- General
- Requirements
- Usage
- Contribution
The complementary task runner for python.
Every development pipeline has tasks, such as test
, lint
or publish
. With taskipy, you can define those tasks in one file and run them with a simple command.
For instance, instead of running the following command:
python -m unittest tests/test_*.py
You can create a task called test
and simply run:
poetry run task test
Or (if you're not using poetry):
task test
In addition, you can compose tasks and group them together, and also create dependencies between them.
This project is heavily inspired by npm's run script command.
Python 3.6 or newer.
Your project directory should include a valid pyproject.toml
file, as specified in PEP-518.
To install taskipy as a dev dependency, simply run:
poetry add --dev taskipy
For Anaconda Python-based environments, taskipy is also available via conda-forge:
conda install -c conda-forge taskipy
In your pyproject.toml
file, add a new section called [tool.taskipy.tasks]
.
The section is a key-value map, from the names of the task to the actual command that should be run in the shell.
There are two ways to define tasks. The easy way is to simply write the command down as a string:
pyproject.toml
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
test = "python -m unittest tests/test_*.py"
lint = "pylint tests taskipy"
Alternatively, you can define tasks more explicitly by declaring both the command and a helpful description using an inline table:
pyproject.toml
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
test = { cmd = "python -m unittest tests/test_*.py", help = "runs all unit tests" }
lint = { cmd = "pylint tests taskipy", help = "confirms code style using pylint" }
The explicit notation is more verbose, but provides better context to anyone who uses the task.
In order to run a task, run the following command in your terminal:
$ poetry run task test
You can also list all existing tasks by running the following:
$ poetry run task --list
test python -m unittest tests/test_*.py
lint pylint tests taskipy
If you declared your task explicitly, you will see the description of the task by the side of the task's name:
$ poetry run task --list
test runs all unit tests
lint confirms code style using pylint
If you want to pass command line arguments to tasks (positional or named), simply append them to the end of the task command.
For example, running the above task like this:
poetry run task test -h
Is equivalent to running:
python -m unittest tests/test_*.py -h
And will show unittest's help instead of actually running it.
⚠️ Note: if you are using pre \ post hooks, do notice that arguments are not passed to them, only to the task itself.
Some tasks are composed of multiple subtasks. Instead of writing plain shell commands and stringing them together, you can break them down into multiple subtasks:
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
lint_pylint = "pylint tests taskipy"
lint_mypy = "mypy tests taskipy"
And then create a composite task:
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
lint = "task lint_pylint && task lint_mypy"
lint_pylint = "pylint tests taskipy"
lint_mypy = "mypy tests taskipy"
Tasks might also depend on one another. For example, tests might require some binaries to be built. Take the two following commands, for instance:
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
test = "python -m unittest tests/test_*.py"
build = "make ."
You could make tests depend on building, by using the pretask hook:
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
pre_test = "task build"
test = "python -m unittest tests/test_*.py"
build = "make ."
The pretask hook looks for pre_<task_name>
task for a given task_name
. It will run it before running the task itself. If the pretask fails, then taskipy will exit without running the task itself.
From time to time, you might want to run a task in conjunction with another. For example, you might want to run linting after a successful test run. Take the two following commands, for instance:
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
test = "python -m unittest tests/test_*.py"
lint = "pylint tests taskipy"
You could make tests trigger linting, by using the posttask hook:
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
test = "python -m unittest tests/test_*.py"
post_test = "task lint"
lint = "pylint tests taskipy"
The posttask hook looks for post_<task_name>
task for a given task_name
. It will run it after running the task itself. If the task failed, then taskipy will not run the posttask hook.
In some cases, you might find yourself passing the same arguments over and over again. Let us take a look at the following tasks:
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
lint = "pylint path/to/my_module"
black = "black path/to/my_module"
As you can see, we provide the same path argument to both pylint
and black
.
In order to encourage DRY and improve your ability to change these values later on, taskipy actually lets you declare and reuse variables in your tasks:
[tool.taskipy.variables]
path = "path/to/my_module"
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
lint = { cmd = "pylint {path}", use_vars = true }
black = { cmd = "pylint {path}", use_vars = true }
We have made the following changes to our configuration:
- We declared variables under
tool.taskipy.variables
- We flagged the relevant task using
use_vars
to note that they should use the variables - We replaced the repeating path with a
{path}
variable
The formatting of the task commands uses python's own string.format
method, and therefore supports everything that python's formatted string literals let you do.
Using variables is opt-in, which means that by default commands do not use them, and you will have to turn them on a task to task basis.
If you want to turn on use_vars
globally, all you need to do is to declare that under taskipy's settings table:
[tool.taskipy.settings]
use_vars = true
[tool.taskipy.variables]
path = "path/to/my_module"
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
lint = "pylint {path}"
black = "black {path}"
If we want to use variables within other variables, we can utilize recursive variables. By default, variables are not recursive, but we can specify a variable to be recursive by setting the recursive
key to true
.
[tool.taskipy.settings]
use_vars = true
[tool.taskipy.variables]
src_dir = "src"
package_dir = { var = "{src_dir}/package", recursive = true }
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
echo = "echo {package_dir}"
In this example, we could run task echo
and we would then see src/package
.
By default, all tasks run from the directory where they are called. This makes possible to change folder and run flexible tasks depending on the current folder.
However, some tasks may need to always run in the same working directory, regardless from where they are called.
If you want tasks to always run relative to a specific path, you can use the "cwd"
setting to define a current working directory of the task relative to the root of the project (where the pyproject.toml
file is):
[tool.taskipy.tasks]
echo = { cmd = "python -c \"import os; print(os.getcwd())\"" , cwd = "."}
In this example, running task echo
will print the directory path of the file pyproject.toml
regardless of the folder that you call this task.
If you want to define cwd
globally (setting all tasks to always run from the same working directory) you just need to declare that under taskipy's settings table:
[tool.taskipy.settings]
cwd = "."
Taskipy was created with poetry projects in mind, but actually only requires a valid pyproject.toml
file in your project's directory. As a result, you can use it even without poetry:
Install taskipy on your machine or in your virtualenv using:
pip install taskipy
Head into your project's directory (don't forget to activate virtualenv if you're using one), and run the following command:
task TASK
Where TASK
is the name of your task.
If you have a more specific use case, you might not be the first to run into it! Head over to the ADVANCED_FEATURES doc, and look it up.
All kinds of contributions are welcome! Feel free to request features and report bugs via issues, and contribute your own beautiful code via pull requests!
The taskipy project is maintained by Roy Sommer. If you're interested in joining the team, feel free to let me know!