The pymsbuild build backend.
Project description
pymsbuild
This is a PEP 517 backend for building packages via MSBuild or dotnet build
.
Configuration file
The file is named _msbuild.py
, and is executed by running python -m pymsbuild
.
The package definition specifies all the files that end up in the released packages.
from pymsbuild import *
METADATA = {
"Metadata-Version": "2.1",
"Name": "package",
"Version": "1.0.0",
"Author": "My Name",
"Author-email": "myemail@example.com",
"Description": File("README.md"),
"Description-Content-Type": "text/markdown",
"Classifier": [
"Development Status :: 3 - Alpha",
"Intended Audience :: Developers",
"Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9",
],
}
PACKAGE = Package(
"my_package",
PyFile(r"my_package\*.py"),
PydFile(
"_accelerator",
CSourceFile(r"win32\*.c"),
IncludeFile(r"win32\*.h"),
),
Package(
"subpackage",
PyFile(r"subpackage\*.py"),
),
)
Note that subpackages must be specified as a Package
element, as the
nesting of Package
elements determines the destination path. Otherwise you
will find all of your files flattened. Recursive wildcards, while partially
supported, are not going to work!
Also note that without a source=
named argument, all source paths are
relative to the configuration file.
pyproject.toml file
You will need this file in order for pip
to build your sdist, but otherwise it's
generally easier and faster to use pymsbuild
directly.
[build-system]
requires = ["pymsbuild"]
build-backend = "pymsbuild"
On Windows, a Visual Studio installation will be
required. It will be automatically detected, or the path to MSBuild can be
provided as the MSBUILD
environment variable.
On other platforms, the .NET SDK will be
required. The dotnet
command must be available on PATH
or specified as the
MSBUILD
environment variable.
Usage
Rebuild the current project in-place.
python -m pymsbuild
Interactively generate the _msbuild.py
file with project spec.
(Or at least, it will, once implemented.)
python -m pymsbuild init
Build the project and output an sdist
python -m pymsbuild sdist
Output is put into dist
by default, but can be overridden with --dist-dir
(-d
).
Build the project and output a wheel
python -m pymsbuild wheel
Output is put into dist
by default, but can be overridden with --dist-dir
(-d
).
Clean any recent builds
python -m pymsbuild clean
Advanced Examples
Dynamic METADATA
Metadata may be dynamically generated, either on import or with the
init_METADATA
function. This function is called and must either
return the metadata dict to use, or update METADATA
directly.
However, if a PKG-INFO
file is found adjacent to the configuration
file, it will be used verbatim. Sdist generation adds this file, so all
metadata is static from that point onward. init_METADATA
is not
called in this case.
from pymsbuild import *
METADATA = {
"Metadata-Version": "2.1",
"Name": "package",
"Version": os.getenv("VERSION", "1.0.0"),
"Author": "My Name",
"Author-email": "myemail@example.com",
"Description": File("README.md"),
"Description-Content-Type": "text/markdown",
"Classifier": [
"Development Status :: 3 - Alpha",
"Intended Audience :: Developers",
"Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9",
],
}
def init_METADATA():
if os.getenv("BUILD_BUILDNUMBER"):
METADATA["Version"] = f"1.0.{os.getenv('BUILD_BUILDNUMBER', '')}"
# Updated METADATA directly, so no need to return anything
Separate packages
Packages are just Python objects, so they may be kept in variables and
used later. They also expose a members
attribute, which is a list, so
that members can be added or inserted later.
After the entire module is executed, the package in PACKAGE
is the
only one used to generate output.
P1 = Package(
"submodule",
PyFile(r"src\submodule\__init__.py")
)
P2 = Package(
"submodule_2",
PyFile(r"src\submodule_2\__init__.py")
)
PACKAGE = Package("my_package", P1)
PACKAGE.members.append(P2)
Dynamic packages
After import, if an init_PACKAGE(tag=None)
function exists it will be
called with the intended platform tag. It must modify or return
PACKAGE
. This function is called for in-place, sdist and wheel
generation, however, for sdists (and any scenario that should not
generate binaries), tag
will be None
. Otherwise, it will be a
string like cp38-cp38-win32
.
