempting to register a package_file.
- exception twine.exceptions.UploadToDeprecatedPyPIDetected[source]#
An upload attempt was detected to deprecated PyPI domains.
The sites pypi.python.org and testpypi.python.org are deprecated.
- exception twine.exceptions.UnreachableRepositoryURLDetected[source]#
An upload attempt was detected to a URL without a protocol prefix.
All repository URLs must have a protocol (e.g.,
https://
).
- exception twine.exceptions.InvalidSigningConfiguration[source]#
Both the sign and identity parameters must be present.
- exception twine.exceptions.InvalidSigningExecutable[source]#
Signing executable must be installed on system.
- exception twine.exceptions.NonInteractive[source]#
Raised in non-interactive mode when credentials could not be found.
- exception twine.exceptions.InvalidPyPIUploadURL[source]#
Repository configuration tries to use PyPI with an incorrect URL.
For example, https://pypi.org instead of https://upload.pypi.org/legacy.
twine.package module#
- twine.package._safe_name(name: str) str [source]#
Convert an arbitrary string to a standard distribution name.
Any runs of non-alphanumeric/. characters are replaced with a single ‘-‘.
Copied from pkg_resources.safe_name for compatibility with warehouse. See https://github.com/pypa/twine/issues/743.
- class twine.package.PackageFile[source]#
- __init__(filename: str, comment: Optional[str], metadata: Distribution, python_version: Optional[str], filetype: Optional[str]) None [source]#
- class twine.package.Hexdigest[source]#
Hexdigest(md5, sha2, blake2)
- property md5#
Alias for field number 0
- property sha2#
Alias for field number 1
- property blake2#
Alias for field number 2
- static __new__(_cls, md5: Optional[str], sha2: Optional[str], blake2: Optional[str])#
Create new instance of Hexdigest(md5, sha2, blake2)
- _asdict()#
Return a new OrderedDict which maps field names to their values.
- _field_defaults = {}#
- _field_types = {'blake2': typing.Union[str, NoneType], 'md5': typing.Union[str, NoneType], 'sha2': typing.Union[str, NoneType]}#
- _fields = ('md5', 'sha2', 'blake2')#
- _fields_defaults = {}#
- classmethod _make(iterable)#
Make a new Hexdigest object from a sequence or iterable
- _replace(**kwds)#
Return a new Hexdigest object replacing specified fields with new values
twine.repository module#
- class twine.repository.Repository[source]#
- __init__(repository_url: str, username: Optional[str], password: Optional[str], disable_progress_bar: bool = False) None [source]#
- static _make_adapter_with_retries() HTTPAdapter [source]#
- register(package: PackageFile) Response [source]#
- _upload(package: PackageFile) Response [source]#
- upload(package: PackageFile, max_redirects: int = 5) Response [source]#
- package_is_uploaded(package: PackageFile, bypass_cache: bool = False) bool [source]#
- verify_package_integrity(package: PackageFile) None [source]#
twine.settings module#
Module containing logic for handling settings.
- class twine.settings.Settings[source]#
Object that manages the configuration for Twine.
This object can only be instantiated with keyword arguments.
For example,
Settings(True, username='fakeusername')
Will raise a
TypeError
. Instead, you would wantSettings(sign=True, username='fakeusername')
- __init__(*, sign: bool = False, sign_with: str = 'gpg', identity: Optional[str] = None, username: Optional[str] = None, password: Optional[str] = None, non_interactive: bool = False, comment: Optional[str] = None, config_file: str = utils.DEFAULT_CONFIG_FILE, skip_existing: bool = False, cacert: Optional[str] = None, client_cert: Optional[str] = None, repository_name: str = 'pypi', repository_url: Optional[str] = None, verbose: bool = False, disable_progress_bar: bool = False, **ignored_kwargs: Any) None [source]#
Initialize our settings instance.
- Parameters:
sign – Configure whether the package file should be signed.
sign_with – The name of the executable used to sign the package with.
identity – The GPG identity that should be used to sign the package file.
username – The username used to authenticate to the repository (package index).
password – The password used to authenticate to the repository (package index).
non_interactive – Do not interactively prompt for username/password if the required credentials are missing.
comment – The comment to include with each distribution file.
config_file – The path to the configuration file to use.
skip_existing – Specify whether twine should continue uploading files if one of them already exists. This primarily supports PyPI. Other package indexes may not be supported.
cacert – The path to the bundle of certificates used to verify the TLS connection to the package index.
client_cert – The path to the client certificate used to perform authentication to the index. This must be a single file that contains both the private key and the PEM-encoded certificate.
repository_name – The name of the repository (package index) to interact with. This should correspond to a section in the config file.
repository_url – The URL of the repository (package index) to interact with. This will override the settings inferred from
repository_name
.verbose – Show verbose output.
disable_progress_bar – Disable the progress bar.
