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09:10
Ok, I've got the cli handled, now problem no.2 - how do I make all the subdirectories in project part of the package instead of their own thing in site-packages?
Here's my general structure:
my_project/
├─ apps/
│  ├─ cli_app.py
│  ├─ run_app.py
├─ src/
│  ├─ objects/
│  │  ├─ MyObject.py
│  ├─ tools/
│  │  ├─ helper.py
├─ data/
├─ pyproject.toml
pyproject.toml:
(...)
[project.scripts]
mypackage = "apps.cli_app:cli"
That's all wrong, all of the code should be inside of src. And it should all be grouped in a single folder
my-project/
├─ src/
│  ├─ my_project/
│  │  ├─ apps/
│  │  │  ├─ cli_app.py
│  │  │  ├─ run_app.py
│  │  ├─ objects/
│  │  │  ├─ MyObject.py
│  │  ├─ tools/
│  │  │  ├─ helper.py
├─ pyproject.toml
[project.scripts]
mypackage = "my_project.apps.cli_app:cli"
Is there a way to avoid doubling the my_project directories?
Not really, no. my_project is required because that's your actual python package, and since you have a bunch of additional stuff (pyproject.toml, .git, README, etc), you need a my-project folder to store it in
If it's any consolation, you can name the root folder whatever you want. Its name has no bearing on anything
09:35
Indeed, I've got a couple of projects in which the package name changed before I did the first release. So it's boring_name / src / punny_name inside.
@matszwecja Yeah, that also always bothered me slightly, especially if the name has no score in it, then it's just foo/foo, but at least if you have foo-bar it's foo_bar, so it's not exactly the same. But one gets used to it and as Aran explained there are sensible reasons for it
Ok, (I hope) one more thing: in order to avoid having to specify each subdirectory in [tool.setuptools], I'd have to define __init__.py that imports them in a parent directory?
I'm not familiar with setuptools, what does [tool.setuptools] do?
You can use globs there.
[tool.setuptools.packages.find]
include = ["taxd", "taxd.*"]
This will include the entire taxd package and all its subpackages.
Wow, you need to explicitly specify that it should include subdirectories? O.o
09:47
At least one or two years ago, yeah.
@MisterMiyagi Why not find and why not auto discovery?
@Peilonrayz I have other stuff in the project directory too (unittests, typetests, tools) that would be picked up by auto-discovery.
Not sure about find
Fair, do you do src/ & tests/ or src/foo.py src/test.py? Would have thought auto wouldn't desend test/ by default.
Looks like a simple include = ["taxd*"] should work these days
Turns out with a modern setuptools, the default auto-detection works fine without any hints on what to include.
Yay!
10:17
i think at some point they started supporting the common default of "whatever is checked into git and isn't obviously a cache is part of the distribution"
no more Manifest.in files 🎉
is it possible to write a context manager that behaves like this:
with timeout(seconds=3) as timed_out:
    # code that may get stuck
print(timed_out)  # 'True' if the code in the block didn't finish after 3 seconds
the condition is that the code in the block doesn't check the timed_out explicitly, so even with something like while: True this should work
Should the context also abort the block after the timeout?
no
wait, what does abort mean?
Kill whatever is running.
then yes
Possible if you don't have threads, don't yield inside the block, and are fine with timed_out just being thuth'ish but not exactly True.
10:30
What I'd wish to do, using this here: docker-py.readthedocs.io/en/stable/…
with timeout(3) as timed_out:
    output = ""
    while log:=my_container.logs(stream=True):
        output += log
        if "Begin running and processing data." in log:
            break
if timed_out:
    raise RuntimeError(f"Container didn't start in time, {output=}")
else:
    yield container
if the container doesn't start up correctly, my_container.logs(stream=True) will just hang indefinitely
so I guess I do yield inside the block. that means it's not possible? I wanted to see if I could start a thread (or process) that sends a sigintl to the main thread after the specified time, and have try: yield; except KeyboardInterrup: pass in the timeout function
I'll just try it out
The no-threads and no-yield is just so that you are sure the block is actually executing. You can then send a signal to the process just fine.
In the transcript from a few days ago, there's also a demo of me using a custom event handler to recreate KeyboardInterrupt (basically just raise in the handler). With the same approach you can take a custom signal and custom exception instead of re-purposing KeyboardInterrupt.
@MisterMiyagi A yield after the block is fine, by the way.

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