X64_ACCELERATOR = PydFile(
"_my_package",
CSourceFile(r"win32\*.c"),
IncludeFile(r"win32\*.h"),
)
PACKAGE = Package(
"my_package",
PyFile(r"my_package\*.py"),
)
def init_PACKAGE(tag=None):
if tag.endswith("-win_amd64"):
PACKAGE.members.append(X64_ACCELERATOR)
Source offsets
If you keep your source in a src
folder (recommended), provide the
source=
argument to Package
in order to properly offset filenames.
Because it is a named argument, it must be provided last.
This is important for sdist generation and in-place builds, which need to match package layout with source layout. Simply prefixing filename patterns with the additional directory is not always sufficient.
Note that this will also offset subpackages, and that subpackages may
include additional source
arguments. However, it only affects
sources, while the package name (the first argument) determines where
in the output the package will be located. In-place builds will create
new folders in your source tree if it does not match the final
structure.
PACKAGE = Package(
"my_package",
PyFile(r"my_package\__init__.py"),
source="src",
)
Project file override
Both Package
and PydFile
types generate MSBuild project files and
execute them as part of build, including sdists. For highly customised
builds, this generation may be overridden completely by specifying the
project_file
named argument. All members are then ignored.
By doing this, you take full responsibility for a valid build, including providing a number of undocumented and unsupported targets.
Recommendations:
- lock your
pymsbuild
dependency to a specific version inpyproject.toml
- generate project files first and modify, rather than writing by hand
- read the
pymsbuild
source code, especially thetargets
folder - consider contributing/requesting your feature
PACKAGE = Package(
"my_package",
PydFile("_accelerator", project_file=r"src\accelerator.vcxproj")
)
Compiler/linker arguments
Rather than overriding the entire project file, there are a number of ways to inject arbitrary values into a project. These require familiarity with MSBuild files and the toolsets you are building with.
The Property
element inserts a <PropertyGroup>
with the value you
specifiy at the position in the project the element appears.
Note that project files also interpret (most) named arguments as properties, so the two properties shown here are equivalent.
PYD = PydFile(
"module",
Property("WindowsSdkVersion", "10.0.18363.0"),
WindowsSdkVersion="10.0.18363.0",
...
)
The ItemDefinition
element inserts an <ItemDefinitionGroup>
with
the type and metadata you specify at the position in the project the
element appears.
PYD = PydFile(
"module",
ItemDefinition("ClCompile", PreprocessorDefinitions="Py_LIMITED_API"),
...
)
The ConditionalValue
item may wrap any element value to add
conditions or concatenate the value. This may also be used on source
arguments for file elements.
...
Property("Arch", ConditionalValue("x86", condition="$(Platform) == 'Win32'")),
Property("Arch", ConditionalValue("x64", if_empty=True)),
...
ItemDefinition(
"ClCompile",
AdditionalIncludeDirectories=
ConditionalValue(INCLUDES + ";", prepend=True),
ProprocessorDefinitions=
ConditionalValue(";Py_LIMETED_API", append=True),
),
...
ConditionalValue
may also be used to dynamically update values in the
init_PACKAGE
function, allowing you to keep the structure mostly
static but insert values from the current METADATA
(which is fully
evaluated by the time init_PACKAGE
is called).
VER = ConditionalValue("1.0.0")
PYD = PydFile(
"module",
Property("Version", VER),
CSourceFile(r"src\*.c"),
IncludeFile(r"src\*.h"),
)
def init_PACKAGE(tag):
VER.value = METADATA["Version"]
As a last resort, the LiteralXml
element inserts plain text directly
into the generated file. It will be inserted as a child of the
top-level Project
element.
...
LiteralXml("<Import Project='my_props.props' />"),
...
Alternate config file
To use a configuration file other than _msbuild.py
, specify the
--config
(-c
) argument or the PYMSBUILD_CONFIG
environment
variable.
python -m pymsbuild --config build-spec.py sdist
python -m pymsbuild --config build-spec.py wheel
# Alternatively
$env:PYMSBUILD_CONFIG = "build-spec.py"
python -m pymsbuild sdist wheel
Generated sdists will rename the configuration file back to
_msbuild.py
in the package to ensure that builds work correctly.
There is no need to override the configuration file path when
building from sdists.
Cross-compiling wheels
Cross compilation may be used by overriding the wheel tag, ABI tag, or build platform, as well as the source for Python's includes and libraries. These all use environment variables, to ensure that the same setting can flow through a package installer's own process.
It is also possible to permanently override the wheel tag by adding
a 'WheelTag'
metadata value, or the ABI tag by adding an 'AbiTag'
metadata value.
