tree: 7a6622ac81d14b79801092a2e2a5575eccbbaa43 [path history] [tgz]
  1. bin/
  2. pip_packages/
  3. venv/
  4. .gitignore
  5. PRESUBMIT.cfg
  6. README.md
README.md

infra_virtualenv README

This repository provides a common Python virtualenv interface that Chromium OS infrastructure code can depend on.

Using virtualenv in another repository

A repository adding virtualenv should mimic this repository, which itself uses virtualenv for running unit tests.

Key files:

  • bin/python_venv starts an instance of Python that uses the virtualenv.
  • bin/turtle is an example script for running a Python module using bin/python_venv.
  • venv/requirements.txt lists the packages to install inside the virtualenv.
  • venv is added to PYTHONPATH. For example, venv/cros_venv can be imported inside the virtualenv using import cros_venv.

To make sure all your requirements are pinned, run:

bin/python_venv -m pip freeze

Copy the output into requirements.txt

Refer to Pip's documentation for the requirements.txt format.

Adding packages to be available for use

Packages to be installed inside a virtualenv must first be added to pip_packages.

To add packages, run:

bin/python_venv -m pip wheel -w pip_packages foo==1.2.3

Refer to Pip's documentation for details on the arguments for pip.

If the resultant wheel contains linux and not manylinux, then it is NOT portable. You will need to build a portable wheel; see next section.

Commit the wheel and make a CL.

Building portable wheel with C extensions

You need to use the standard manylinux Docker image to build the portable wheel.

Install Docker:

https://g3doc.corp.google.com/cloud/containers/registry/g3doc/glinux-docker/install.md?cl=head

Add the manylinux Docker image:

docker pull quay.io/pypa/manylinux1_x86_64@sha256:a0f4dd1303b10dbbd99f84e6d7e9b6575efd5c3a6b16519a15703a70a5833b4d

Get the image ID:

docker image ls

Run the Docker image:

docker run -i -t -v "$(pwd)/pip_packages:/pip_packages" --rm $IMAGE /bin/bash

Build a portable wheel:

cd /opt/python/cp27-cp27mu
bin/pip wheel -w /pip_packages foo==1.2.3
auditwheel repair -w /pip_packages /pip_packages/foo-1.2.3-cp27-cp27mu-linux_x86_64.whl

Keep the manylinux wheel and remove the linux wheel.

Since these wheels are built as root inside the container, you may need to chown the files on the host to prevent permission issues later:

sudo chown $(id -un):$(id -gn) pip_packages/*

Adding third party packages to a virtualenv

Add the packages to requirements.txt. If the packages are not in pip_packages yet, add the packages to pip_packages.

Adding first party modules to a virtualenv's import path

“First party modules” refers to Chromium OS code (anything checked out by repo).

NOTE: Do not use this for third party dependencies (stuff not owned by Chromium OS)! This should only be used to set up imports for stuff we own. For example, importing python-MySQL SHOULD NOT use this, but importing chromite MAY use this.

There are two ways to do this:

  1. Adding a relative symlink to venv.
  2. Modifying sys.path in __init__.py.

Adding a symlink to venv is simple and should be self-explanatory. However, keep in mind that repo checkouts may not always have the same structure, and certain environments such as production servers may check out repositories in completely different locations. This method is not powerful enough to account for these environments.

Modifying sys.path is a lot more powerful. The way to do this is to add a small bit of code to the __init__.py of the package that needs the import.

Example (do not copy and paste blindly):

import os
import sys

# The path of the package
PKGDIR = __path__[0]
# Paths to check
_PATH1 = os.path.join(PKGDIR, '../foo')
_PATH2 = '/opt/foo'

if os.path.exists(_PATH1):
    sys.path.append(_PATH1)
elif os.path.exists(_PATH2):
    sys.path.append(_PATH2)
else:
    raise ImportError('foo not found')

You must also add the contents of the other project's requirements.txt to your project. We do not attempt to resolve dependencies recursively as that is very difficult.

Low level API

The bin/create_venv script prepares a virtualenv using a requirements.txt file.

bin/create_venv requirements.txt

The script will print the path to the virtualenv to stdout. Note that the output ends with a newline; Bash handles this, but Python does not.

To run the virtualenv Python, call bin/python under the virtualenv directory.

Together, this might look up:

venv=$(bin/create_venv requirements.txt)
${venv}/bin/python

NOTE: It is not generally safe to run the other scripts in the virtualenv's bin directory due to hard-coded paths. Instead of running bin/pip for example, use bin/python -m pip.