this post was submitted on 23 Jun 2024
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The multiple venv for different Python versions sounds exactly like what tox does
Then setup a github action that does nightly builds. Which will catch issues caused by changes that only tested against one python version or on one platform
py313 is a good version to test against cuz there were many modules removed or depreciated or APIs changed
good luck. Hope some of my advice is helpful
Thanks, yes, I use nox and github actions for automated environments and testing in my own projects, and tox instead of nox when it's someone else's project. But for ad hoc, local and interactive multiple environments, I don't.
Are you using github actions locally? Feel silly making gh actions and workflows and only github runs them
No, I don't use GHA locally, but the actions are defined to run the same things that I do run locally (e.g. invoke
nox
). I try to keep the GHA-exclusive boilerplate to a minimum. Steps can be like:Sometimes if I want a higher level interface to tasks that run
nox
or other things locally, I usetaskipy
to define them in mypyproject.toml
, like:Thanks for the introduction to taskipy. Think if i need macros, Makefile is the way to go. Supports running targets in parallel and i like performing a check to ensure the virtual environment is activated or the command won't run.
make mypy
without the virtualenv on will write a warning message why it's not working!Sure, but nox is the closer counterpart for in-venv-task definitions. List "sessions" with
-l
, pick specific sessions to run with-s
.Unfortunately it doesn't currently do any parallel runs, but if anyone wants to track/encourage/contribute in that regard, see nox#544.