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nox-poetry

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Read the documentation at https://nox-poetry.readthedocs.io/ Tests Codecov

Use Poetry inside Nox sessions

This package provides a drop-in replacement for the nox.session decorator, and for the nox.Session object passed to user-defined session functions. This enables session.install to install packages at the versions specified in the Poetry lock file.

from nox_poetry import session

@session(python=["3.10", "3.9"])
def tests(session):
    session.install("pytest", ".")
    session.run("pytest")

Disclaimer: This project is not affiliated with Nox, and not an official Nox plugin.

Installation

Install nox-poetry from the Python Package Index:

$ pip install nox-poetry

Important: This package must be installed into the same environment that Nox is run from. If you installed Nox using pipx, use the following command to install this package into the same environment:

$ pipx inject nox nox-poetry

Requirements

You need to have a Poetry installation on your system. nox-poetry uses Poetry via its command-line interface.

Usage

Import the @session decorator from nox_poetry instead of nox. There is nothing else you need to do. The session.install method automatically honors the Poetry lock file when installing dependencies. This allows you to manage packages used in Nox sessions as development dependencies in Poetry.

This works because session functions are passed instances of nox_poetry.Session, a proxy for nox.Session adding Poetry-related functionality. Behind the scenes, nox-poetry uses Poetry to export a constraints file and build the package.

For more fine-grained control, additional utilities are available under the session.poetry attribute:

Note that distribution_format is a keyword-only parameter.

Here is a comparison of the different installation methods:

Please read the next section for the tradeoffs of each method.

Why?

Let's look at an example:

from nox_poetry import session

@session(python=["3.10", "3.9"])
def tests(session):
    session.install("pytest", ".")
    session.run("pytest")

This session performs the following steps:

Consider what would happen in this session if we had imported @session from nox instead of nox_poetry:

Unpinned dependencies mean that your checks are not reproducible and deterministic, which can lead to surprises in Continuous Integration and when collaborating with others. You can solve these issues by declaring pytest as a development dependency, and installing your package and its dependencies using poetry install:

@nox.session
def tests(session: Session) -> None:
    """Run the test suite."""
    session.run_always("poetry", "install", external=True)
    session.run("pytest")

Unfortunately, this approach comes with its own set of problems:

nox-poetry uses a third approach:

In summary, this approach brings the following advantages:

Contributing

Contributions are very welcome. To learn more, see the Contributor Guide.

License

Distributed under the terms of the MIT license, nox-poetry is free and open source software.

Issues

If you encounter any problems, please file an issue along with a detailed description.

Credits

This project was generated from @cjolowicz's Hypermodern Python Cookiecutter template.

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