Skip to main content

Modern, PEP 517 compliant build backend for creating Python packages with

Project description

Python Wheel Documentation PyPI - Downloads

py-build-cmake

Modern, PEP 517 compliant build backend for creating Python packages with extensions built using CMake.

Features

  • Building and packaging C, C++ or Fortran extension modules for Python using CMake
  • Declarative configuration using pyproject.toml (PEP 621)
  • Editable/development installations for Python modules (PEP 660)
  • Easy integration with pybind11 and nanobind, with stable ABI support
  • Stub generation for type checking and autocompletion
  • Customizable CMake configuration, build, and installation options
  • Support for multiple installation configurations and components, across different Wheel packages
  • First-class cross-compilation support
  • Reproducible source distributions
  • No dependency on setuptools
  • Compatible with cibuildwheel for building Wheels

Installation

The py-build-cmake package is available on PyPI:

pip install py-build-cmake

Documentation

The documentation can be found on https://tttapa.github.io/py-build-cmake.

The format of the configuration file is explained in Config.md.

Alternatively, use the command-line interface to get the documentation for all supported options:

py-build-cmake config format

To get started quickly, have a look at the following section and the README in examples/minimal, which goes over the project structure and the configuration files you'll need.

Usage

If you don't have one already, add a pyproject.toml configuration file to your project's repository. Specify the mandatory project metadata (PyPA: Declaring project metadata), and tell py-build-cmake how to build your CMake project. For example:

[project] # Project metadata
name = "example-project"
readme = "README.md"
requires-python = ">=3.7"
license = { "file" = "LICENSE" }
authors = [{ "name" = "Pieter P", "email" = "pieter.p.dev@outlook.com" }]
keywords = ["some", "keywords"]
classifiers = ["Topic :: Scientific/Engineering"]
urls = { "Documentation" = "https://tttapa.github.io/py-build-cmake" }
dependencies = ["numpy"]
dynamic = ["version", "description"]

[build-system] # How pip and other frontends should build this project
requires = ["py-build-cmake~=0.2.0a2"]
build-backend = "py_build_cmake.build"

[tool.py-build-cmake.module] # Where to find the Python module to package
directory = "src-python"

[tool.py-build-cmake.sdist] # What to include in source distributions
include = ["CMakeLists.txt", "src/*"]

[tool.py-build-cmake.cmake] # How to build the CMake project
build_type = "RelWithDebInfo"
source_path = "src"
build_args = ["-j"]
install_components = ["python_modules"]

[tool.py-build-cmake.stubgen] # Whether and how to generate typed stub files

The README of examples/minimal describes this configuration file in much more detail.

Then use pip, build or another PEP 517 compatible frontend to build and/or install the package.

Build sdist and wheel packages you can upload to PyPI:

python -m pip install -U build
python -m build . # find the sdist and wheel file in the 'dist' folder

Install the package in the current environment:

pip install .    # normal installation
pip install -e . # editable installation

Examples

As an introduction to py-build-cmake, see examples/minimal for a detailed overview of the configuration files and the directory structure, using a very simple Python module as an example.
For a more advanced, real-world example, see examples/pybind11-project and examples/nanobind-project.
If you are interested in packaging C/C++/Fortran programs using py-build-cmake, have a look at examples/minimal-program.
See the examples folder for a full list of examples.

Projects using py-build-cmake

If you need more examples, you can look at the following projects using py-build-cmake as their Python build backend:

Alternatives and related tools

  • scikit-build-core: alternative CMake build backend, successor of scikit-build
  • meson-python: Meson build backend
  • flit: pure-Python packaging tool and build backend
  • hatchling: build backend of the Hatch project manager, supports build hooks
  • poetry-core: pure-Python build backend for the Poetry package manager
  • crossenv: tool to trick setuptools into cross-compiling by monkey patching the sysconfig and distutils modules

Planned features

  • macOS support
  • Entry point support
  • Namespace package support (PEP 420)
  • Doxygen and Sphinx support

Project details


Download files

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

Source Distribution

py_build_cmake-0.2.0a2.tar.gz (38.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

py_build_cmake-0.2.0a2-py3-none-any.whl (41.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file py_build_cmake-0.2.0a2.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: py_build_cmake-0.2.0a2.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 38.2 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/4.0.2 CPython/3.11.4

File hashes

Hashes for py_build_cmake-0.2.0a2.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 043d32a134b34116fb57116971d52ef3b4c299fa445ef90ba76dd6048f96ed36
MD5 f945cc52c7f5b8063cbdfa7a2e821ab8
BLAKE2b-256 87bad99142949f47f69928958a83631c8778f9a0e955737309243de41c9afb3a

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file py_build_cmake-0.2.0a2-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for py_build_cmake-0.2.0a2-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 a14b3807d9eb485c4c348205f22366489f4d0361fd5802bef7497276fa3881b1
MD5 2b4fc2d8fb91432bec2876f79b724899
BLAKE2b-256 fd39500be636c8afa5ba70edc3de513271268e126bef456068fc39301d164afc

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