| commit | e2c9d2f1f6f4a2e43cdaa46f129a433676edc9f8 | [log] [tgz] |
|---|---|---|
| author | Corentin Le Molgat <corentinl@google.com> | Fri Sep 26 12:56:09 2025 +0200 |
| committer | Mizux Seiha <mizux.dev@gmail.com> | Fri Sep 26 15:07:23 2025 +0200 |
| tree | 6c1447406226c326d4e0d5c9f48b634033eef4f7 | |
| parent | 35257000aa10b44e5bcc06755514dae9e816ac37 [diff] |
ci: add dependabot.yml
Provided rules:
pybind_extension: Builds a python extension, automatically adding the required build flags and pybind11 dependencies. It defines a target which can be included as a data dependency of a py_* target.pybind_library: Builds a C++ library, automatically adding the required build flags and pybind11 dependencies. This library can then be used as a dependency of a pybind_extension. The arguments match a cc_library.pybind_library_test: Builds a C++ test for a pybind_library. The arguments match a cc_test.To test a pybind_extension, the most common approach is to write the test in Python and use the standard py_test build rule.
To embed Python, add @rules_python//python/cc:current_py_cc_libs as a dependency to your cc_binary.
In your WORKSPACE file:
http_archive( name = "pybind11_bazel", strip_prefix = "pybind11_bazel-<version>", urls = ["https://github.com/pybind/pybind11_bazel/archive/v<version>.zip"], ) # We still require the pybind library. http_archive( name = "pybind11", build_file = "@pybind11_bazel//:pybind11-BUILD.bazel", strip_prefix = "pybind11-<version>", urls = ["https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/archive/v<version>.zip"], )
Then, in your BUILD file:
load("@pybind11_bazel//:build_defs.bzl", "pybind_extension")
In your MODULE.bazel file:
bazel_dep(name = "pybind11_bazel", version = "<version>")
Usage in your BUILD file is as described previously.