Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
641 lines (476 loc) · 23.7 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

641 lines (476 loc) · 23.7 KB

Chat on Matrix

poetry2nix

poetry2nix turns Poetry projects into Nix derivations without the need to actually write Nix expressions. It does so by parsing pyproject.toml and poetry.lock and converting them to Nix derivations on the fly.

For more information, see the announcement post on the Tweag blog.

Quickstart Non-flake

You can turn your Python application into a Nix package with a few lines by adding a default.nix next to your pyproject.toml and poetry.lock files:

# file: default.nix
let
  sources = import ./nix/sources.nix;
  pkgs = import sources.nixpkgs { };
  # Let all API attributes like "poetry2nix.mkPoetryApplication" 
  # use the packages and versions (python3, poetry etc.) from our pinned nixpkgs above
  # under the hood:
  poetry2nix = import sources.poetry2nix { inherit pkgs; };
  myPythonApp = poetry2nix.mkPoetryApplication { projectDir = ./.; };
in
myPythonApp

The Nix code being executed by import sources.poetry2nix { inherit pkgs; } is ./default.nix. The resulting poetry2nix attribute set contains (only) the API attributes like mkPoetryApplication.

Hint: This example assumes that nixpkgs and poetry2nix are managed and pinned by the handy niv tool. In your terminal just run:

nix-shell -p niv
niv init
niv add nix-community/poetry2nix

You can then build your Python application with Nix by running:

nix-build default.nix

Finally, you can run your Python application from the new ./result symlinked folder:

# replace <script> with the name in the [tool.poetry.scripts] section of your pyproject.toml
./result/bin/<script>

Quickstart flake.nix

If your project uses the experimental flake.nix schema, you don't need niv. This repository provides poetry2nix as a flake as well for you to import as a flake input. For example:

# file: flake.nix
{
  description = "Python application packaged using poetry2nix";

  inputs.nixpkgs.url = "github:NixOS/nixpkgs/nixos-unstable";
  inputs.poetry2nix.url = "github:nix-community/poetry2nix";

  outputs = { self, nixpkgs, poetry2nix }:
    let
      system = "x86_64-linux";
      pkgs = nixpkgs.legacyPackages.${system};
      # create a custom "mkPoetryApplication" API function that under the hood uses
      # the packages and versions (python3, poetry etc.) from our pinned nixpkgs above:
      inherit (poetry2nix.lib.mkPoetry2Nix { inherit pkgs; }) mkPoetryApplication;
      myPythonApp = mkPoetryApplication { projectDir = ./.; };
    in
    {
      apps.${system}.default = {
        type = "app";
        # replace <script> with the name in the [tool.poetry.scripts] section of your pyproject.toml
        program = "${myPythonApp}/bin/<script>";
      };
    };
}

You can then (build and) run your Python app with

nix run .

A larger real-world setup can be found in ./templates/app/flake.nix. This example is also exported as a flake template so that you can start your poetry2nix project conveniently through:

nix flake init --template github:nix-community/poetry2nix

Additionally, this project flake provides an overlay to merge poetry2nix into your pkgs and access it as pkgs.poetry2nix. Just replace the three lines pkgs = ..., inherit ... and myPythonApp = ... above with:

pkgs = nixpkgs.legacyPackages.${system}.extend poetry2nix.overlays.default;
myPythonApp = pkgs.poetry2nix.mkPoetryApplication { projectDir = self; };

Table of contents

API

The poetry2nix public API consists of the following attributes:

  • mkPoetryApplication: Creates a Python application.
  • mkPoetryEnv: Creates a Python environment with an interpreter and all packages from poetry.lock.
  • mkPoetryPackages: Creates an attribute set providing access to the generated packages and other artifacts.
  • mkPoetryScriptsPackage: Creates a package containing the scripts from tool.poetry.scripts of the pyproject.toml.
  • mkPoetryEditablePackage: Creates a package containing editable sources. Changes in the specified paths will be reflected in an interactive nix-shell session without the need to restart it.
  • defaultPoetryOverrides: A set of bundled overrides fixing problems with Python packages.
  • overrides.withDefaults: A convenience function for specifying overrides on top of the defaults.
  • overrides.withoutDefaults: A convenience function for specifying overrides without defaults.
  • cleanPythonSources: A function to create a source filter for python projects.

