blob: d7a11ea596039a2d1f62f31f8e966863c8f66848 [file] [log] [blame]
workspace(name = "pip_parse_vendored_example")
local_repository(
name = "rules_python",
path = "../..",
)
load("@rules_python//python:repositories.bzl", "py_repositories", "python_register_toolchains")
py_repositories()
python_register_toolchains(
name = "python39",
python_version = "3.9",
)
load("@rules_python//python:pip.bzl", "pip_parse")
# This repository isn't referenced, except by our test that asserts the requirements.bzl is updated.
# It also wouldn't be needed by users of this ruleset.
# If you're using envsubst with extra_pip_args, as we do below, the value of the environment
# variables at the time we generate requirements.bzl don't make it into the file, as you may
# verify by inspection; the environment variables at a later time, when we download the
# packages, will be the ones that take effect.
pip_parse(
# We choose a unique name here to make sure we can do some cleanup on it.
name = "pip_deps_to_be_vendored",
envsubst = ["PIP_RETRIES"],
extra_pip_args = ["--retries=${PIP_RETRIES:-5}"],
python_interpreter_target = "@python39_host//:python",
requirements_lock = "//:requirements.txt",
)
# This example vendors the file produced by `pip_parse` above into the repo.
# This way our Bazel doesn't eagerly fetch and install the pip_parse'd
# repository for builds that don't need it.
# See discussion of the trade-offs in the pip_parse documentation
# and the "vendor_requirements" target in the BUILD file.
load("//:requirements.bzl", "install_deps")
install_deps()