The wheel tag is used for the generated wheel file, and to fill in a missing ABI tag and platform.
The ABI tag is used for any native extension modules, and to fill in a missing platform.
The platform is used to determine the MSBuild target platform. It
cannot yet automatically select the correct Python libraries, and so
you will need to set PYTHON_INCLUDES
and PYTHON_LIBS
(or just
PYTHON_PREFIX
) environment variables as well to locate the correct
files.
You can also override the platform toolset with the 'PlatformToolset'
metadata value, for scenarios where this information ought to be
included in an sdist.
The set of valid platforms for auto-generated .pyd
project files are
hard-coded into pymsbuild
and are currently Win32
, x64
, ARM
and
ARM64
. Custom project files may use whatever they like.
# Directly specify the resulting wheel tag
# This is used for the wheel filename/metadata
$env:PYMSBUILD_WHEEL_TAG = "py38-cp38-win_arm64"
# Directly set the ABI tag (or else taken from wheel tag)
# This is used for extension module filenames
$env:PYMSBUILD_ABI_TAG = "cp38-win_arm64"
# Specify the Python platform (or else taken from ABI tag)
# This is used for MSBuild options
$env:PYMSBUILD_PLATFORM = "win_arm64"
# Specify the paths to ARM64 headers and libs
$env:PYTHON_INCLUDES = "$pyarm64\Include"
$env:PYTHON_LIBS = "$pyarm64\libs"
# Alternatively, just specify the prefix directory
$env:PYTHON_PREFIX = $pyarm64
# If necessary, specify an alternate C++ toolset
$env:PLATFORMTOOLSET = "Intel C++ Compiler 19.1"
Cython
Cython support is available from the pymsbuild.cython
module.
from pymsbuild import PydFile, ItemDefinition
from pymsbuild.cython import CythonIncludeFile, CythonPydFile, PyxFile
PACKAGE = CythonPydFile(
"cython_module",
ItemDefinition("PyxCompile", IncludeDirs=PYD_INCLUDES),
CythonIncludeFile("mod.pxd"),
PyxFile("mod.pyx"),
)
The CythonPydFile
type derives from the regular PydFile
and also
generates a C++ project, so all options that would be available there may
also be used.
The PyxCompile.IncludeDirs
metadata specifies search paths for Cython
headers (*.pxd
). You may also need to specify
ClCompile.AdditionalIncludeDirectories
for any C/C++ headers.
Two-Step Builds
By default, the sdist
and wheel
commands will perform the entire
process in a single invocation. However, sometimes there are build steps
that must be manually performed between compilation and packaging.
To run the build in two stages, invoke as normal, but add the
--layout-dir
argument followed by a directory. The package will be
laid out in this directory so that you can perform any extra processing.
Later, use the pack
command and specify the --layout-dir
again. If
you have added new files into the layout directory, specify each with an
--add
option (filenames starting with @
are treated as
newline-separated, UTF-8 encoded text files listing each new file). These
paths may be absolute or relative to the layout directory, but only files
located within the layout directory will be included.
All other options are retained from the original invocation.
python -m pymsbuild sdist --layout-dir tmp
# Generate additional metadata in tmp/EXTRA.txt
python -m pymsbuild pack --layout-dir tmp --add tmp/EXTRA.txt
Experimental Features
DLL Packing
Experimental.
DLL Packing is a way to compile a complete Python package (.py
source
and resource files) into a Windows DLL. It is fundamentally equivalent
to packing in a ZIP file, except that additional native code may also be
included (though not an entire native module), and the whole file may be
cryptographically signed and validated by the operating system.
DllPackage
is a drop-in substitute for the Package
type.
from pymsbuild import *
from pymsbuild.dllpack import *
PACKAGE = DllPackage(
"packed_package",
PyFile("__init__.py"),
File("data.txt"),
...
)
DllPackage
is a subclass of PydFile
, and so all logic or elements
by that type are also available. ClCompile
elements will be compiled
and linked into the output and functions may be exposed in the root of
the package using the Function
element.
// extra.c
PyObject *my_func(PyObject *, PyObject *args, PyObject **kwargs) {
...
}
PACKAGE = DllPackage(
"packed_package",
PyFile("__init__.py"),
CSourceFile("extra.c"),
CFunction("my_func"),
...
)
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