Rules for building wheels.

Rules

py_package

A rule to select all files in transitive dependencies of deps which belong to given set of Python packages.

This rule is intended to be used as data dependency to py_wheel rule

Example usage (generated)

load("@rules_python//python:packaging.bzl", "py_package")

py_package(
    # A unique name for this target.
    name = "",
)

name

A unique name for this target.

deps

packages

List of Python packages to include in the distribution. Sub-packages are automatically included.


py_wheel

A rule for building Python Wheels.

Wheels are Python distribution format defined in https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0427/.

This rule packages a set of targets into a single wheel.

Currently only pure-python wheels are supported.

Examples:

# Package some specific py_library targets, without their dependencies
py_wheel(
    name = "minimal_with_py_library",
    # Package data. We're building "example_minimal_library-0.0.1-py3-none-any.whl"
    distribution = "example_minimal_library",
    python_tag = "py3",
    version = "0.0.1",
    deps = [
        "//examples/wheel/lib:module_with_data",
        "//examples/wheel/lib:simple_module",
    ],
)

# Use py_package to collect all transitive dependencies of a target,
# selecting just the files within a specific python package.
py_package(
    name = "example_pkg",
    # Only include these Python packages.
    packages = ["examples.wheel"],
    deps = [":main"],
)

py_wheel(
    name = "minimal_with_py_package",
    # Package data. We're building "example_minimal_package-0.0.1-py3-none-any.whl"
    distribution = "example_minimal_package",
    python_tag = "py3",
    version = "0.0.1",
    deps = [":example_pkg"],
)

Example usage (generated)

load("@rules_python//python:packaging.bzl", "py_wheel")

py_wheel(
    # A unique name for this target.
    name = "",
    # Name of the distribution
    distribution = "",
    # Version number of the package
    version = "",
)

name

A unique name for this target.

abi

Python ABI tag. 'none' for pure-Python wheels.

author

A string specifying the author of the package.

author_email

A string specifying the email address of the package author.

classifiers

A list of strings describing the categories for the package. For valid classifiers see https://pypi.org/classifiers

console_scripts

Deprecated console_script entry points, e.g. {'main': 'examples.wheel.main:main'}.

Deprecated: prefer the entry_points attribute, which supports console_scripts as well as other entry points.

deps

Targets to be included in the distribution.

The targets to package are usually py_library rules or filesets (for packaging data files).

Note it's usually better to package py_library targets and use entry_points attribute to specify console_scripts than to package py_binary rules. py_binary targets would wrap a executable script that tries to locate .runfiles directory which is not packaged in the wheel.

description_file

A file containing text describing the package in a single line.

distribution

Name of the distribution.

This should match the project name onm PyPI. It's also the name that is used to refer to the package in other packages' dependencies.

entry_points

entry_points, e.g. {'console_scripts': ['main = examples.wheel.main:main']}.

extra_requires

List of optional requirements for this package

homepage

A string specifying the URL for the package homepage.

license

A string specifying the license of the package.

platform

Supported platform. Use 'any' for pure-Python wheel.

If you have included platform-specific data, such as a .pyd or .so extension module, you will need to specify the platform in standard pip format. If you support multiple platforms, you can define platform constraints, then use a select() to specify the appropriate specifier, eg:

platform = select({ "//platforms:windows_x86_64": "win_amd64", "//platforms:macos_x86_64": "macosx_10_7_x86_64", "//platforms:linux_x86_64": "manylinux2014_x86_64", })

python_requires

A string specifying what other distributions need to be installed when this one is. See the section on Declaring required dependency for details and examples of the format of this argument.

python_tag

Supported Python version(s), eg py3, cp35.cp36, etc

requires

List of requirements for this package

stamp

Whether to encode build information into the wheel. Possible values:

  • stamp = 1: Always stamp the build information into the wheel, even in --nostamp builds. This setting should be avoided, since it potentially kills remote caching for the target and any downstream actions that depend on it.

  • stamp = 0: Always replace build information by constant values. This gives good build result caching.

  • stamp = -1: Embedding of build information is controlled by the --[no]stamp flag.

Stamped targets are not rebuilt unless their dependencies change.

strip_path_prefixes

path prefixes to strip from files added to the generated package

version

Version number of the package. Note that this attribute supports stamp format strings. Eg 1.2.3-{BUILD_TIMESTAMP}


Providers

PyWheelInfo

Information about a wheel produced by py_wheel