Data Files Support#
Old packaging installation methods in the Python ecosystem have traditionally allowed installation of “data files”, which are placed in a platform-specific location. However, the most common use case for data files distributed with a package is for use by the package, usually by including the data files inside the package directory.
Setuptools focuses on this most common type of data files and offers three ways of specifying which files should be included in your packages, as described in the following sections.
include_package_data#
First, you can simply use the include_package_data
keyword.
For example, if the package tree looks like this:
project_root_directory
├── setup.py # and/or setup.cfg, pyproject.toml
└── src
└── mypkg
├── __init__.py
├── data1.rst
├── data2.rst
├── data1.txt
└── data2.txt
and you supply this configuration:
[options]
# ...
packages = find:
package_dir =
= src
include_package_data = True
[options.packages.find]
where = src
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
setup(
# ...,
packages=find_packages(where="src"),
package_dir={"": "src"},
include_package_data=True
)
[tool.setuptools]
# ...
# By default, include-package-data is true in pyproject.toml, so you do
# NOT have to specify this line.
include-package-data = true
[tool.setuptools.packages.find]
where = ["src"]
then all the .txt
and .rst
files will be automatically installed with
your package, provided:
These files are included via the
MANIFEST.in
file, like so:include src/mypkg/*.txt include src/mypkg/*.rst
OR, they are being tracked by a revision control system such as Git, Mercurial or SVN, and you have configured an appropriate plugin such as setuptools-scm or setuptools-svn. (See the section below on Adding Support for Revision Control Systems for information on how to write such plugins.)
package_data#
By default, include_package_data
considers all non .py
files found inside
the package directory (src/mypkg
in this case) as data files, and includes those that
satisfy (at least) one of the above two conditions into the source distribution, and
consequently in the installation of your package.
If you want finer-grained control over what files are included, then you can also use
the package_data
keyword.
For example, if the package tree looks like this:
project_root_directory
├── setup.py # and/or setup.cfg, pyproject.toml
└── src
└── mypkg
├── __init__.py
├── data1.rst
├── data2.rst
├── data1.txt
└── data2.txt
then you can use the following configuration to capture the .txt
and .rst
files as
data files:
[options]
# ...
packages = find:
package_dir =
= src
[options.packages.find]
where = src
[options.package_data]
mypkg =
*.txt
*.rst
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
setup(
# ...,
packages=find_packages(where="src"),
package_dir={"": "src"},
package_data={"mypkg": ["*.txt", "*.rst"]}
)
[tool.setuptools.packages.find]
where = ["src"]
[tool.setuptools.package-data]
mypkg = ["*.txt", "*.rst"]
The package_data
argument is a dictionary that maps from package names to
lists of glob patterns. Note that the data files specified using the package_data
option neither require to be included within a MANIFEST.in
file, nor
require to be added by a revision control system plugin.
Note
If your glob patterns use paths, you must use a forward slash (/
) as
the path separator, even if you are on Windows. Setuptools automatically
converts slashes to appropriate platform-specific separators at build time.
Note
Glob patterns do not automatically match dotfiles (directory or file names
starting with a dot (.
)). To include such files, you must explicitly start
the pattern with a dot, e.g. .*
to match .gitignore
.
If you have multiple top-level packages and a common pattern of data files for all these packages, for example:
project_root_directory
├── setup.py # and/or setup.cfg, pyproject.toml
└── src
├── mypkg1
│ ├── data1.rst
│ ├── data1.txt
│ └── __init__.py
└── mypkg2
├── data2.txt
└── __init__.py
Here, both packages mypkg1
and mypkg2
share a common pattern of having .txt
data files. However, only mypkg1
has .rst
data files. In such a case, if you want to
use the package_data
option, the following configuration will work:
[options]
packages = find:
package_dir =
= src
[options.packages.find]
where = src
[options.package_data]
* =
*.txt
mypkg1 =
data1.rst
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
setup(
# ...,
packages=find_packages(where="src"),
package_dir={"": "src"},
package_data={"": ["*.txt"], "mypkg1": ["data1.rst"]},
)
[tool.setuptools.packages.find]
where = ["src"]
[tool.setuptools.package-data]
"*" = ["*.txt"]
mypkg1 = ["data1.rst"]
Notice that if you list patterns in package_data
under the empty string ""
in
setup.py
, and the asterisk *
in setup.cfg
and pyproject.toml
, these
patterns are used to find files in every package. For example, we use ""
or *
to indicate that the .txt
files from all packages should be captured as data files.
