qemu/pythondeps.toml

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# This file describes Python package requirements to be
# installed in the pyvenv Python virtual environment.
#
# Packages are placed in groups, which are installed using
# the ensuregroup subcommand of python/scripts/mkvenv.py.
# Each group forms a TOML section and each entry in the
# section is a TOML key-value list describing a package.
# All fields are optional; valid fields are:
#
# - accepted: accepted versions when using a system package
# - installed: fixed version to install in the virtual environment
# if a system package is not found; if not specified,
# defaults to the same as "accepted" or, if also missing,
# to the newest version available on PyPI.
# - canary: if specified, use this program name to present more
# precise error diagnostics to the user. For example,
# 'sphinx-build' can be used as a bellwether for the
# presence of 'sphinx' in the system.
[meson]
# The install key should match the version in python/wheels/
meson = { accepted = ">=1.5.0", installed = "1.5.0", canary = "meson" }
pycotap = { accepted = ">=1.1.0", installed = "1.3.1" }
[docs]
# Please keep the installed versions in sync with docs/requirements.txt
Python: bump minimum sphinx version to 3.4.3 With RHEL 8 support retired (It's been two years since RHEL9 released), our very oldest build platform version of Sphinx is now 3.4.3; and keeping backwards compatibility for versions as old as v1.6 when using domain extensions is a lot of work we don't need to do. This patch is motivated by my work creating a new QAPI domain, which unlike the dbus documentation, cannot be allowed to regress by creating a "dummy" doc when operating under older sphinx versions. Easier is to raise our minimum version as far as we can push it forwards, reducing my burden in creating cross-compatibility hacks and patches. A sampling of sphinx versions from various distributions, courtesy https://repology.org/project/python:sphinx/versions Alpine 3.16: v4.3.0 (QEMU support ended 2024-05-23) Alpine 3.17: v5.3.0 Alpine 3.18: v6.1.3 Alpine 3.19: v6.2.1 Ubuntu 20.04 LTS: EOL Ubuntu 22.04 LTS: v4.3.2 Ubuntu 22.10: EOL Ubuntu 23.04: EOL Ubuntu 23.10: v5.3.0 Ubuntu 24.04 LTS: v7.2.6 Debian 11: v3.4.3 (QEMU support ends 2024-07-xx) Debian 12: v5.3.0 Fedora 38: EOL Fedora 39: v6.2.1 Fedora 40: v7.2.6 CentOS Stream 8: v1.7.6 (QEMU support ended 2024-05-17) CentOS Stream 9: v3.4.3 OpenSUSE Leap 15.4: EOL OpenSUSE Leap 15.5: 2.3.1, 4.2.0 and 7.2.6 RHEL9 / CentOS Stream 9 becomes the new defining factor in staying at Sphinx 3.4.3 due to downstream offline build requirements that force us to use platform Sphinx instead of newer packages from PyPI. Signed-off-by: John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com> Acked-by: Paolo Bonzini <pbonzini@redhat.com> Acked-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Thomas Huth <thuth@redhat.com> Message-id: 20240703175235.239004-2-jsnow@redhat.com Signed-off-by: John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com>
2024-07-03 20:52:34 +03:00
sphinx = { accepted = ">=3.4.3", installed = "5.3.0", canary = "sphinx-build" }
sphinx_rtd_theme = { accepted = ">=0.5", installed = "1.1.1" }
[avocado]
# Note that qemu.git/python/ is always implicitly installed.
# Prefer an LTS version when updating the accepted versions of
# avocado-framework, for example right now the limit is 92.x.
avocado-framework = { accepted = "(>=103.0, <104.0)", installed = "103.0", canary = "avocado" }
pycdlib = { accepted = ">=1.11.0" }