mkPoetryApplication

Creates a Python application using the Python interpreter specified based on the designated poetry project and lock files. mkPoetryApplication takes an attribute set with the following attributes (attributes without default are mandatory):

  • projectDir: path to the root of the project.
  • src: project source (default: cleanPythonSources { src = projectDir; }).
  • pyproject: path to pyproject.toml (default: projectDir + "/pyproject.toml").
  • poetrylock: poetry.lock file path (default: projectDir + "/poetry.lock").
  • overrides: Python overrides to apply (default: defaultPoetryOverrides).
  • meta: application meta data (default: {}).
  • python: The Python interpreter to use (default: pkgs.python3).
  • preferWheels : Use wheels rather than sdist as much as possible (default: false).
  • groups: Which Poetry 1.2.0+ dependency groups to install (default: [ ]).
  • checkGroups: Which Poetry 1.2.0+ dependency groups to install (independently of groups) to run unit tests (default: [ "dev" ]).
  • extras: Which Poetry extras to install (default: [ "*" ], all extras).

Other attributes are passed through to buildPythonApplication.

Make sure to add in your pyproject.toml the py-object for your main(). Otherwise, the result is empty.

[tool.poetry.scripts]
poetry = "poetry.console.application:main"

Example

poetry2nix.mkPoetryApplication {
    projectDir = ./.;
}

Dependency environment

The resulting derivation also has the passthru attribute dependencyEnv, which is an environment with a python interpreter, all non-development dependencies and your application. This can be used if your application doesn't provide any binaries on its own and instead relies on dependencies binaries to call its modules (as is often the case with celery or gunicorn). For example, if your application defines a CLI for the module admin and a gunicorn app for the module web, a working default.nix would contain

let
    app = poetry2nix.mkPoetryApplication {
        projectDir = ./.;
    };
in app.dependencyEnv

After building this expression, your CLI and app can be called with these commands

./result/bin/python -m admin
./result/bin/gunicorn web:app

If you prefer to build a single binary that runs gunicorn web:app, use pkgs.writeShellApplication for a simple wrapper.

Note: If you need to perform overrides on the application, use app.dependencyEnv.override { app = app.override { ... }; }. See ./tests/dependency-environment/default.nix for a full example.

mkPoetryEnv

Creates an environment that provides a Python interpreter along with all dependencies declared by the designated poetry project and lock files. Also allows package sources of an application to be installed in editable mode for fast development. mkPoetryEnv takes an attribute set with the following attributes (attributes without default are mandatory):

  • projectDir: path to the root of the project.
  • pyproject: path to pyproject.toml (default: projectDir + "/pyproject.toml").
  • poetrylock: poetry.lock file path (default: projectDir + "/poetry.lock").
  • overrides: Python overrides to apply (default: defaultPoetryOverrides).
  • python: The Python interpreter to use (default: pkgs.python3).
  • editablePackageSources: A mapping from package name to source directory, these will be installed in editable mode. Note that path dependencies with develop = true will be installed in editable mode unless explicitly passed to editablePackageSources as null. (default: {}).
  • extraPackages: A function taking a Python package set and returning a list of extra packages to include in the environment. This is intended for packages deliberately not added to pyproject.toml that you still want to include. An example of such a package may be pip. (default: (ps: [ ])).
  • preferWheels : Use wheels rather than sdist as much as possible (default: false).
  • groups: Which Poetry 1.2.0+ dependency groups to install (default: [ "dev" ]).
  • checkGroups: Which Poetry 1.2.0+ dependency groups to install (independently of groups) to run unit tests (default: [ "dev" ]).
  • extras: Which Poetry extras to install (default: [ "*" ], all extras).

