tree: 2faac0d01b5b7c4ac5f6ca44d3a67f1dce3a256c [path history] [tgz]
  1. __init__.py
  2. BUILD.bazel
  3. py.typed
  4. README.md
  5. runfiles.py
python/runfiles/README.md

bazel-runfiles library

This is a Bazel Runfiles lookup library for Bazel-built Python binaries and tests.

Learn about runfiles: read Runfiles guide or watch Fabian's BazelCon talk.

Importing

The Runfiles API is available from two sources, a direct Bazel target, and a pypi package.

Pure Bazel imports

  1. Depend on this runfiles library from your build rule, like you would other third-party libraries:

    py_binary(
        name = "my_binary",
        # ...
        deps = ["@rules_python//python/runfiles"],
    )
    
  2. Import the runfiles library:

        from python.runfiles import Runfiles
    

Pypi imports

  1. Add the ‘bazel-runfiles’ dependency along with other third-party dependencies, for example in your requirements.txt file.

  2. Depend on this runfiles library from your build rule, like you would other third-party libraries:

    load("@pip_deps//:requirements.bzl", "requirement")
    
    py_binary(
        name = "my_binary",
        ...
        deps = [requirement("bazel-runfiles")],
    )
    
  3. Import the runfiles library:

    from runfiles import Runfiles
    

Typical Usage

Create a Runfiles object and use Rlocation to look up runfile paths:

r = Runfiles.Create()
# ...
with open(r.Rlocation("my_workspace/path/to/my/data.txt"), "r") as f:
    contents = f.readlines()
    # ...

The code above creates a manifest- or directory-based implementation based on the environment variables in os.environ. See Runfiles.Create() for more info.

If you want to explicitly create a manifest- or directory-based implementation, you can do so as follows:

r1 = Runfiles.CreateManifestBased("path/to/foo.runfiles_manifest")

r2 = Runfiles.CreateDirectoryBased("path/to/foo.runfiles/")

If you want to start subprocesses, and the subprocess can't automatically find the correct runfiles directory, you can explicitly set the right environment variables for them:

import subprocess
from python.runfiles import Runfiles

r = Runfiles.Create()
env = {}
# ...
env.update(r.EnvVars())
p = subprocess.run(
    [r.Rlocation("path/to/binary")],
    env=env,
    # ...
)