Introduction ============ Bindep is a tool for checking the presence of binary packages needed to use an application / library. It started life as a way to make it easier to set up a development environment for OpenStack projects. While OpenStack depends heavily on `pip` for installation of Python dependencies, some dependencies are not Python based, and particularly for testing, some dependencies have to be installed before `pip` can be used - such as `virtualenv` and `pip` itself. Basics ====== Create a file called ``other-requirements.txt`` and in that list any requirements your application / library has. In your README or INSTALL or other documentation you can tell users to run `bindep` to report on missing dependencies. Users without `bindep` installed can consult the ``other-requirements.txt`` file by hand if they choose, or install `bindep` first and then use it. The output from bindep is fairly verbose normally, but passing an option of -b/--brief outputs just the missing packages one per line, suitable for feeding to your package management tool of choice. If you need to maintain multiple requirements list files you can pass a specific filename with the -f/--file command line option. If you want to read the list from standard input in a pipeline instead, use a filename of "-". When bindep runs, its exit code is ``0`` if no described packages are missing, but ``1`` if there are packages which it believes need to be installed. Profiles -------- Profiles can be used to describe different scenarios. For instance, you might have a profile for using PostgreSQL which requires the PostgreSQL client library, a profile for MySQL needing that client library, and a profile for testing which requires both libraries as well as the servers. To select a profile just pass it when running `bindep` - e.g.:: $ bindep test When running bindep a single profile can be chosen by the user, with no explicit selection resulting in the selected profile being ``default``. `bindep` will automatically activate additional profiles representing the platform `bindep` is running under, making it easy to handle platform specific quirks. The available profiles are inferred by inspecting the requirements file and collating the used profile names. Users can get a report on the available profiles:: $ bindep --profiles Writing Requirements Files ========================== The requirements file ``other-requirements.txt`` lists the dependencies for projects. Where non-ascii characters are needed, they should be UTF8 encoded. The file is line orientated - each line is a Debian binary package name, an optional profile selector and optional version constraints. (Note - if you are writing an alternative parser, see the Debian policy manual for the parsing rules for packagenames). Debian package names are used as a single source of truth - `bindep` can be taught the mapping onto specific packaging systems. Alternatively, profiles may be used to encode platform specific requirements. Profiles are used to decide which lines in the requirements file should be considered when checking dependencies. Profile selectors are a list of space separated strings contained in ``[]``. A selector prefixed with ``!`` is a negative selector. For a line in the requirements file to be active: * it must not have a negative selector that matches the active profile. * it must either have no positive selectors, or a positive selector that matches the active profile. For instance, the profile selector ``[!qpid]`` will match every profile except ``qpid`` and would be suitable for disabling installation of rabbitmq when qpid is in use. ``[default]`` would match only if the user has not selected a profile (or selected ``default``). ``[default postgresql test]`` would match those three profiles but not ``mysql``. ``[platform:rhel]`` will match only when running in a RHEL linux environment. Note that platform selectors are treated as kind of filter: If a line contains a platform selector, then the package only gets installed if at least one of the platform selectors matches in addition to the match on the other selectors. As an example, ``[platform:rpm test]`` would only install a package on a RPM platform if the test selector is used. Version constraints are a comma separated list of constraints where each constraint is (== | < | <= | >= | > | !=) VERSION, and the constraints are ANDed together (the same as pip requirements version constraints). Comments are allowed: everything from the first ``#`` to the end of the line is ignored. Developing bindep ================= Either install `bindep` and run ``bindep test`` to check you have the needed tools, or review ``other-requirements.txt`` by hand. Running Tests ------------- The testing system is based on a combination of tox and testr. The canonical approach to running tests is to simply run the command `tox`. This will create virtual environments, populate them with dependencies and run all of the tests that OpenStack CI systems run. Behind the scenes, tox is running `testr run --parallel`, but is set up such that you can supply any additional testr arguments that are needed to tox. For example, you can run: `tox -- --analyze-isolation` to cause tox to tell testr to add --analyze-isolation to its argument list. It is also possible to run the tests inside of a virtual environment you have created, or it is possible that you have all of the dependencies installed locally already. If you'd like to go this route, the requirements are listed in requirements.txt and the requirements for testing are in test-requirements.txt. Installing them via pip, for instance, is simply:: pip install -r requirements.txt -r test-requirements.txt In you go this route, you can interact with the testr command directly. Running `testr run` will run the entire test suite. `testr run --parallel` will run it in parallel (this is the default incantation tox uses.) More information about testr can be found at: http://wiki.openstack.org/testr