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check-manifest

buildstatus appveyor coverage

Are you a Python developer? Have you uploaded packages to the Python Package Index? Have you accidentally uploaded broken packages with some files missing? If so, check-manifest is for you.

Quick start

$ pip install check-manifest

$ cd ~/src/mygreatpackage
$ check-manifest

You can ask the script to help you update your MANIFEST.in:

$ check-manifest -u -v
listing source files under version control: 6 files and directories
building an sdist: check-manifest-0.7.tar.gz: 4 files and directories
lists of files in version control and sdist do not match!
missing from sdist:
  tests.py
  tox.ini
suggested MANIFEST.in rules:
  include *.py
  include tox.ini
updating MANIFEST.in

$ cat MANIFEST.in
include *.rst

# added by check_manifest.py
include *.py
include tox.ini

Command-line reference

$ check-manifest --help
usage: check-manifest [-h] [--version] [-v] [-c] [-u] [-p PYTHON]
                      [--ignore patterns]
                      [source_tree]

Check a Python MANIFEST.in file for completeness

positional arguments:
  source_tree           location for the source tree (default: .)

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  --version             show program's version number and exit
  -v, --verbose         more verbose output (default: False)
  -c, --create          create a MANIFEST.in if missing (default: False)
  -u, --update          append suggestions to MANIFEST.in (implies --create)
                        (default: False)
  -p PYTHON, --python PYTHON
                        use this Python interpreter for running setup.py sdist
                        (default: /home/mg/.venv/bin/python)
  --ignore patterns     ignore files/directories matching these comma-
                        separated patterns (default: None)
  --ignore-bad-ideas patterns
                        ignore bad idea files/directories matching these
                        comma-separated patterns (default: [])

Configuration

You can configure check-manifest to ignore certain file patterns using a [tool.check-manifest] section in your pyproject.toml file or a [check-manifest] section in either setup.cfg or tox.ini. Examples:

# pyproject.toml
[tool.check-manifest]
ignore = [".travis.yml"]

# setup.cfg or tox.ini
[check-manifest]
ignore =
    .travis.yml

Note that lists are newline separated in the setup.cfg and tox.ini files.

The following options are recognized:

ignore

A list of filename patterns that will be ignored by check-manifest. Use this if you want to keep files in your version control system that shouldn't be included in your source distributions. The default ignore list is

PKG-INFO
*.egg-info
*.egg-info/*
setup.cfg
.hgtags
.hgsigs
.hgignore
.gitignore
.bzrignore
.gitattributes
.github/*
.travis.yml
Jenkinsfile
*.mo
ignore-default-rules
If set to true, your ignore patterns will replace the default ignore list instead of adding to it.
ignore-bad-ideas
A list of filename patterns that will be ignored by check-manifest's generated files check. Use this if you want to keep generated files in your version control system, even though it is generally a bad idea.

Version control integration

With pre-commit, check-manifest can be part of your git-workflow. Add the following to your .pre-commit-config.yaml.

repos:
-   repo: https://github.com/mgedmin/check-manifest
    rev: "0.50"
    hooks:
    -   id: check-manifest

If you are running pre-commit without a network, you can utilize args: [--no-build-isolation] to prevent a pip install reaching out to PyPI. This makes python -m build ignore your build-system.requires, so you'll want to list them all in additional_dependencies.

repos:
-   repo: https://github.com/mgedmin/check-manifest
    rev: "0.50"
    hooks:
    -   id: check-manifest
        args: [--no-build-isolation]
        additional_dependencies: [setuptools, wheel, setuptools-scm]