On Mon, May 29, 2017 at 12:50 PM, Donald Stufft
To be honest, I’m not hardly going to feel particularly bad if one of the most compilation heavy packages that exist takes a whole 10 seconds to install from a VCS checkout.
Rebuild latency is *really* important. People get really cranky at me when I argue that we should get rid of "editable installs", which create much greater problems for . I think I'm entitled to be cranky
Particularly when I assume that the build tool can be even smarter here than ccache is able to be to reduce the setup.py build step back down to the no-op incremental build case.
I mean, unless numpy is doing something different, the default distutils incremental build stuff is incredibly dumb, it just stores the build output in a directory (by default it’s located in ./build/) and compares the mtime of a list of source files with the mtime of the target file, and if the sources files are newer, it recompiles it. If you replace mtime with blake2 (or similar) then you can trivially support the exact same thing just storing the built target files in some user directory cache instead.
Hell, we *might* even be able to preserve mtime (if we’re not already… we might be! But I’d need to dig into it) so literally the only thing that would need to change is instead of storing the built artifacts in ./build/ you store them in ~/.cache/my-cool-build-tool/{project-name}. Bonus points: this means you get incremental speeds even when building from a sdist from PyPI that doesn’t have wheels and hasn’t changed those files either.
I’m of the opinion that first you need to make it *correct*, then you can try to make it *fast*. It is my opinion that a installer that shits random debris into your current directory is not correct. It’s kind of silly that we have to have a “random pip/distutils/setuptools” crap chunk of stuff to add to .gitignore to basically every Python package in existence. Nevermind the random stuff that doesn’t currently get written there, but will if we stop copying files out of the path and into a temporary location (I’m sure everyone wants a pip-egg-info directory in their current directory).
I’m also of the opinion that avoiding foot guns is more important than shooting for the fastest operation possible. I regularly (sometimes multiple times a week!, but often every week or two) see people tripping up on the fact that ``git clone … && pip install .`` does something different than ``git clone … && python setup.py sdist && pip install dist/*``. Files suddenly go missing and they have no idea why. If they’re lucky, they’ll figure out they need to modify some combination of package_data, data_files, and MANIFEST.in to make it work, if they’re not lucky they just sit there dumbfounded at it.
Also also, notice elsewhere in the thread where Thomas notes that flit can't build an sdist from an unpacked sdist. It seems like 'pip install unpacked-sdist/' is an important use case to support…
If the build tool gives us a mechanism to determine if something is an unpacked sdist or not so we can fallback to just copying in that case, that is fine with me. The bad case is generally only going to be hit on VCS checkouts or other not sdist kinds of source trees.
— Donald Stufft
-- Nathaniel J. Smith -- https://vorpus.org