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Meta-package providing the oldest supported Numpy for a given Python version and platform

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PyPI

Deprecation notice for NumPy 2.0

This package is deprecated.

Until NumPy 1.25.0 this package was needed to be able to target the oldest supported NumPy version for packages using the NumPy C API. That targeting was necessary in order to obtain wheel for distribution on PyPI. However, a new "C API exporting" feature in NumPy 1.25.0 made that unnecessary. And with NumPy 2.0, it is now actually necessary to use >=2.0 at build time for packages that want to support both NumPy 1.xx and 2.0.

All users should migrate to expressing a build dependency on numpy directly, according to the guidance given in Adding a dependency on NumPy.

[build-system]
requires = ["numpy>=2.0,<3"]

Python 3.13 is supported as of NumPy 2.1. For older Python versions this package can still be used to compile against NumPy 1.xx.

[build-system]
requires = [
    "oldest-supported-numpy; python_version<='3.8'",
    "numpy>=1.25,<2; python_version>'3.8'",
]

About

This is a meta-package which can be used in pyproject.toml files to automatically provide as a build-time dependency the oldest version of NumPy that supports the given Python version and platform. In case of platforms for which NumPy has prebuilt wheels, the provided version also has a prebuilt NumPy wheel.

The reason to use the oldest available NumPy version as a build-time dependency is because of ABI compatibility. Binaries compiled with old NumPy versions are binary compatible with newer NumPy versions, but not vice versa. This meta-package exists to make dealing with this more convenient, without having to duplicate the same list manually in all packages requiring it.

In other words:

[build-system]
requires = [
    "wheel",
    "setuptools",
    "numpy==1.13.3; python_version=='3.5'",
    "numpy==1.13.3; python_version=='3.6'",
    "numpy==1.14.5; python_version=='3.7'",
    # more numpy requirements...
]

can be replaced by:

[build-system]
requires = ["wheel", "setuptools", "oldest-supported-numpy"]

And as new Python versions are released, the pyproject.toml file does not need to be updated.

Q&A

Why define the NumPy pinnings using install_requires in this repository?

The NumPy version pinnings are defined inside the setup.cfg file as install_requires dependencies, rather than as build-time dependencies inside pyproject.toml. This is deliberate, since NumPy is not actually required to build wheels of oldest-supported-numpy. What we need here is to make sure that when oldest-supported-numpy is installed into the build environment of a package using it, NumPy gets installed too as a runtime dependency inside the build environment.

Another way to think about this is that since we only publish (universal) wheels of oldest-supported-numpy, the wheel contains no pyproject.toml, setup.cfg, or setup.py code - it only contains metadata including dependencies which get installed by pip when oldest-supported-numpy is installed.

Can I use this if my package requires a recent version of NumPy?

In many cases, even though your package may require a version of NumPy that is more recent than the pinned versions here, this is often a runtime requirement, i.e. for running (rather than building) your package. In many cases, unless you use recent features of the NumPy C API, you will still be able to build your package with an older version of NumPy and therefore you will still be able to use oldest-supported-numpy. You can still impose a more recent NumPy requirement in install_requires

What if a bug in NumPy that affects me is fixed only in a newer release?

If oldest-supported-numpy pins a numpy version that is broken for everyone using a certain OS/platform/interpreter combination, we can update the == pin to a newer release. In general, building against a newer bugfix release (i.e., a higher Y value for a 1.X.Y version number) is safe to do. Newer minor versions will likely not be ABI-compatible, so are much more difficult to change. If a bug only affects some uses cases (e.g., versions < 1.20.3 don't work on Windows when using f2py), the pin cannot be updated because it will affect backwards compatibility of oldest-supported-numpy. In that case, it is recommended that you add the needed constraint directly in your own pyproject.toml file. For example:

[build-system]
requires = [
    "wheel",
    "numpy==1.19.0; python_version<='3.8' and platform_system=='Windows' and platform_python_implementation != 'PyPy'",
    "oldest-supported-numpy; python_version>'3.8' or platform_system!='Windows' or platform_python_implementation == 'PyPy'",
    # more requirements (if needed) ...
]

Note that when you do this, it is important to ensure the conditions are such that there is exactly one pin possible for a given platform configuration. Otherwise your build will fail or pip may refuse to install your package only on that configuration (so you likely won't see it in CI). The oldest-supported-numpy repository contains tests, so for safety you may want to implement your constraints in its setup.cfg and run the tests with pytest to validate those constraints.

Why isn't oldest-supported-numpy available for Conda, Homebrew, Debian, etc.?

The pyproject.toml format is specific to PyPI. Other packaging systems have their own metadata formats and ways of specifying dependencies. Typically they don't need anything like oldest-supported-numpy because either (a) they ship only a single NumPy version for a given release (typically the case for Linux distros and Homebrew), or (b) they have a more explicit way of managing ABI compatibility (see for example conda-forge's pin_compatible feature: https://conda-forge.org/docs/maintainer/knowledge_base.html#linking-numpy).

What about having a catchier name for this package?

The current name is not very catchy as package names go, but it is very descriptive. This package is only meant to be used in pyproject.toml files for defining build-time dependencies, so it's more important to have a descriptive than a catchy name!

What if I think that one of the pinnings is wrong or out of date?

Please feel free to open an issue or a pull request if you think something is wrong or could be improved!