fix(uv): respect uv.tool settings in pyproject.toml (#3811) With this we auto-detect the location of the project file based on where the first pyproject.toml file is located. Whilst this may work for majority of the cases there could be a case where the user wants to leverage the workspaces, we iterate through all pyproject.toml files and choose the one with the shortest directory path. If this does not work, we you can just override it manually. Along the way, give some advice to agents for handling flakey CI and pushing changes to PRs. Fixes #3807 --------- Co-authored-by: Richard Levasseur <richardlev@gmail.com>
This repository is the home of the core Python rules -- py_library, py_binary, py_test, and related symbols that provide the basis for Python support in Bazel. It also contains package installation rules for integrating with PyPI and other indices.
Documentation for rules_python is at https://rules-python.readthedocs.io and in the Bazel Build Encyclopedia.
Examples live in the examples directory.
The core rules are stable. Their implementation is subject to Bazel's backward compatibility policy. This repository aims to follow semantic versioning.
The Bazel community maintains this repository. Neither Google nor the Bazel team provides support for the code. However, this repository is part of the test suite used to vet new Bazel releases. See How to contribute page for information on our development workflow.
requirements.txt is how users have been defining dependencies for a long time. We support this to support legacy usecases or package managers that we don't support directly. Any additional information that we need will be retrieved from the SimpleAPI during the bzlmod extension evaluation phase. Then it will be written to the MODULE.bazel.lock file for future reuse. We have plans to support uv.lock file directly. uv is recommended for generating a fully locked requirements.txt file and we do provide a rule for it.py_binary, py_test rules should scale to large monorepos and we work hard to minimize the work done during analysis and build phase. What is more, the space requirements for should be minimal, so we strive to use symlinks rather than extracting wheels at build time. This means that for different configurations of the same build, we are not extracting the wheel multiple times thus scaling better over the time. From 2.0 onwards we are creating a virtual env for each target by creating an actual minimal virtual environment using symlinks. We plan on creating the traditional site-packages layout in the future by default.rules_python and this has resulted in a few PEPs supported within pure starlark - PEP440, PEP509.Common misconceptions:
rules_python has to keep backwards compatibility with google3. Whilst this might have been true in the past, rules_python is an open source project and any compatibility needs should come from the community - we have no requirement to keep this compatibility and are allowed to make our decisions. However, we do want to keep backwards compatibility as long as possible to not upset users with never ending migrations.rules_python is not caching pip downloads. With 2.0, we use Bazel's downloader by default and rely on bazel to provide the repository caching mechanisms. This means that for simpler setups this should result in transparent and scalable caching with the most recent bazel versions unless there are issues in the bazel itself.For detailed documentation, see https://rules-python.readthedocs.io
See Bzlmod support for more details.