Also note how we can continue to specify patterns for individual packages, i.e.
we specify that data1.rst
from mypkg1
alone should be captured as well.
Note
When building an sdist
, the datafiles are also drawn from the
package_name.egg-info/SOURCES.txt
file, so make sure that this is removed if
the setup.py
package_data
list is updated before calling setup.py
.
Note
If using the include_package_data
argument, files specified by
package_data
will not be automatically added to the manifest unless
they are listed in the MANIFEST.in
file or by a plugin like
setuptools-scm or setuptools-svn.
exclude_package_data#
Sometimes, the include_package_data
or package_data
options alone
aren’t sufficient to precisely define what files you want included. For example,
consider a scenario where you have include_package_data=True
, and you are using
a revision control system with an appropriate plugin.
Sometimes developers add directory-specific marker files (such as .gitignore
,
.gitkeep
, .gitattributes
, or .hgignore
), these files are probably being
tracked by the revision control system, and therefore by default they will be
included when the package is installed.
Supposing you want to prevent these files from being included in the
installation (they are not relevant to Python or the package), then you could
use the exclude_package_data
option:
[options]
# ...
packages = find:
package_dir =
= src
include_package_data = True
[options.packages.find]
where = src
[options.exclude_package_data]
mypkg =
.gitattributes
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
setup(
# ...,
packages=find_packages(where="src"),
package_dir={"": "src"},
include_package_data=True,
exclude_package_data={"mypkg": [".gitattributes"]},
)
[tool.setuptools.packages.find]
where = ["src"]
[tool.setuptools.exclude-package-data]
mypkg = [".gitattributes"]
The exclude_package_data
option is a dictionary mapping package names to
lists of wildcard patterns, just like the package_data
option. And, just
as with that option, you can use the empty string key ""
in setup.py
and the
asterisk *
in setup.cfg
and pyproject.toml
to match all top-level packages.
Any files that match these patterns will be excluded from installation,
even if they were listed in package_data
or were included as a result of using
include_package_data
.
Subdirectory for Data Files#
A common pattern is where some (or all) of the data files are placed under a separate subdirectory. For example:
project_root_directory
├── setup.py # and/or setup.cfg, pyproject.toml
└── src
└── mypkg
├── data
│ ├── data1.rst
│ └── data2.rst
├── __init__.py
├── data1.txt
└── data2.txt
Here, the .rst
files are placed under a data
subdirectory inside mypkg
,
while the .txt
files are directly under mypkg
.
In this case, the recommended approach is to treat data
as a namespace package
(refer PEP 420). With package_data
,
the configuration might look like this:
[options]
# ...
packages = find_namespace:
package_dir =
= src
[options.packages.find]
where = src
[options.package_data]
mypkg =
*.txt
mypkg.data =
*.rst
from setuptools import setup, find_namespace_packages
setup(
# ...,
packages=find_namespace_packages(where="src"),
package_dir={"": "src"},
package_data={
"mypkg": ["*.txt"],
"mypkg.data": ["*.rst"],
}
)
[tool.setuptools.packages.find]
# scanning for namespace packages is true by default in pyproject.toml, so
# you do NOT need to include the following line.
namespaces = true
where = ["src"]
[tool.setuptools.package-data]
mypkg = ["*.txt"]
"mypkg.data" = ["*.rst"]
In other words, we allow Setuptools to scan for namespace packages in the src
directory,
which enables the data
directory to be identified, and then, we separately specify data
files for the root package mypkg
, and the namespace package data
under the package
mypkg
.
