Skip to main content

Build and publish crates with pyo3, rust-cpython and cffi bindings as well as rust binaries as python packages

Project description

Maturin

formerly pyo3-pack

Actions Status FreeBSD Crates.io PyPI Maturin User Guide Chat on Gitter

Build and publish crates with pyo3, rust-cpython and cffi bindings as well as rust binaries as python packages.

This project is meant as a zero configuration replacement for setuptools-rust and milksnake. It supports building wheels for python 3.5+ on windows, linux, mac and freebsd, can upload them to pypi and has basic pypy support.

Check out the User Guide!

Usage

You can either download binaries from the latest release or install it with pip:

pip install maturin

There are four main commands:

  • maturin new creates a new cargo project with maturin configured.
  • maturin publish builds the crate into python packages and publishes them to pypi.
  • maturin build builds the wheels and stores them in a folder (target/wheels by default), but doesn't upload them. It's possible to upload those with twine or maturin upload.
  • maturin develop builds the crate and installs it as a python module directly in the current virtualenv. Note that while maturin develop is faster, it doesn't support all the feature that running pip install after maturin build supports.

pyo3 and rust-cpython bindings are automatically detected, for cffi or binaries you need to pass -b cffi or -b bin. maturin doesn't need extra configuration files and doesn't clash with an existing setuptools-rust or milksnake configuration. You can even integrate it with testing tools such as tox. There are examples for the different bindings in the test-crates folder.

The name of the package will be the name of the cargo project, i.e. the name field in the [package] section of Cargo.toml. The name of the module, which you are using when importing, will be the name value in the [lib] section (which defaults to the name of the package). For binaries, it's simply the name of the binary generated by cargo.

Python packaging basics

Python packages come in two formats: A built form called wheel and source distributions (sdist), both of which are archives. A wheel can be compatible with any python version, interpreter (cpython and pypy, mainly), operating system and hardware architecture (for pure python wheels), can be limited to a specific platform and architecture (e.g. when using ctypes or cffi) or to a specific python interpreter and version on a specific architecture and operating system (e.g. with pyo3 and rust-cpython).

When using pip install on a package, pip tries to find a matching wheel and install that. If it doesn't find one, it downloads the source distribution and builds a wheel for the current platform, which requires the right compilers to be installed. Installing a wheel is much faster than installing a source distribution as building wheels is generally slow.

When you publish a package to be installable with pip install, you upload it to pypi, the official package repository. For testing, you can use test pypi instead, which you can use with pip install --index-url https://test.pypi.org/simple/. Note that for publishing for linux, you need to use the manylinux docker container, while for publishing from your repository you can use the messense/maturin-action github action.

pyo3 and rust-cpython

For pyo3 and rust-cpython, maturin can only build packages for installed python versions. On linux and mac, all python versions in PATH are used. If you don't set your own interpreters with -i, a heuristic is used to search for python installations. On windows all versions from the python launcher (which is installed by default by the python.org installer) and all conda environments except base are used. You can check which versions are picked up with the list-python subcommand.

pyo3 will set the used python interpreter in the environment variable PYTHON_SYS_EXECUTABLE, which can be used from custom build scripts. Maturin can build and upload wheels for pypy with pyo3, even though only pypy3.7-7.3 on linux is tested.

Cffi

Cffi wheels are compatible with all python versions including pypy. If cffi isn't installed and python is running inside a virtualenv, maturin will install it, otherwise you have to install it yourself (pip install cffi).

maturin uses cbindgen to generate a header file, which can be customized by configuring cbindgen through a cbindgen.toml file inside your project root. Alternatively you can use a build script that writes a header file to $PROJECT_ROOT/target/header.h.

Based on the header file maturin generates a module which exports an ffi and a lib object.

