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conda-build

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Installation

# Display information about current conda install
conda info

# Install conda-build in the current env
conda install -n root conda-build

Building Your Own Packages

You can easily build your own packages for conda, and upload them to anaconda.org, a free service for hosting packages for conda, as well as other package managers. To build a package, create a recipe. See http://github.com/conda/conda-recipes for many example recipes, and http://conda.pydata.org/docs/build.html for documentation on how to build recipes.

To upload to anaconda.org, create an account. Then, install the anaconda-client and login

$ conda install anaconda-client
$ anaconda login

Then, after you build your recipe

$ conda build <recipe-dir>

you will be prompted to upload to anaconda.org.

To add your anaconda.org channel, or the channel of others to conda so that conda install will find and install their packages, run

$ conda config --add channels https://conda.anaconda.org/username

(replacing username with the user name of the person whose channel you want to add).

Gotchas/FAQ

  • `OSError: [Errno 36] File name too long:` - This error has been seen on Linux computers with encrypted folders. The solution is to install miniconda or anaconda to a location that is not encrypted. This error occurs because the encrypted form of the path that conda-build creates can be too long.

Getting Help

The documentation for conda is at http://conda.pydata.org/docs/. You can subscribe to the conda mailing list. The source code and issue tracker for conda are on GitHub.

Contributing

Contributions to conda-build are always welcome! Please fork the conda/conda-build repository, and submit a PR. If a PR is a work in progress, please put [WIP] in the title. Contributions are expected to pass flake8 and test suites run on Travis CI (linux) and AppVeyor (windows). Contributors also need to have signed our Contributor License Agreement

Testing

Running our test suite requires cloning one other repo at the same level as conda-build: https://github.com/conda/conda_build_test_recipe - this is necessary for relative path tests outside of conda build's build tree.

Additionally, you need to install a few extra packages:

conda install anaconda-client pytest pytest-cov mock pytest-mock conda-package-handling

The test suite runs with py.test. Some useful commands to run select tests, assuming you are in the conda-build root folder:

Run all tests:

py.test tests

Run one test file:

py.test tests/test_api_build.py

Run one test function:

py.test tests/test_api_build.py::test_early_abort

Run one parameter of one parametrized test function:

Several tests are parametrized, to run some small change, or build several recipe folders. To choose only one of them:

py.test tests/test_api_build.py::test_recipe_builds.py[entry_points]

Note that our tests use py.test fixtures extensively. These sometimes trip up IDE style checkers about unused or redefined variables. These warnings are safe to ignore.

Releasing

Conda-build releases may be performed via the rever command. Rever is configured to perform the activities for a typical conda-build release. To cut a release, simply run rever <X.Y.Z> where <X.Y.Z> is the release number that you want bump to. For example, rever 1.2.3. However, it is always good idea to make sure that the you have permissions everywhere to actually perform the release. So it is customary to run rever check before the release, just to make sure. The standard workflow is thus:

rever check
rever 1.2.3

If for some reason a release fails partway through, or you want to claw back a release that you have made, rever allows you to undo activities. If you find yourself in this pickle, you can pass the --undo option a comma-separated list of activities you'd like to undo. For example:

rever --undo tag,changelog,authors 1.2.3

Happy releasing!

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