Example

poetry2nix.mkPoetryEnv {
    projectDir = ./.;
}

See ./tests/env/default.nix for a working example.

Example with editable packages

poetry2nix.mkPoetryEnv {
    projectDir = ./.;
    editablePackageSources = {
        my-app = ./src;
    };
}

See ./tests/editable/default.nix for a working example of an editable package.

Example shell.nix

The env attribute of the attribute set created by mkPoetryEnv contains a shell environment.

{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
let
  myAppEnv = pkgs.poetry2nix.mkPoetryEnv {
    projectDir = ./.;
    editablePackageSources = {
      my-app = ./src;
    };
  };
in myAppEnv.env

Example shell.nix with external dependencies

For a shell environment including external dependencies, override the env to add dependency packages (for example, pkgs.hello) as build inputs.

{ pkgs ? import <nixpkgs> {} }:
let
  myAppEnv = pkgs.poetry2nix.mkPoetryEnv {
    projectDir = ./.;
    editablePackageSources = {
      my-app = ./src;
    };
  };
in myAppEnv.env.overrideAttrs (oldAttrs: {
  buildInputs = [ pkgs.hello ];
})

mkPoetryPackages

Creates an attribute set of the shape { python, poetryPackages, pyProject, poetryLock }. Where python is the interpreter specified, poetryPackages is a list of all generated python packages, pyProject is the parsed pyproject.toml and poetryLock is the parsed poetry.lock file. mkPoetryPackages takes an attribute set with the following attributes (attributes without default are mandatory):

  • projectDir: path to the root of the project.
  • pyproject: path to pyproject.toml (default: projectDir + "/pyproject.toml").
  • poetrylock: poetry.lock file path (default: projectDir + "/poetry.lock").
  • overrides: Python overrides to apply (default: defaultPoetryOverrides).
  • python: The Python interpreter to use (default: pkgs.python3).
  • editablePackageSources: A mapping from package name to source directory, these will be installed in editable mode (default: {}).
  • preferWheels : Use wheels rather than sdist as much as possible (default: false).
  • groups: Which Poetry 1.2.0+ dependency groups to install (default: [ ]).
  • checkGroups: Which Poetry 1.2.0+ dependency groups to install (independently of groups) to run unit tests (default: [ "dev" ]).
  • extras: Which Poetry extras to install (default: [ "*" ], all extras).

Example

poetry2nix.mkPoetryPackages {
    projectDir = ./.;
    python3 = python39;
}

mkPoetryScriptsPackage

Creates a package containing the scripts from tool.poetry.scripts of the pyproject.toml:

  • projectDir: path to the root of the project.
  • pyproject: path to pyproject.toml (default: projectDir + "/pyproject.toml").
  • python: The Python interpreter to use (default: pkgs.python3).

Example

poetry2nix.mkPoetryScriptsPackage {
    projectDir = ./.;
    python3 = python39;
}

mkPoetryEditablePackage

Creates a package containing editable sources. Changes in the specified paths will be reflected in an interactive nix-shell session without the need to restart it:

  • projectDir: path to the root of the project.
  • pyproject: path to pyproject.toml (default: projectDir + "/pyproject.toml").
  • python: The Python interpreter to use (default: pkgs.python3).
  • editablePackageSources: A mapping from package name to source directory, these will be installed in editable mode (default: {}).

Example

poetry2nix.mkPoetryEditablePackage {
    projectDir = ./.;
    python3 = python39;
    editablePackageSources = {
        my-app = ./src;
    };
}

defaultPoetryOverrides

poetry2nix bundles a set of default overrides that fix problems with various Python packages. These overrides are implemented in overrides.

overrides.withDefaults

Returns a list containing the specified overlay and defaultPoetryOverrides.