Example of a custom build script
use cbindgen;
use std::env;
use std::path::Path;

fn main() {
    let crate_dir = env::var("CARGO_MANIFEST_DIR").unwrap();

    let bindings = cbindgen::Builder::new()
        .with_no_includes()
        .with_language(cbindgen::Language::C)
        .with_crate(crate_dir)
        .generate()
        .unwrap();
    bindings.write_to_file(Path::new("target").join("header.h"));
}

Mixed rust/python projects

To create a mixed rust/python project, create a folder with your module name (i.e. lib.name in Cargo.toml) next to your Cargo.toml and add your python sources there:

my-project
├── Cargo.toml
├── my_project
│   ├── __init__.py
│   └── bar.py
├── pyproject.toml
├── Readme.md
└── src
    └── lib.rs

You can specify a different python source directory in Cargo.toml by setting package.metadata.maturin.python-source, for example

[package.metadata.maturin]
python-source = "python"

then the project structure would look like this:

my-project
├── Cargo.toml
├── python
│   └── my_project
│       ├── __init__.py
│       └── bar.py
├── pyproject.toml
├── Readme.md
└── src
    └── lib.rs

maturin will add the native extension as a module in your python folder. When using develop, maturin will copy the native library and for cffi also the glue code to your python folder. You should add those files to your gitignore.

With cffi you can do from .my_project import lib and then use lib.my_native_function, with pyo3/rust-cpython you can directly from .my_project import my_native_function.

Example layout with pyo3 after maturin develop:

my-project
├── Cargo.toml
├── my_project
│   ├── __init__.py
│   ├── bar.py
│   └── my_project.cpython-36m-x86_64-linux-gnu.so
├── Readme.md
└── src
    └── lib.rs

Python metadata

maturin supports PEP 621, you can specify python package metadata in pyproject.toml. maturin merges metadata from Cargo.toml and pyproject.toml, pyproject.toml take precedence over Cargo.toml.

To specify python dependencies, add a list dependencies in a [project] section in the pyproject.toml. This list is equivalent to install_requires in setuptools:

[project]
name = "my-project"
dependencies = ["flask~=1.1.0", "toml==0.10.0"]

Pip allows adding so called console scripts, which are shell commands that execute some function in you program. You can add console scripts in a section [project.scripts]. The keys are the script names while the values are the path to the function in the format some.module.path:class.function, where the class part is optional. The function is called with no arguments. Example:

[project.scripts]
get_42 = "my_project:DummyClass.get_42"

You can also specify trove classifiers in your Cargo.toml under project.classifiers:

[project]
name = "my-project"
classifiers = ["Programming Language :: Python"]

Source distribution

maturin supports building through pyproject.toml. To use it, create a pyproject.toml next to your Cargo.toml with the following content:

[build-system]
requires = ["maturin>=0.12,<0.13"]
build-backend = "maturin"

If a pyproject.toml with a [build-system] entry is present, maturin will build a source distribution of your package, unless --no-sdist is specified. The source distribution will contain the same files as cargo package. To only build a source distribution, pass --interpreter without any values.

You can then e.g. install your package with pip install .. With pip install . -v you can see the output of cargo and maturin.

You can use the options compatibility, skip-auditwheel, bindings, strip, cargo-extra-args and rustc-extra-args under [tool.maturin] the same way you would when running maturin directly. The bindings key is required for cffi and bin projects as those can't be automatically detected. Currently, all builds are in release mode (see this thread for details).

For a non-manylinux build with cffi bindings you could use the following:

[build-system]
requires = ["maturin>=0.12,<0.13"]
build-backend = "maturin"

[tool.maturin]
bindings = "cffi"
compatibility = "linux"

manylinux option is also accepted as an alias of compatibility for backward compatibility with old version of maturin.

To include arbitrary files in the sdist for use during compilation specify sdist-include as an array of globs:

[tool.maturin]
sdist-include = ["path/**/*"]

There's a maturin sdist command for only building a source distribution as workaround for pypa/pip#6041.

Manylinux and auditwheel

For portability reasons, native python modules on linux must only dynamically link a set of very few libraries which are installed basically everywhere, hence the name manylinux. The pypa offers special docker images and a tool called auditwheel to ensure compliance with the manylinux rules. If you want to publish widely usable wheels for linux pypi, you need to use a manylinux docker image.

The Rust compiler since version 1.47 requires at least glibc 2.11, so you need to use at least manylinux2010. For publishing, we recommend enforcing the same manylinux version as the image with the manylinux flag, e.g. use --manylinux 2014 if you are building in quay.io/pypa/manylinux2014_x86_64. The messense/maturin-action github action already takes care of this if you set e.g. manylinux: 2014.

maturin contains a reimplementation of auditwheel automatically checks the generated library and gives the wheel the proper. If your system's glibc is too new or you link other shared libraries, it will assign the linux tag. You can also manually disable those checks and directly use native linux target with --manylinux off.

