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A tool to use a pyproject.toml instead of a blender_manifest.toml to build Blender add-ons

Project description

Peeler – Simplify Your Blender Add-on Packaging

This package is under active development. Feel free to ask for help here or open an issue here. I’ll be happy to develop the feature you need. :smile:

A tool to easily package your Blender add-on

Building and installing a Blender add-on with dependencies requires manually downloading the necessary wheels and specifying their paths in blender_manifest.toml. Peeler automates this process, allowing you to package your Blender add-on without manually handling dependencies (and their own dependencies !) or manually writing their paths in blender_manifest.toml.

Since Blender 4.2, add-ons must use blender_manifest.toml instead of the standard pyproject.toml used in Python projects. Peeler lets you use pyproject.toml instead (or alongside) to simplify dependency management and streamline your workflow.

Installation

uv is required to use the Wheels feature.

If you don't have uv installed

Either install uv and run:

pip install peeler

Or install uv and peeler at the same time:

pip install peeler[uv]

If you are already a uv user

Peeler does not need to be added to your project dependencies - you can use Peeler directly as a tool:

uvx peeler [OPTIONS] COMMAND [ARGS]

Or install Peeler without uv:

uv pip install peeler

Features

Each feature can be used independently.

Manifest: Generate the blender_manifest.toml from fields in a pyproject.toml.

Wheels: Download the required wheels for packaging your add-on based on the dependencies specified in your pyproject.toml, automatically write their paths to blender_manifest.toml.

Manifest

Generate the blender_manifest.toml from fields in a pyproject.toml.

1. Ensure your pyproject.toml contains basic field values

# pyproject.toml

[project]
name = "My Awesome Add on"
version = "1.0.0"
requires-python = "==3.11.*"

2. Some metadata are specific to Blender

For instance blender_version_min, you can specify these metadata in your pyproject.toml file under the [tool.peeler.manifest] table Here's a minimal working version:

# pyproject.toml

[project]
name = "My Awesome Add on"
version = "1.0.0"
requires-python = "==3.11.*"

[tool.peeler.manifest]
blender_version_min = "4.2.0"
id = "my_awesome_add_on"
license = ["SPDX:0BSD"]
maintainer = "John Smith"
tagline = "My Add-on is awesome"

3. Run Peeler to create (or update) your blender_manifest.toml

peeler manifest /path/to/your/pyproject.toml /path/to/blender_manifest.toml
# Generated blender_manifest.toml

version = "1.0.0"
name = "My Awesome Add on"
schema_version = "1.0.0"
type = "add-on"
blender_version_min = "4.2.0"
id = "my_awesome_add_on"
license = ["SPDX:0BSD"]
maintainer = "John Smith"
tagline = "My Add-on is awesome"

The manifest is populated with values from your pyproject.toml [project] and [tool.peeler.manifest] tables, along with default values.

For a full list of required and optional values in a blender_manifest.toml visit Blender Documentation

4. Build your add-on

If your add-on has dependencies make sure to use the Wheels feature below.

Then to build your add-on use the regular Blender command:

blender --command extension build

Hint: Ensure Blender is added to your PATH

Wheels

Download the required wheels for packaging your add-on based on the dependencies specified in your pyproject.toml, automatically write their paths to blender_manifest.toml.

1. In your pyproject.toml, specify your dependencies

# pyproject.toml

[project]
name = "My Awesome Add-on"
version = "1.0.0"
requires-python = "==3.11.*"

# For instance rich and Pillow (the popular image manipulation module)

dependencies = [
    "Pillow==11.1.0",
    "rich>=13.9.4",
]

2. Run peeler wheels to download the wheels for all platforms

peeler wheels ./pyproject.toml ./blender_manifest.toml

Peeler updates your blender_manifest.toml with the downloaded wheels paths.

# Updated blender_manifest.toml

version = "1.0.0"
name = "My Awesome Add on"
schema_version = "1.0.0"
type = "add-on"
blender_version_min = "4.2.0"

# The wheels as a list of paths
wheels = [
    # Pillow wheels for all platforms
    "./wheels/pillow-11.1.0-cp311-cp311-macosx_10_10_x86_64.whl",
    "./wheels/pillow-11.1.0-cp311-cp311-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl",
    "./wheels/pillow-11.1.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_17_aarch64.manylinux2014_aarch64.whl",
    "./wheels/pillow-11.1.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_17_x86_64.manylinux2014_x86_64.whl",
    "./wheels/pillow-11.1.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_28_aarch64.whl",
    "./wheels/pillow-11.1.0-cp311-cp311-manylinux_2_28_x86_64.whl",
    "./wheels/pillow-11.1.0-cp311-cp311-musllinux_1_2_aarch64.whl",
    "./wheels/pillow-11.1.0-cp311-cp311-musllinux_1_2_x86_64.whl",
    "./wheels/pillow-11.1.0-cp311-cp311-win32.whl",
    "./wheels/pillow-11.1.0-cp311-cp311-win_amd64.whl",
    "./wheels/pillow-11.1.0-cp311-cp311-win_arm64.whl",

    # Wheels for rich and its dependencies
    "./wheels/rich-13.9.4-py3-none-any.whl",
    "./wheels/markdown_it_py-3.0.0-py3-none-any.whl",
    "./wheels/mdurl-0.1.2-py3-none-any.whl",
    "./wheels/pygments-2.18.0-py3-none-any.whl"
]

Note that the dependencies of the dependencies (and so on) specified in pyproject.toml are also downloaded, ensuring everything is packaged correctly. Pretty neat, right?

# Pillow and rich dependency tree resolved from
# dependencies = [
#    "Pillow==11.1.0",
#    "rich>=13.9.4",
# ]

My Awesome Add on v1.0.0
├── pillow v11.1.0
├── rich v13.9.4
│   ├── markdown-it-py v3.0.0
│      └── mdurl v0.1.2
│   └── pygments v2.18.0

Authors

  • Maxime Letellier - Initial work

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