4.2 KiB
Creating a Pyodide package
Pyodide includes a set of automatic tools to make it easier to add new third-party Python libraries to the build.
These tools automate the following steps to build a package:
- Download a source tarball (usually from PyPI)
- Confirm integrity of the package by comparing it to a checksum
- Apply patches, if any, to the source distribution
- Add extra files, if any, to the source distribution
- If the package includes C/C++/Cython extensions:
- Build the package natively, keeping track of invocations of the native compiler and linker
- Rebuild the package using emscripten to target WebAssembly
- If the package is pure Python:
- Run the
setup.py
script to get the built package
- Run the
- Package the results into an emscripten virtual filesystem package, which
comprises:
- A
.data
file containing the file contents of the whole package, concatenated together - A
.js
file which contains metadata about the files and installs them into the virtual filesystem.
- A
Lastly, a packages.json
file is output containing the dependency tree of all
packages, so pyodide.loadPackage
can load a package's dependencies
automatically.
The meta.yaml file
Packages are defined by writing a meta.yaml
file. The format of these files is
based on the meta.yaml
files used to build Conda
packages,
though it is much more limited. The most important limitation is that Pyodide
assumes there will only be one version of a given library available, whereas
Conda allows the user to specify the versions of each package that they want to
install. Despite the limitations, keeping the file format as close as possible
to conda's should make it easier to use existing conda package definitions as a
starting point to create Pyodide packages. In general, however, one should not
expect Conda packages to "just work" with Pyodide. (In the longer term, Pyodide
may use conda as its packaging system, and this should hopefully ease that
transition.)
The supported keys in the meta.yaml
file are described below.
package
package/name
The name of the package. It must match the name of the package used when
expanding the tarball, which is sometimes different from the name of the package
in the Python namespace when installed. It must also match the name of the
directory in which the meta.yaml
file is placed. It can only contain
alpha-numeric characters and -
, _
.
package/version
The version of the package.
source
source/url
The url of the source tarball.
The tarball may be in any of the formats supported by Python's
shutil.unpack_archive
: tar
, gztar
, bztar
, xztar
, and zip
.
source/md5
The MD5 checksum of the tarball. It is recommended to use SHA256 instead of MD5. At most one checksum entry should be provided per package.
source/sha256
The SHA256 checksum of the tarball. It is recommended to use SHA256 instead of MD5. At most one checksum entry should be provided per package.
source/patches
A list of patch files to apply after expanding the tarball. These are applied
using patch -p1
from the root of the source tree.
source/extras
Extra files to add to the source tree. This should be a list where each entry is
a pair of the form (src, dst)
. The src
path is relative to the directory in
which the meta.yaml
file resides. The dst
path is relative to the root of
source tree (the expanded tarball).
build
build/cflags
Extra arguments to pass to the compiler when building for WebAssembly.
(This key is not in the Conda spec).
build/ldflags
Extra arguments to pass to the linker when building for WebAssembly.
(This key is not in the Conda spec).
build/post
Shell commands to run after building the library. These are run inside of
bash
, and there are two special environment variables defined:
$SITEPACKAGES
: Thesite-packages
directory into which the package has been installed.$PKGDIR
: The directory in which themeta.yaml
file resides.
(This key is not in the Conda spec).
requirements
requirements/run
A list of required packages.
(Unlike conda, this only supports package names, not versions).