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At any given time, the binary package python3
will represent the
current default Debian Python 3 version; the binary package python
will represent the current default Debian Python 2 version. As far as is
reasonable, Python 3 and Python 2 should be treated as separate runtime systems
with minimal interdependencies.
In some cases, Python policy explicitly references Python helper tools. For
Debian Stretch, the dh-python
package provides the only such
tools; earlier helpers have been removed from Debian.
It is a design goal to fully specify required interfaces and functions in policy for Python 3 and to avoid enshrining specific implementation details in policy. Except as noted, policy for Python 2 is the same as Python 3 with the exception of the different major version number as needed to distinguish them.
The default Debian Python version, for each of Python 3 and Python 2, should always be the latest stable upstream version that can be fully integrated in Debian.
There may be newer supported or unsupported versions included in Debian if they are not fully integrated for a particular release.
Apart from the default version, legacy versions of Python or beta releases of future upstream versions may be included as well in Debian, as long as they are needed by other packages, or as long as it seems reasonable to provide them.
Note: For the scope of this document, a Python version is synonymous with all micro versions within that minor version. e.g. Python 3.5.0 and 3.5.1 are micro versions of the same Python version 3.5, but Python 3.4 and 3.5 are indeed different versions.
For any version, the main binary package must be called
pythonX.Y
.
The set of currently supported Python 3 versions can be found in
/usr/share/python3/debian_defaults
; the supported interface to
this information is through /usr/bin/py3versions
. The set of
currently supported Python 2 versions can be found in
/usr/share/python/debian_defaults
; the supported interface to this
information is /usr/bin/pyversions
.
These files are in Python configparser format. They define (in the DEFAULT section) the following options:
default-version: The name of the interpreter for the current default Debian Python.
supported-versions: The set of interpreter names currently supported and for which modules should be built and byte-compiled. This includes default-version.
old-versions: The set of interpreter names which might still be on the system but for which modules should not be built.
unsupported-versions: The set of interpreter names which should not be supported at all, that is modules should not be built or byte-compiled for these. This includes (is a superset of) old-versions.
Newer versions might also appear in unsupported-versions before being moved to supported-versions.
For every Python version provided in Debian, the binary package
pythonX.Y
shall provide a complete
distribution for deployment of Python scripts and applications. The
package must ensure that the binary
/usr/bin/pythonX.Y
is provided.
Installation of pythonX.Y
shall provide the
modules of the upstream Python distribution with some exceptions.
Excluded are modules that cannot be included for licensing reasons (for example the profile module), for dependency tracking purposes (for example the GPL-licensed gdbm module), or that should not be included for packaging reasons (for example the tk module which depends on Xorg).
Some tools and files for the development of Python modules are split
off in a separate binary package
pythonX.Y-dev
.
Documentation will be provided separately as well.
At any time, the python3
binary package must ensure that
/usr/bin/python3
is provided, as a symlink to the current
python3.Y
executable. The package must depend on the
python3.Y
package that installs the executable.
The version of the python3
package must be greater than or equal
to 3.Y and lower than 3.Y+1.
At any time, the python
binary package must ensure that
/usr/bin/python2
is provided, as a symlink to the current
python2.Y
executable. The package must depend on the
python2.Y
package that installs the executable.
The version of the python
package must be greater than or equal to
2.Y and lower than 2.Y+1.
The python
binary package must also ensure that
/usr/bin/python
is provided, as a symlink to the current
python2.Y
executable. See PEP 394
for
details.
For every Python version provided in Debian, the binary package
pythonX.Y-minimal
might exist and should not
be depended upon by other packages except the Python runtime packages
themselves.
The different Python major versions require different interpreters (see Main packages, Section 2.2).
Python scripts that require the default Python 3 version should specify
python3
as the interpreter name.
Python scripts that require the default Python 2 version should specify
python2
as the interpreter name.
Python scripts may specify python
as the interpreter name only if
they do not require any particular version of Python. (Note: this means any
python2 version)
Python scripts that only work with a specific Python minor version must
explicitly use the versioned interpreter name
(pythonX.Y
).