Takes an attribute set with the following attributes (attributes without default are mandatory):

  • src: project source directory

Example

poetry2nix.mkPoetryEnv {
    projectDir = ./.;
    overrides = poetry2nix.overrides.withDefaults (final: prev: { foo = null; });
}

See ./tests/override-support/default.nix for a working example.

overrides.withoutDefaults

Returns a list containing just the specified overlay, ignoring defaultPoetryOverrides.

Example

poetry2nix.mkPoetryEnv {
    projectDir = ./.;
    overrides = poetry2nix.overrides.withoutDefaults (final: prev: { foo = null; });
}

cleanPythonSources

Provides a source filtering mechanism that:

  • Filters gitignore's
  • Filters pycache/pyc files
  • Uses cleanSourceFilter to filter out .git/.hg, .o/.so, editor backup files & nix result symlinks

Example

poetry2nix.cleanPythonSources {
    src = ./.;
}

Creating a custom Poetry2nix instance

Sometimes when it can be convenient to create a custom instance of poetry2nix with a different set of default overrides.

Example

let
  # final & prev refers to poetry2nix
  p2nix = poetry2nix.overrideScope (final: prev: {

    # pyself & pyprev refers to python packages
    defaultPoetryOverrides = prev.defaultPoetryOverrides.extend (pyfinal: pyprev: {

      my-custom-pkg = pyprev.my-custom-pkg.overridePythonAttrs (oldAttrs: { });

    });

  });

in
p2nix.mkPoetryApplication {
  projectDir = ./.;
}

or as a nixpkgs overlay:

let
  pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {
    overlays = [
      # final & prev refers to nixpkgs
      (final: prev: {

        # p2nixfinal & p2nixprev refers to poetry2nix
        poetry2nix = prev.poetry2nix.overrideScope (p2nixfinal: p2nixprev: {

          # pyfinal & pyprev refers to python packages
          defaultPoetryOverrides = p2nixprev.defaultPoetryOverrides.extend (pyfinal: pyprev: {

            my-custom-pkg = pyprev.my-custom-pkg.overridePythonAttrs (oldAttrs: { });

          });

        });
      })

    ];
  };

in pkgs.poetry2nix.mkPoetryApplication {
  projectDir = ./.;
}

Using private Python package repositories with authentication

Poetry by default downloads Python packages (wheels, sources, etc.) from PyPI but supports to specify one or more alternative repositories in a "package source" section in the pyproject.toml file:

[[tool.poetry.source]]
name = "private-repository"
url = "https://example.org/simple/"
priority = "primary"
...

Poetry then bakes the individual source repository urls for each Python package together with a cryptographic hash of the package into its poetry.lock file. This is great for reproducibility as Poetry knows where to download packages from later and can ensure that the packages haven't been modified.

Poetry2nix downloads the same packages from the same repository urls in the lock file and reuses the hashes. However, many private Python repositories require authentication with credentials like username and password token, especially in companies.

While Poetry supports several methods of authentication like through a NETRC file environment variables a custom crendentials file and others, poetry2nix only supports one: the NETRC file method that secretly adds credentials to your http calls to the repository url, e.g. https://example.org/simple/.

For this to work, follow these three steps:

  1. Create or locate your NETRC file into your computer, usually in your home folder /home/user/<username>/.netrc or /etc/nix/netrc with credentials like:
machine https://example.org
login <repository-username>
password <repository-password-or-token>
  1. Mount the NETRC file into the Nix build sandbox with Nix extra-sandbox-paths setting; otherwise poetry2nix is not able to access that file from within the Nix sandbox. You can mount the file either through the global Nix/NixOS config, usually /etc/nix/nix.conf:
# file: nix.conf
extra-sandbox-paths /etc/nix/netrc`

This is not recommended as you expose your secrets to all Nix builds.

Better just mount it for single, specific poetry2nix builds directly in the terminal:

# non-flake project
nix-build --option extra-sandbox-paths /etc/nix/netrc default.nix
# flake project
nix build . --extra-sandbox-paths /etc/nix/netrc

Note that the username you're executing this command with must be a "trusted-user" in the global Nix/NixOS config, usually /etc/nix/nix.conf:

# file: nix.conf
trusted-users <username>

If you are not a trusted user, this extra setting will be silently ignored and package downloads will fail.

