Python Dependencies

Unlike our frontend JavaScript story, where we're generally very happy pulling in dependencies, we're much more conservative on the backend. Any dependency we pull in might require us to eventually (temporarily) fork and vendor it if the upstream project no longer supports our version of Python.

Additionally, all these dependencies run on the server, making them riskier as they have direct access to customer data if they turn out to be malicious.

Adding or updating a dependency

Any new dependency needs to be thoroughly reviewed and approved by owners-python-build. This group is already automatically tagged in your PR to sentry or getsentry as soon as you edit relevant files. For other repos you might need to do it manually.

To add or update a dependency:

  1. Clone https://github.com/getsentry/pypi/.
  2. cd into your clone and run python3 -m add_pkg PKGNAME (or python3 -m add_pkg PKGNAME==PKGVERSION if you want a version other than the latest).
  3. Commit the resulting changes to a branch, open a PR in getsentry/pypi, and tag someone on your team (any engineer can approve PRs on this repo).
  4. Once your PR is merged, go back to the main repo whose dependencies you want to change (sentry, getsentry, etc.).
  5. In that repo, add to or update requirements-base.txt or requirements-dev.txt, as appropriate. Note that many of our dependencies are pinned with lower bounds only, to encourage updating to latest versions, though we do use exact pins for certain core dependencies like django. Choose whichever one feels most appropriate in your case.
  6. Run make freeze-requirements. You might need to wait a few minutes for the changes to getsentry/pypi to be deployed before this will work without erroring.
  7. Commit your changes (which should consist of changes to both one of the requirements files and its corresponding lockfile) to a branch and open a PR in the relevant repo. If it's not obvious, explain why you're adding or updating the dependency. Tag owners-python-build if they haven't already been auto-tagged.
  8. Merge your PR, pull master, and run make install py-dev.

Depending on forks

If you need to make modifications to a dependency and need to deploy the result before it is accepted upstream, you can fork the dependency.

Depending on forks is generally discouraged unless necessary, and you should make sure that the changes in your fork are not required for self-hosted to function, because they won't be included in the PyPI distribution of Sentry.

  1. Fork into the getsentry organization.
  2. Depend on the fork using library-name @ https://github.com/getsentry/<repo>/archive/<40 char sha>.zip in getsentry's requirements-base.txt.
  3. The requirement in sentry stays the same, because we upload sentry to PyPI, and PyPI does not allow us to depend on URLs.

Unclear?

If you have questions about dependencies, ask owners-python-build or in #discuss-dev-infra.

You can edit this page on GitHub.