- _allow_noninteractive() contextlib.AbstractContextManager[None] [source]#
Bypass NonInteractive error when client cert is present.
- static register_argparse_arguments(parser: ArgumentParser) None [source]#
Register the arguments for argparse.
- classmethod from_argparse(args: Namespace) Settings [source]#
Generate the Settings from parsed arguments.
- check_repository_url() None [source]#
Verify we are not using legacy PyPI.
- Raises:
twine.exceptions.UploadToDeprecatedPyPIDetected – The configured repository URL is for legacy PyPI.
- create_repository() Repository [source]#
Create a new repository for uploading.
twine.utils module#
- twine.utils.get_config(path: str) Dict[str, Dict[str, Optional[str]]] [source]#
Read repository configuration from a file (i.e. ~/.pypirc).
Format: https://packaging.python.org/specifications/pypirc/
If the default config file doesn’t exist, return a default configuration for pypyi and testpypi.
- twine.utils._validate_repository_url(repository_url: str) None [source]#
Validate the given url for allowed schemes and components.
- twine.utils.get_repository_from_config(config_file: str, repository: str, repository_url: Optional[str] = None) Dict[str, Optional[str]] [source]#
Get repository config command-line values or the .pypirc file.
- twine.utils.get_file_size(filename: str) str [source]#
Return the size of a file in KB, or MB if >= 1024 KB.
- twine.utils.check_status_code(response: Response, verbose: bool) None [source]#
Generate a helpful message based on the response from the repository.
Raise a custom exception for recognized errors. Otherwise, print the response content (based on the verbose option) before re-raising the HTTPError.
- twine.utils.get_userpass_value(cli_value: Optional[str], config: Dict[str, Optional[str]], key: str, prompt_strategy: Optional[Callable[[], str]] = None) Optional[str] [source]#
Get a credential (e.g. a username or password) from the configuration.
Uses the following rules:
If
cli_value
is specified, use that.If
config[key]
is specified, use that.If
prompt_strategy
is specified, use its return value.Otherwise return
None
- Parameters:
cli_value – The value supplied from the command line.
config – A dictionary of repository configuration values.
key – The credential to look up in
config
, e.g."username"
or"password"
.prompt_strategy – An argumentless function to get the value, e.g. from keyring or by prompting the user.
- Returns:
The credential value, i.e. the username or password.
- twine.utils.get_cacert(cli_value: Optional[str], config: Dict[str, Optional[str]], *, key: str = 'ca_cert', prompt_strategy: Optional[Callable[[], str]] = None) Optional[str] #
Get the CA bundle via
get_userpass_value()
.
- twine.utils.get_clientcert(cli_value: Optional[str], config: Dict[str, Optional[str]], *, key: str = 'client_cert', prompt_strategy: Optional[Callable[[], str]] = None) Optional[str] #
Get the client certificate via
get_userpass_value()
.
twine.wheel module#
twine.wininst module#
Where Twine gets configuration and credentials#
A user can set the repository URL, username, and/or password via
command line, .pypirc
files, environment variables, and
keyring
.
Adding a maintainer#
A checklist for adding a new maintainer to the project.
Add them as a Member in the GitHub repo settings.
Get them Test PyPI and canon PyPI usernames and add them as a Maintainer on our Test PyPI project and canon PyPI.
Making a new release#
A checklist for creating, testing, and distributing a new version.
Choose a version number, and create a new branch
VERSION=3.4.2 git switch -c release-$VERSION
Update
docs/changelog.rst
tox -e changelog -- --version $VERSION git commit -am "Update changelog for $VERSION"
Open a pull request for review
Merge the pull request, and ensure the GitHub Actions build passes
Create a new git tag for the version
git switch main git pull --ff-only upstream main git tag -m "Release v$VERSION" $VERSION
Push to start the release, and watch it in GitHub Actions
git push upstream $VERSION
View the new release on PyPI
Future development#
See our open issues.
In the future, pip
and twine
may
merge into a single tool; see ongoing discussion.
Twine#
Twine is a utility for publishing Python packages to PyPI and other repositories. It provides build system independent uploads of source and binary distribution artifacts for both new and existing projects.
Why Should I Use This?#
The goal of Twine is to improve PyPI interaction by improving security and testability.
