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uv IS the Future of Python Packaging ๐๐ฆ
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Iโve been mostly a poetry guy but have tested out uv a bit lately. Two main advantages I see are being able to install Python (I relied on pyenv before) and itโs waaay faster at solving/installing dependencies.
Yeah, it certainly looks nice, but my problems are:
So for me, it needs to at least have feature parity w/ poetry to seriously consider.
uv is still faster with a cold cache
and uv does have dep groups
about the second problem, there's an issue open on writing a migration guide, but migrating manually is not too difficult.
I'm not really worried about the migration work, from what I can tell it's basically just moving a few things around. I'm more worried about losing features the team likes largely for performance reasons.
Our primary use cases are:
ruff
, we'll just standardize on a version of that (like we do withpoetry
today)I like the syntax
poetry
has, but I'd be willing to use something else, like in PEP 735.One thing we also need is a way to define additional package repos since we use an internal repo. I didn't see that called out in the PEP, and I haven't looked at
uv
enough to know what their plan is, but this issue seems to be intended to fix it. We specify a specific repo for a handful of packages in each project, and we need that to work as well.I'm currently looking to use
ruff
to replace some of our dev tools, and I'll look back atuv
in another release or two to see what the progress is on our blockers.You should be using dockers cache mounts
https://docs.docker.com/build/cache/optimize/#use-cache-mounts
Good call. We have some other tech debt related to our docker usage, so I'll add this to the list.