For full manylinux compliance you need to compile in a CentOS docker container. The pyo3/maturin image is based on the manylinux2010 image, and passes arguments to the maturin binary. You can use it like this:

docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/io ghcr.io/pyo3/maturin build --release  # or other maturin arguments

Note that this image is very basic and only contains python, maturin and stable rust. If you need additional tools, you can run commands inside the manylinux container. See konstin/complex-manylinux-maturin-docker for a small educational example or nanoporetech/fast-ctc-decode for a real world setup.

maturin itself is manylinux compliant when compiled for the musl target.

Code

The main part is the maturin library, which is completely documented and should be well integrable. The accompanying main.rs takes care username and password for the pypi upload and otherwise calls into the library.

The sysconfig folder contains the output of python -m sysconfig for different python versions and platform, which is helpful during development.

You need to install cffi and virtualenv (pip install cffi virtualenv) to run the tests.

There are some optional hacks that can speed up the tests (over 80s to 17s on my machine).

  1. By running cargo build --release --manifest-path test-crates/cargo-mock/Cargo.toml you can activate a cargo cache avoiding to rebuild the pyo3 test crates with every python version.
  2. Delete target/test-cache to clear the cache (e.g. after changing a test crate) or remove test-crates/cargo-mock/target/release/cargo to deactivate it.
  3. By running the tests with the faster-tests feature, binaries are stripped and wheels are only stored and not compressed.

Project details


Release history Release notifications | RSS feed

Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

maturin-0.12.18.tar.gz (155.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distributions

maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-win_arm64.whl (5.1 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3 Windows ARM64

maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-win_amd64.whl (5.9 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3 Windows x86-64

maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-win32.whl (5.4 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3 Windows x86

maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_s390x.manylinux2014_s390x.whl (9.8 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3 manylinux: glibc 2.17+ s390x

maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_ppc64le.manylinux2014_ppc64le.musllinux_1_1_ppc64le.whl (8.4 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3 manylinux: glibc 2.17+ ppc64le musllinux: musl 1.1+ ppc64le

maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_armv7l.manylinux2014_armv7l.musllinux_1_1_armv7l.whl (9.2 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3 manylinux: glibc 2.17+ ARMv7l musllinux: musl 1.1+ ARMv7l

maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.musllinux_1_1_aarch64.whl (9.2 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3 manylinux: glibc 2.17+ ARM64 musllinux: musl 1.1+ ARM64

maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_12_x86_64.manylinux2010_x86_64.musllinux_1_1_x86_64.whl (9.6 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3 manylinux: glibc 2.12+ x86-64 musllinux: musl 1.1+ x86-64

maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_12_i686.manylinux2010_i686.musllinux_1_1_i686.whl (9.7 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3 manylinux: glibc 2.12+ i686 musllinux: musl 1.1+ i686

maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-macosx_10_9_x86_64.macosx_11_0_arm64.macosx_10_9_universal2.whl (12.9 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3 macOS 10.9+ universal2 (ARM64, x86-64) macOS 10.9+ x86-64 macOS 11.0+ ARM64

maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-macosx_10_7_x86_64.whl (6.7 MB view details)

Uploaded Python 3 macOS 10.7+ x86-64

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: maturin-0.12.18.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 155.8 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: maturin/0.12.17

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 ea5e7ee199ad03a031a4b2f402a7dbaa46bf24cd2e41088420e86a9c864d7e07
MD5 324bb8601f66a56c8cb0c630f87b0926
BLAKE2b-256 d4e6927ea15d5ef6eb1ead0332ea76358f70e578a3415be6edc0013c84a06633

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-win_arm64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-win_arm64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 7d033753b038a840d3079bebe52cc5593575b35fd3e2300368240a8cefa1e47b
MD5 1ed83ebadd4afd2b39d293504ba34aef
BLAKE2b-256 659bc79dba4c1464fc911e43c8c32988025b87963d5cff0e23e7094a4db7484c

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 3931499992099628d0362cd544dc250e8e5fed1718f97ddda144c8656008492a
MD5 f4e9d8f476c9445f9e402403f1984675
BLAKE2b-256 658238535c3bf7e18db01e3b1bd7977a84f07c9adbc987316d6d4436f456d226

