Subpar is a utility for creating self-contained python executables. It is designed to work well with Bazel.
This project is unmaintained and considered deprecated.
Historically, subpar was the only way to produce a deployable Python artifact in Bazel.
This is no longer true; --build_python_zip
and the python_zip_file
output_group allows you to create executable Python zip artifacts with the standard py_binary
rule.
rules_docker
can also be used to build container images that launch py_binary
.
git_repository(
name = "subpar",
remote = "https://github.com/google/subpar",
tag = "1.0.0",
)
par_binary()
rules:load("@subpar//:subpar.bzl", "par_binary")
par_binary()
is a drop-in replacement for py_binary()
in your BUILD files
that also builds a self-contained, single-file executable for the application,
with a .par
file extension.
To build the .par
file associated with a par_binary(name=myname)
rule, do
bazel build //my/package:myname.par
The .par file is created alongside the python stub and .runfiles directories that py_binary() creates, but is independent of them. It can be copied to other directories or machines, and executed directly without needing the .runfiles directory. The body of the .par file contains all the srcs, deps, and data files listed.
Given a BUILD
file with the following:
load("@subpar//:subpar.bzl", "par_binary")
par_binary(
name = 'foo',
srcs = ['foo.py', 'bar.py'],
deps = ['//baz:some_py_lib'],
data = ['quux.dat'],
)
Run the following build command:
bazel build //package:foo.par
This results in the following files being created by bazel build:
bazel-bin/
package/
foo
foo.par
foo.runfiles/
...
The .par file can be copied, moved, or renamed, and still run like a compiled executable file:
$ scp bazel-bin/package/foo.par my-other-machine:foo.par
$ ssh my-other-machine ./foo.par
This is not an official Google product, it is just code that happens to be owned by Google.