The biggest reason to use Twine is that it securely authenticates
you to PyPI over HTTPS using a verified connection, regardless of
the underlying Python version. Meanwhile, python setup.py upload
will only work correctly and securely if your build system, Python
version, and underlying operating system are configured properly.
Secondly, Twine encourages you to build your distribution files. python
setup.py upload
only allows you to upload a package as a final step after
building with distutils
or setuptools
, within the same command
invocation. This means that you cannot test the exact file you’re going to
upload to PyPI to ensure that it works before uploading it.
Finally, Twine allows you to pre-sign your files and pass the
.asc
files into the command line invocation (twine upload
myproject-1.0.1.tar.gz myproject-1.0.1.tar.gz.asc
). This enables you
to be assured that you’re typing your gpg
passphrase into gpg
itself and not anything else, since you will be the one directly
executing gpg --detach-sign -a <filename>
.
Features#
Verified HTTPS connections
Uploading doesn’t require executing
setup.py
Uploading files that have already been created, allowing testing of distributions before release
Supports uploading any packaging format (including wheels)
Installation#
pip install twine
Using Twine#
Create some distributions in the normal way:
python -m build
Upload to Test PyPI and verify things look right:
twine upload -r testpypi dist/*
Twine will prompt for your username and password.
Upload to PyPI:
twine upload dist/*
Done!
Note
Like many other command line tools, Twine does not show any characters when you enter your password.
If you’re using Windows and trying to paste your username, password, or
token in the Command Prompt or PowerShell, Ctrl-V
and Shift+Insert
won’t work. Instead, you can use “Edit > Paste” from the window menu, or
enable “Use Ctrl+Shift+C/V as Copy/Paste” in “Properties”. This is a
known issue with Python’s
getpass
module.
More documentation on using Twine to upload packages to PyPI is in the Python Packaging User Guide.
Commands#
twine upload
#
Uploads one or more distributions to a repository.
usage: twine upload [-h] [-r REPOSITORY] [--repository-url REPOSITORY_URL]
[-s] [--sign-with SIGN_WITH] [-i IDENTITY] [-u USERNAME]
[-p PASSWORD] [--non-interactive] [-c COMMENT]
[--config-file CONFIG_FILE] [--skip-existing]
[--cert path] [--client-cert path] [--verbose]
[--disable-progress-bar]
dist [dist ...]
positional arguments:
dist The distribution files to upload to the repository
(package index). Usually dist/* . May additionally
contain a .asc file to include an existing signature
with the file upload.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-r REPOSITORY, --repository REPOSITORY
The repository (package index) to upload the package
to. Should be a section in the config file (default:
pypi). (Can also be set via TWINE_REPOSITORY
environment variable.)
--repository-url REPOSITORY_URL
The repository (package index) URL to upload the
package to. This overrides --repository. (Can also be
set via TWINE_REPOSITORY_URL environment variable.)
-s, --sign Sign files to upload using GPG.
--sign-with SIGN_WITH
GPG program used to sign uploads (default: gpg).
-i IDENTITY, --identity IDENTITY
GPG identity used to sign files.
-u USERNAME, --username USERNAME
The username to authenticate to the repository
(package index) as. (Can also be set via
TWINE_USERNAME environment variable.)
-p PASSWORD, --password PASSWORD
The password to authenticate to the repository
(package index) with. (Can also be set via
TWINE_PASSWORD environment variable.)
--non-interactive Do not interactively prompt for username/password if
the required credentials are missing. (Can also be set
via TWINE_NON_INTERACTIVE environment variable.)
-c COMMENT, --comment COMMENT
The comment to include with the distribution file.
--config-file CONFIG_FILE
The .pypirc config file to use.
--skip-existing Continue uploading files if one already exists. (Only
valid when uploading to PyPI. Other implementations
may not support this.)
--cert path Path to alternate CA bundle (can also be set via
TWINE_CERT environment variable).
--client-cert path Path to SSL client certificate, a single file
containing the private key and the certificate in PEM
format.
--verbose Show verbose output.
--disable-progress-bar
Disable the progress bar.
twine check
#
Checks whether your distribution’s long description will render correctly on PyPI.
usage: twine check [-h] [--strict] dist [dist ...]
positional arguments:
dist The distribution files to check, usually dist/*
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--strict Fail on warnings
twine register
#
Pre-register a name with a repository before uploading a distribution.