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-win32.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-win32.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 5.4 MB
  • Tags: Python 3, Windows x86
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: maturin/0.12.17

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-win32.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 87ba085a36706fa3be37b0720809ef9098ac2c8e8f42eea2dc10408c1e9ecda0
MD5 44845666d5ff8c25d5ce9b130462d9b5
BLAKE2b-256 4d06daadb84d22f534850c95e60707d04f743c96e3f5b8c4136751481400fc89

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_s390x.manylinux2014_s390x.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_s390x.manylinux2014_s390x.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 c168434cb5a1fb066733eea17111360722037b7cd0de9e90650f5e7cc0e11fef
MD5 76cc90a1b6f41ca45d18ace90a5e463f
BLAKE2b-256 eaca4f500594e65438268f4fb7618884645ea9a90243d9e3f08d35ad142ae247

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_ppc64le.manylinux2014_ppc64le.musllinux_1_1_ppc64le.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_ppc64le.manylinux2014_ppc64le.musllinux_1_1_ppc64le.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 86ab2c1cfc90bb1ed5395aeac6a00dc04b615d46a0e40cd458dd6e565bf3f84c
MD5 38d165b69f90d3aa00cb5b98586e55b3
BLAKE2b-256 539212638ab6a71bafdc73eecea4f11e8bde6ad32ff47cb8a2ff5900a995f80c

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_armv7l.manylinux2014_armv7l.musllinux_1_1_armv7l.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_armv7l.manylinux2014_armv7l.musllinux_1_1_armv7l.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 d286778c6d90f3b0fcebd0ffd5468e42b9239b118c387fdddba33649fe0a2c7d
MD5 e3489997ca9a6a3d323e0388ea5e7ade
BLAKE2b-256 b50dc68d020d95e637dab8e54915ec9e6259e5d9ac97546ebcf12a7902e20a36

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.musllinux_1_1_aarch64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.musllinux_1_1_aarch64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 8a43430f50ac7b2eba188c572e495b4471eae38b6030067caaacbe52da9ad8b5
MD5 b35af179d1dd80977bb2d7f7dd515c44
BLAKE2b-256 3cc9d2e7063c36750ed161dede027405822f348c5b6dcb6b70cd042bdec97893

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_12_x86_64.manylinux2010_x86_64.musllinux_1_1_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_12_x86_64.manylinux2010_x86_64.musllinux_1_1_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 be680754ba04e7eb4bde0296419c558cf093482440ee41a570ca14c0f0e78c1e
MD5 6e6687554f5d35bfd570848a1d9a0a4f
BLAKE2b-256 2e2b695ecbfc4fe81a89fe3c8973e1967b25d69780c816b4e8cfd90ba45e6f9e

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_12_i686.manylinux2010_i686.musllinux_1_1_i686.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-manylinux_2_12_i686.manylinux2010_i686.musllinux_1_1_i686.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 c4b12a24f9b7c2142f92f15cbbb3a2b068da6dd271c1c825168b1c6e70aa1dda
MD5 61b2b4d26877cf16055710ed8c92435b
BLAKE2b-256 3881d5d3e9fccabbd55b43dcce3966aa3fbe0ad95fd42c95d64ee6c5019c35d8

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-macosx_10_9_x86_64.macosx_11_0_arm64.macosx_10_9_universal2.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-macosx_10_9_x86_64.macosx_11_0_arm64.macosx_10_9_universal2.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 b82a1a689c9e9d8874b8378e42844e718811eee61a4868dfef19c392e46d5299
MD5 1d1fc28c351b142e24d9a2370eaa61df
BLAKE2b-256 01fcc5ae1282a7658928ef9787e781291156f90984dcd3e361c58118e32a1b39

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-macosx_10_7_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for maturin-0.12.18-py3-none-macosx_10_7_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 f611e3285617a1bc2eb5d7a6aa310a3b6e86f8406c3049984877d092ed93b44f
MD5 f8b24a7860abb5c4b3cb419157dc205c
BLAKE2b-256 1043d539b6b8b712e15195ae35a2edfec976a4134ac87cab0b0d17ae2cdd7470

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page