pip/src/pip/_internal/resolution/resolvelib/resolver.py

258 lines
9.4 KiB
Python

import functools
import logging
from pip._vendor import six
from pip._vendor.packaging.utils import canonicalize_name
from pip._vendor.resolvelib import BaseReporter, ResolutionImpossible
from pip._vendor.resolvelib import Resolver as RLResolver
from pip._internal.exceptions import InstallationError
from pip._internal.req.req_set import RequirementSet
from pip._internal.resolution.base import BaseResolver
from pip._internal.resolution.resolvelib.provider import PipProvider
from pip._internal.utils.deprecation import deprecated
from pip._internal.utils.typing import MYPY_CHECK_RUNNING
from .factory import Factory
if MYPY_CHECK_RUNNING:
from typing import Dict, List, Optional, Set, Tuple
from pip._vendor.packaging.specifiers import SpecifierSet
from pip._vendor.resolvelib.resolvers import Result
from pip._vendor.resolvelib.structs import Graph
from pip._internal.cache import WheelCache
from pip._internal.index.package_finder import PackageFinder
from pip._internal.operations.prepare import RequirementPreparer
from pip._internal.req.req_install import InstallRequirement
from pip._internal.resolution.base import InstallRequirementProvider
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
def reject_invalid_constraint_types(req):
# type: (InstallRequirement) -> None
# Check for unsupported forms
problem = ""
if not req.name:
problem = "Unnamed requirements are not allowed as constraints"
elif req.link:
problem = "Links are not allowed as constraints"
elif req.extras:
problem = "Constraints cannot have extras"
if problem:
deprecated(
reason=(
"Constraints are only allowed to take the form of a package "
"name and a version specifier. Other forms were originally "
"permitted as an accident of the implementation, but were "
"undocumented. The new implementation of the resolver no "
"longer supports these forms."
),
replacement=(
"replacing the constraint with a requirement."
),
# No plan yet for when the new resolver becomes default
gone_in=None,
issue=8210
)
raise InstallationError(problem)
class Resolver(BaseResolver):
_allowed_strategies = {"eager", "only-if-needed", "to-satisfy-only"}
def __init__(
self,
preparer, # type: RequirementPreparer
finder, # type: PackageFinder
wheel_cache, # type: Optional[WheelCache]
make_install_req, # type: InstallRequirementProvider
use_user_site, # type: bool
ignore_dependencies, # type: bool
ignore_installed, # type: bool
ignore_requires_python, # type: bool
force_reinstall, # type: bool
upgrade_strategy, # type: str
py_version_info=None, # type: Optional[Tuple[int, ...]]
):
super(Resolver, self).__init__()
assert upgrade_strategy in self._allowed_strategies
self.factory = Factory(
finder=finder,
preparer=preparer,
make_install_req=make_install_req,
use_user_site=use_user_site,
force_reinstall=force_reinstall,
ignore_installed=ignore_installed,
ignore_requires_python=ignore_requires_python,
py_version_info=py_version_info,
)
self.ignore_dependencies = ignore_dependencies
self.upgrade_strategy = upgrade_strategy
self._result = None # type: Optional[Result]
def resolve(self, root_reqs, check_supported_wheels):
# type: (List[InstallRequirement], bool) -> RequirementSet
constraints = {} # type: Dict[str, SpecifierSet]
user_requested = set() # type: Set[str]
requirements = []
for req in root_reqs:
if req.constraint:
# Ensure we only accept valid constraints
reject_invalid_constraint_types(req)
name = canonicalize_name(req.name)
if name in constraints:
constraints[name] = constraints[name] & req.specifier
else:
constraints[name] = req.specifier
else:
if req.is_direct and req.name:
user_requested.add(canonicalize_name(req.name))
requirements.append(
self.factory.make_requirement_from_install_req(req)
)
provider = PipProvider(
factory=self.factory,
constraints=constraints,
ignore_dependencies=self.ignore_dependencies,
upgrade_strategy=self.upgrade_strategy,
user_requested=user_requested,
)
reporter = BaseReporter()
resolver = RLResolver(provider, reporter)
try:
try_to_avoid_resolution_too_deep = 2000000
self._result = resolver.resolve(
requirements, max_rounds=try_to_avoid_resolution_too_deep,
)
except ResolutionImpossible as e:
error = self.factory.get_installation_error(e)
if not error:
# TODO: This needs fixing, we need to look at the
# factory.get_installation_error infrastructure, as that
# doesn't really allow for the logger.critical calls I'm
# using here.
for req, parent in e.causes:
logger.critical(
"Could not find a version that satisfies " +
"the requirement " +
str(req) +
("" if parent is None else " (from {})".format(
parent.name
))
)
raise InstallationError(
"No matching distribution found for " +
", ".join([r.name for r, _ in e.causes])
)
raise
six.raise_from(error, e)
req_set = RequirementSet(check_supported_wheels=check_supported_wheels)
for candidate in self._result.mapping.values():
ireq = candidate.get_install_requirement()
if ireq is None:
continue
ireq.should_reinstall = self.factory.should_reinstall(candidate)
req_set.add_named_requirement(ireq)
return req_set
def get_installation_order(self, req_set):
# type: (RequirementSet) -> List[InstallRequirement]
"""Get order for installation of requirements in RequirementSet.
The returned list contains a requirement before another that depends on
it. This helps ensure that the environment is kept consistent as they
get installed one-by-one.
The current implementation creates a topological ordering of the
dependency graph, while breaking any cycles in the graph at arbitrary
points. We make no guarantees about where the cycle would be broken,
other than they would be broken.
"""
assert self._result is not None, "must call resolve() first"
graph = self._result.graph
weights = get_topological_weights(graph)
sorted_items = sorted(
req_set.requirements.items(),
key=functools.partial(_req_set_item_sorter, weights=weights),
reverse=True,
)
return [ireq for _, ireq in sorted_items]
def get_topological_weights(graph):
# type: (Graph) -> Dict[Optional[str], int]
"""Assign weights to each node based on how "deep" they are.
This implementation may change at any point in the future without prior
notice.
We take the length for the longest path to any node from root, ignoring any
paths that contain a single node twice (i.e. cycles). This is done through
a depth-first search through the graph, while keeping track of the path to
the node.
Cycles in the graph result would result in node being revisited while also
being it's own path. In this case, take no action. This helps ensure we
don't get stuck in a cycle.
When assigning weight, the longer path (i.e. larger length) is preferred.
"""
path = set() # type: Set[Optional[str]]
weights = {} # type: Dict[Optional[str], int]
def visit(node):
# type: (Optional[str]) -> None
if node in path:
# We hit a cycle, so we'll break it here.
return
# Time to visit the children!
path.add(node)
for child in graph.iter_children(node):
visit(child)
path.remove(node)
last_known_parent_count = weights.get(node, 0)
weights[node] = max(last_known_parent_count, len(path))
# `None` is guaranteed to be the root node by resolvelib.
visit(None)
# Sanity checks
assert weights[None] == 0
assert len(weights) == len(graph)
return weights
def _req_set_item_sorter(
item, # type: Tuple[str, InstallRequirement]
weights, # type: Dict[Optional[str], int]
):
# type: (...) -> Tuple[int, str]
"""Key function used to sort install requirements for installation.
Based on the "weight" mapping calculated in ``get_installation_order()``.
The canonical package name is returned as the second member as a tie-
breaker to ensure the result is predictable, which is useful in tests.
"""
name = canonicalize_name(item[0])
return weights[name], name