Warning
Pre-registration is not supported on PyPI, so the register
command is
only necessary if you are using a different repository that requires it. See
issue #1627 on Warehouse (the software running on PyPI) for more details.
usage: twine register [-h] [-r REPOSITORY] [--repository-url REPOSITORY_URL]
[-s] [--sign-with SIGN_WITH] [-i IDENTITY] [-u USERNAME]
[-p PASSWORD] [--non-interactive] [-c COMMENT]
[--config-file CONFIG_FILE] [--skip-existing]
[--cert path] [--client-cert path] [--verbose]
[--disable-progress-bar]
package
register operation is not required with PyPI.org
positional arguments:
package File from which we read the package metadata.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-r REPOSITORY, --repository REPOSITORY
The repository (package index) to upload the package
to. Should be a section in the config file (default:
pypi). (Can also be set via TWINE_REPOSITORY
environment variable.)
--repository-url REPOSITORY_URL
The repository (package index) URL to upload the
package to. This overrides --repository. (Can also be
set via TWINE_REPOSITORY_URL environment variable.)
-s, --sign Sign files to upload using GPG.
--sign-with SIGN_WITH
GPG program used to sign uploads (default: gpg).
-i IDENTITY, --identity IDENTITY
GPG identity used to sign files.
-u USERNAME, --username USERNAME
The username to authenticate to the repository
(package index) as. (Can also be set via
TWINE_USERNAME environment variable.)
-p PASSWORD, --password PASSWORD
The password to authenticate to the repository
(package index) with. (Can also be set via
TWINE_PASSWORD environment variable.)
--non-interactive Do not interactively prompt for username/password if
the required credentials are missing. (Can also be set
via TWINE_NON_INTERACTIVE environment variable.)
-c COMMENT, --comment COMMENT
The comment to include with the distribution file.
--config-file CONFIG_FILE
The .pypirc config file to use.
--skip-existing Continue uploading files if one already exists. (Only
valid when uploading to PyPI. Other implementations
may not support this.)
--cert path Path to alternate CA bundle (can also be set via
TWINE_CERT environment variable).
--client-cert path Path to SSL client certificate, a single file
containing the private key and the certificate in PEM
format.
--verbose Show verbose output.
--disable-progress-bar
Disable the progress bar.
Configuration#
Twine can read repository configuration from a .pypirc
file, either in your
home directory, or provided with the --config-file
option. For details on
writing and using .pypirc
, see the specification in the Python
Packaging User Guide.
Environment Variables#
Twine also supports configuration via environment variables. Options passed on
the command line will take precedence over options set via environment
variables. Definition via environment variable is helpful in environments where
it is not convenient to create a .pypirc
file (for example,
on a CI/build server).
TWINE_USERNAME
- the username to use for authentication to the repository.TWINE_PASSWORD
- the password to use for authentication to the repository.TWINE_REPOSITORY
- the repository configuration, either defined as a section in.pypirc
or provided as a full URL.TWINE_REPOSITORY_URL
- the repository URL to use.TWINE_CERT
- custom CA certificate to use for repositories with self-signed or untrusted certificates.TWINE_NON_INTERACTIVE
- Do not interactively prompt for username/password if the required credentials are missing.
Proxy Support#
Twine can be configured to use a proxy by setting environment variables.
For example, to use a proxy for just the twine
command,
without export
-ing it for other tools:
HTTPS_PROXY=socks5://user:pass@host:port twine upload dist/*
For more information, see the Requests documentation on proxies and SOCKS , and an in-depth article about proxy environment variables.
Keyring Support#
Instead of typing in your password every time you upload a distribution, Twine allows storing a username and password securely using keyring. Keyring is installed with Twine but for some systems (Linux mainly) may require additional installation steps.
Once Twine is installed, use the keyring
program to set a username and
password to use for each repository to which you may upload.
For example, to set a username and password for PyPI:
keyring set https://upload.pypi.org/legacy/ your-username
and enter the password when prompted.
For a different repository, replace the URL with the relevant repository
URL. For example, for Test PyPI, use https://test.pypi.org/legacy/
.
The next time you run twine
, it will prompt you for a username, and then
get the appropriate password from Keyring.
Note
If you are using Linux in a headless environment (such as on a server) you’ll need to do some additional steps to ensure that Keyring can store secrets securely. See Using Keyring on headless systems.
Disabling Keyring#
In most cases, simply not setting a password with keyring
will allow Twine
to fall back to prompting for a password. In some cases, the presence of
Keyring will cause unexpected or undesirable prompts from the backing system.
In these cases, it may be desirable to disable Keyring altogether. To disable
Keyring, run:
keyring --disable
See Twine issue #338 for discussion and background.