  1. Tell poetry2nix where to find the NETRC file inside the Nix sandbox. For that you have to pass an environment variable called NETRC into the sandbox containing the path to the file. Depending on whether you use flakes or not you have the following options:

For flakes the only option is to add the environment variable to the "nix-daemon", the process that actually creates sandboxes and performs builds on your behalf.

On NixOS you can add the env variable to the nix-daemon through its systemd configuration:

systemd.services.nix-daemon = {
  serviceConfig = {
    Environment = "NETRC=/etc/nix/netrc";
  };
};

This environment variable will automatically be passed to all your builds so you can keep using the build commands as before;

# non-flake project
nix-build --option extra-sandbox-paths /etc/nix/netrc default.nix
# flake project
nix build . --extra-sandbox-paths /etc/nix/netrc

For a non-flake project you can alternatively pass the NETRC path value through a fake Nix search path -I NETRC=<netrc-path> argument in the terminal; such a search path doesn't work with flakes. poetry2nix contains special code to forward this variable as an environment variable into any Python sandbox.

# non-flake project
nix-build -I NETRC=/etc/nix/netrc --option extra-sandbox-paths /etc/nix/netrc default.nix

Note: The alternative to pass the NETRC path environment variable into the sandbox via the (impureEnvVars setting](https://nixos.org/manual/nix/stable/language/advanced-attributes.html##adv-attr-impureEnvVars) doesn't work.

FAQ

Q. Does poetry2nix install wheels or sdists?

A. By default, poetry2nix installs from source. If you want to give precedence to wheels, look at the preferWheel and preferWheels attributes.

Q. Does poetry2nix use package definitions from nixpkgs' Python package set?

A. poetry2nix overlays packages taken from the poetry.lock file on top of nixpkgs, in such a way that overlaid packages in nixpkgs are completely ignored. Any package that is used, but isn't in the poetry.lock file (most commonly build dependencies) is taken from nixpkgs.

Q. How to prefer wheel installation for a single package?

A. Override it and set preferWheel = true in that single package:

poetry2nix.mkPoetryApplication {
  projectDir = ./.;
  overrides = poetry2nix.overrides.withDefaults (final: prev: {
    # Notice that using .overridePythonAttrs or .overrideAttrs won't work!
    some-dependency = prev.some-dependency.override {
      preferWheel = true;
    };
  });
}

Q. I'm experiencing one of the following errors, what do I do?

  • ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'setuptools'
  • ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'pdm'
  • ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'setuptools-scm'
  • ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'poetry-core'
  • ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'flit'
  • ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'flit-core'
  • ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'flit-scm'

A. Have a look at the following document edgecase.md

How-to guides

Contributing

Contributions to this project are welcome in the form of GitHub PRs. Please consider the following before creating PRs:

  • You can use nix fmt to format everything and sort overrides/build-systems.json.
  • If you are planning to make any considerable changes, you should first present your plans in a GitHub issue so it can be discussed.
  • If you add new features please consider adding tests. You can run them locally as follows:
nix-build --keep-going --show-trace tests/default.nix

To list test names:

nix eval --impure --expr 'let pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {}; in pkgs.lib.attrNames (import ./tests/default.nix {})'

To run specific tests, add --attr NAME to the nix-build command above. For example, to run the bcrypt and jq tests:

nix-build --attr bcrypt --attr jq --keep-going --show-trace tests/default.nix

To test with a specific channel:

nix-build --expr 'with import <unstable> {}; callPackage ./tests/default.nix {}'

Contact

We have a Matrix room at #poetry2nix:blad.is.

Acknowledgements

Development of poetry2nix has been supported by Tweag.

License

poetry2nix is released under the terms of the MIT license.