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.
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 thepyproject.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.
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
).
Other attributes are passed through to buildPythonApplication
.
poetry2nix.mkPoetryApplication {
projectDir = ./.;
}
See ./pkgs/poetry/default.nix for a working example.
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
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.
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 toeditablePackageSources
asnull
. (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 bepip
. (default:(ps: [ ])
).
poetry2nix.mkPoetryEnv {
projectDir = ./.;
}
See ./tests/env/default.nix for a working example.
poetry2nix.mkPoetryEnv {
projectDir = ./.;
editablePackageSources = {
my-app = ./src;
};
}
See ./tests/editable/default.nix for a working example of an editable package.
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
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 ];
})
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:
{}
).
poetry2nix.mkPoetryPackages {
projectDir = ./.;
python = python35;
}
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
).
poetry2nix.mkPoetryScriptsPackage {
projectDir = ./.;
python = python35;
}
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:
{}
).
poetry2nix.mkPoetryEditablePackage {
projectDir = ./.;
python = python35;
editablePackageSources = {
my-app = ./src;
};
}
poetry2nix bundles a set of default overrides that fix problems with various Python packages. These overrides are implemented in overrides.nix.
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
poetry2nix.mkPoetryEnv {
projectDir = ./.;
overrides = poetry2nix.overrides.withDefaults (self: super: { foo = null; });
}
See ./tests/override-support/default.nix for a working example.
Returns a list containing just the specified overlay, ignoring defaultPoetryOverrides
.
poetry2nix.mkPoetryEnv {
projectDir = ./.;
overrides = poetry2nix.overrides.withoutDefaults (self: super: { foo = null; });
}
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
poetry2nix.cleanPythonSources {
src = ./.;
}
Sometimes when it can be convenient to create a custom instance of poetry2nix
with a different set of default overrides.
let
# self & super refers to poetry2nix
p2nix = poetry2nix.overrideScope' (self: super: {
# pyself & pysuper refers to python packages
defaultPoetryOverrides = super.defaultPoetryOverrides.extend (pyself: pysuper: {
my-custom-pkg = super.my-custom-pkg.overridePythonAttrs (oldAttrs: { });
});
});
in
p2nix.mkPoetryApplication {
projectDir = ./.;
}
or as a nixpkgs overlay:
let
pkgs = import <nixpkgs> {
overlays = [
# self & super refers to nixpkgs
(self: super: {
# p2self & p2super refers to poetry2nix
poetry2nix = super.poetry2nix.overrideScope' (p2nixself: p2nixsuper: {
# pyself & pysuper refers to python packages
defaultPoetryOverrides = p2nixsuper.defaultPoetryOverrides.extend (pyself: pysuper: {
my-custom-pkg = super.my-custom-pkg.overridePythonAttrs (oldAttrs: { });
});
});
})
];
};
in pkgs.poetry2nix.mkPoetryApplication {
projectDir = ./.;
}
- Package and deploy Python apps faster with Poetry and Nix This is a short (11 minutes) video tutorial by Steve Purcell from Tweag walking you through how to get started with a small web development project.
For the experimental flakes functionality we provide poetry2nix as a flake providing an overlay to use with nixpkgs. Additionally, the flake provides a flake template to quickly start using poetry2nix in a project:
nix flake init --template github:nix-community/poetry2nix
Contributions to this project are welcome in the form of GitHub PRs. Please consider the following before creating PRs:
- This project uses nixpkgs-fmt for formatting the Nix code. You can use
nix-shell --run "nixpkgs-fmt ."
to format everything. - 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
We have a Matrix room at #poetry2nix:blad.is.
Development of poetry2nix
has been supported by Tweag.
poetry2nix is released under the terms of the MIT license.