Python scripts should specify the Debian Python interpreter, to ensure that the Debian Python installation is used and all dependencies on additional Python modules are met.
The preferred specification for the Python 3 interpreter is
/usr/bin/python3
(or /usr/bin/python3.Y
if
it requires Python 3.Y).
The preferred specification for the Python 2 interpreter is
/usr/bin/python2
(or /usr/bin/python2.Y
if
it requires Python 2.Y).
Scripts requiring the default Python 2 version may instead specify the
interpreter /usr/bin/python
.
Maintainers should not override the Debian Python interpreter using
/usr/bin/env name
. This is not advisable as it
bypasses Debian's dependency checking and makes the package vulnerable to
incomplete local installations of Python.
By default, Python modules are searched in the directories listed in the
PYTHONPATH environment variable and in the sys.path
Python variable. For all supported Debian releases, sys.path does
not include a /usr/lib/pythonXY.zip
entry.
Directories with private Python modules must be absent from the sys.path.
Public Python 3 modules must be installed in the system Python 3 modules
directory, /usr/lib/python3/dist-packages
.
Public Python 2 modules must be installed in the system Python 2 modules
directory /usr/lib/python2.Y/dist-packages
, where
2.Y is the Python 2 version.
A special directory is dedicated to public Python modules installed by the
local administrator, /usr/lib/python3/dist-packages
for all Python
3 versions, /usr/local/lib/python2.Y/dist-packages
for
Python 2.
For local installation of Python modules by the system administrator, special
directories are reserved. The directory
/usr/local/lib/python3/site-packages
is in the Python 3 runtime
module search path. The directory
/usr/local/lib/python2.Y/site-packages
is in the Python
2.Y runtime module search path.
Additional information on appending site-specific paths to the module search path is available in the official documentation of the site module.
Python modules which work with multiple supported Python 2 versions must
install to version-specific locations, for instance
/usr/lib/python2.6/dist-packages/foo.py
and
/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/foo.py
. These should point to a
common file.
Architecture-independent public Python 3 modules must be installed to
/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages
.
Architecture-independent public Python 2 modules should be installed to
/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages
. The historical location for
this was /usr/share/pyshared
. Since Python 2.7 is the last Python
2 version and the only supported version in Wheezy and later releases, a
version-specific location is sufficient.
The python
binary package has special hooks to allow other
packages to act upon updates to the installed runtimes.
This mechanism is required to handle changes of the default Python runtime in some packages and to enable the Python packaging helpers.
There are three supported hook types which come in the form of scripts which are invoked from the maintainer scripts of the Python runtime packages when specific installations, removals, or upgrades occur.
/usr/share/python3/runtime.d/*.rtinstall
,
/usr/share/python/runtime.d/*.rtinstall
: These are called when a
runtime is installed or becomes supported. The first argument is
rtinstall, the second argument is the affected runtime (for
example pythonX.Y
) and the third and fourth
argument are the old and new version of this packaged runtime if this runtime
was already installed but unsupported.
/usr/share/python3/runtime.d/*.rtremove
,
/usr/share/python/runtime.d/*.rtremove
: These are called when a
runtime is removed or stops being supported. The first argument is
rtremove, and the second argument is the affected runtime (for
example pythonX.Y
).
/usr/share/python3/runtime.d/*.rtupdate
,
/usr/share/python/runtime.d/*.rtupdate
: These are called when the
default runtime changes. The first argument is either
pre-rtupdate, called before changing the default runtime, or
rtupdate, called when changing the default runtime, or
post-rtupdate, called immediately afterwards. The second argument
is the old default runtime (for example
pythonX.Y
), and the third argument is the
new default runtime (for example pythonX.Z
).
Python documentation is split out in separate binary packages
pythonX.Y-doc
.
The binary package python3-doc
will always provide the
documentation for the default Debian Python 3 version. The binary package
python-doc
will always provide the documentation for the default
Debian Python 2 version.
TODO: Policy for documentation of third party packages.
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Debian Python Policy
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