buildmatrix

Build a matrix of conda packages


License
BSD-3-Clause
Install
pip install buildmatrix==0.0.5

Documentation

buildmatrix

Build Status codecov PyPI version

buildmatrix is a thin wrapper around conda-build that does four things:

  1. Build conda packages for the outer product of python versions and numpy versions with one command line invocation.

  2. Compare against a channel on an anaconda server (defaults to anaconda.org/anaconda) and only build the packages that do not already exist

  3. Build conda packages from git source in addition to tarballs. This is the primary difference between this tool and conda-build-all.
    You can use the conda GIT_* variables in your conda recipes and buildmatrix will go and clone the git repo and evaluate the GIT_* variables when determining if it should build the package or not (the second point above)

  4. If you point buildmatrix at a folder full of conda recipes, it will examine all of the build/run/test time dependencies that are found in all of the recipes and build a dependency graph. The build order will then be determined by starting with the recipes that are not dependent on other recipes that are slated to be built.

Usage

$ buildmatrix -h
usage: buildmatrix [-h] [-p [PYTHON [PYTHON ...]]] [-c [CHANNEL]] [-l [LOG]]
                   [--numpy [NUMPY [NUMPY ...]]] [-v] [--pdb]
                   [--allow-failures] [--dry-run] [--plan-file PLAN_FILE]
                   [recipes_path]

Tool for building a folder of conda recipes where only the ones that don't
already exist are built.

positional arguments:
  recipes_path          path to recipes that should be built

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -p [PYTHON [PYTHON ...]], --python [PYTHON [PYTHON ...]]
                        Python version to build conda packages for
  -c [CHANNEL], --channel [CHANNEL]
                        Conda channel to check for pre-existing artifacts
  -l [LOG], --log [LOG]
                        Name of the log file to write
  --numpy [NUMPY [NUMPY ...]]
                        List the numpy versions to build packages for.
                        Defaults to ['1.11']
  -v, --verbose         Enable DEBUG level logging. Default is INFO
  --pdb                 Enable PDB debugging on exception
  --allow-failures      Enable build.py to continue building conda packages if
                        one of them fails
  --dry-run             Figure out what to build and then exit
  --plan-file PLAN_FILE
                        File to output json version of the plan

buildmatrix depends on conda and conda_build. You can pip install buildmatrix and it will add the buildmatrix command line app and its alias bm for those of you that abhor typing more than is absolutely necessary

Most usage will look like this:

buildmatrix /path/to/recipe --python 2.7 3.4 3.5 --numpy 1.10 1.11

The above command will produce one of two things depending on if your package depends on a numpy version at build time (e.g., numpy x.x is a build requirement)

If your package depends on numpy at build time:

  • python 2.7 and numpy 1.10
  • python 3.4 and numpy 1.10
  • python 3.5 and numpy 1.10
  • python 2.7 and numpy 1.11
  • python 3.4 and numpy 1.11
  • python 3.5 and numpy 1.11

If your package does not depend on numpy at build time:

  • python 2.7 and numpy 1.11
  • python 3.4 and numpy 1.11
  • python 3.5 and numpy 1.11

--dry-run

buildmatrix tests/example-recipes/ --python 2.7 3.4 3.5 --numpy 1.10 1.11 --dry-run

Logging summary to /tmp/buildmatrix/2016.09.30-15.19
{'allow_failures': False, 'numpy': ['1.10', '1.11'], 'dry_run': True, 'python': ['2.7', '3.4', '3.5'], 'channel': 'anaconda', 'recipes_path': '/home/eric/dev/conda/buildmatrix/tests/example-recipes'}
Using Anaconda API: https://api.anaconda.org
Fetching package metadata .....
recipes_path = /home/eric/dev/conda/buildmatrix/tests/example-recipes

Figuring out which recipes need to build...
True     | 2.7   | 1.11  | linux-64/package-b-1-py27_0.tar.bz2
True     | 3.4   | 1.11  | linux-64/package-b-1-py34_0.tar.bz2
True     | 3.5   | 1.11  | linux-64/package-b-1-py35_0.tar.bz2
True     | 2.7   | 1.10  | linux-64/package-a-1-np110py27_0.tar.bz2
True     | 2.7   | 1.11  | linux-64/package-a-1-np111py27_0.tar.bz2
True     | 3.4   | 1.10  | linux-64/package-a-1-np110py34_0.tar.bz2
True     | 3.4   | 1.11  | linux-64/package-a-1-np111py34_0.tar.bz2
True     | 3.5   | 1.10  | linux-64/package-a-1-np110py35_0.tar.bz2
True     | 3.5   | 1.11  | linux-64/package-a-1-np111py35_0.tar.bz2

This is the determined build order...
linux-64/package-a-1-np110py27_0.tar.bz2
linux-64/package-a-1-np111py27_0.tar.bz2
linux-64/package-a-1-np110py34_0.tar.bz2
linux-64/package-a-1-np111py34_0.tar.bz2
linux-64/package-a-1-np110py35_0.tar.bz2
linux-64/package-a-1-np111py35_0.tar.bz2
linux-64/package-b-1-py27_0.tar.bz2
linux-64/package-b-1-py34_0.tar.bz2
linux-64/package-b-1-py35_0.tar.bz2
Dry run enabled. Exiting 0

Note a couple of things.

  1. package-a has a numpy compile-time dependency and so you see that it is slated to build against numpy 1.10 and numpy 1.11 along with the three python versions for six total. The other package (package-b) has no numpy build-time dependency, so it builds against the highest numpy version listed in the --numpy flag

  2. package-b depends on package-a in this contrived example. In the determined build order section you can see that package-a will be built before package-b.