With include_package_data
the configuration is simpler: you simply need to enable
scanning of namespace packages in the src
directory and the rest is handled by Setuptools.
[options]
packages = find_namespace:
package_dir =
= src
include_package_data = True
[options.packages.find]
where = src
from setuptools import setup, find_namespace_packages
setup(
# ... ,
packages=find_namespace_packages(where="src"),
package_dir={"": "src"},
include_package_data=True,
)
[tool.setuptools]
# ...
# By default, include-package-data is true in pyproject.toml, so you do
# NOT have to specify this line.
include-package-data = true
[tool.setuptools.packages.find]
# scanning for namespace packages is true by default in pyproject.toml, so
# you need NOT include the following line.
namespaces = true
where = ["src"]
Summary#
In summary, the three options allow you to:
include_package_data
Accept all data files and directories matched by
MANIFEST.in
or added by a plugin.package_data
Specify additional patterns to match files that may or may not be matched by
MANIFEST.in
or added by a plugin.exclude_package_data
Specify patterns for data files and directories that should not be included when a package is installed, even if they would otherwise have been included due to the use of the preceding options.
Note
Due to the way the build process works, a data file that you
include in your project and then stop including may be “orphaned” in your
project’s build directories, requiring you to run setup.py clean --all
to
fully remove them. This may also be important for your users and contributors
if they track intermediate revisions of your project using Subversion; be sure
to let them know when you make changes that remove files from inclusion so they
can run setup.py clean --all
.
Accessing Data Files at Runtime#
Typically, existing programs manipulate a package’s __file__
attribute in
order to find the location of data files. For example, if you have a structure
like this:
project_root_directory
├── setup.py # and/or setup.cfg, pyproject.toml
└── src
└── mypkg
├── data
│ └── data1.txt
├── __init__.py
└── foo.py
Then, in mypkg/foo.py
, you may try something like this in order to access
mypkg/data/data1.txt
:
import os
data_path = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), 'data', 'data1.txt')
with open(data_path, 'r') as data_file:
...
However, this manipulation isn’t compatible with PEP 302-based import hooks,
including importing from zip files and Python Eggs. It is strongly recommended that,
if you are using data files, you should use importlib.resources
to access them.
In this case, you would do something like this:
from importlib.resources import files
data_text = files('mypkg.data').joinpath('data1.txt').read_text()
importlib.resources
was added to Python 3.7. However, the API illustrated in
this code (using files()
) was added only in Python 3.9, [3] and support
for accessing data files via namespace packages was added only in Python 3.10 [4]
(the data
subdirectory is a namespace package under the root package mypkg
).
Therefore, you may find this code to work only in Python 3.10 (and above). For other
versions of Python, you are recommended to use the importlib-resources backport
which provides the latest version of this library. In this case, the only change that
has to be made to the above code is to replace importlib.resources
with importlib_resources
, i.e.
from importlib_resources import files
...
See Using importlib_resources for detailed instructions.
Tip
Files inside the package directory should be read-only to avoid a series of common problems (e.g. when multiple users share a common Python installation, when the package is loaded from a zip file, or when multiple instances of a Python application run in parallel).
If your Python package needs to write to a file for shared data or configuration,
you can use standard platform/OS-specific system directories, such as
~/.local/config/$appname
or /usr/share/$appname/$version
(Linux specific) [2].
A common approach is to add a read-only template file to the package
directory that is then copied to the correct system directory if no
pre-existing file is found.
Non-Package Data Files#
Historically, setuptools
by way of easy_install
would encapsulate data
files from the distribution into the egg (see the old docs). As eggs are deprecated and pip-based installs
fall back to the platform-specific location for installing data files, there is
no supported facility to reliably retrieve these resources.
Instead, the PyPA recommends that any data files you wish to be accessible at run time be included inside the package.