This tutorial will walk you through installing, configuring, and running Nox.
Nox can be easily installed via pip:
python3 -m pip install nox
You may want to use the user site to avoid messing with your global Python install:
python3 -m pip install --user nox
Or you can be extra fancy and use pipx:
pipx install nox
Either way, Nox is usually installed globally, similar to tox
, pip
, and other similar tools.
If you're interested in running nox
within docker, you can use the thekevjames/nox images on DockerHub which contain builds for all nox
versions and all supported python
versions. Nox is also supported via pipx run nox
in the manylinux images.
If you want to run nox
within GitHub Actions, you can use the wntrblm/nox
action, which installs the latest nox
and makes available all active CPython and PyPY versions provided by the GitHub Actions environment:
# setup nox with all active CPython and PyPY versions provided by
# the GitHub Actions environment i.e.
# python-versions: "3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, pypy-3.7, pypy-3.8, pypy-3.9"
- uses: wntrblm/nox@latest
# setup nox only for a given list of python versions
# Limitations:
# - Version specifiers shall be supported by actions/setup-python
# - You can specify up-to 20 versions
# - There can only be one "major.minor" per interpreter i.e. "3.7.0, 3.7.1" is invalid
- uses: wntrblm/nox@latest
with:
python-versions: "2.7, 3.5, 3.11-dev, pypy-3.9"
Nox is configured via a file called noxfile.py
in your project's directory.
This file is a Python file that defines a set of sessions. A session is
an environment and a set of commands to run in that environment. If you're
familiar with tox sessions are analogous to environments. If you're familiar
with GNU Make, sessions are analogous to targets.
Sessions are declared using the @nox.session
decorator. This is similar to
how Flask uses @app.route
.
Here's a basic Noxfile that runs flake8 against example.py
(you can create
example.py
yourself):
import nox @nox.session def lint(session): session.install("flake8") session.run("flake8", "example.py")
Now that you've installed Nox and have a Noxfile you can run Nox! Open your
project's directory in a terminal and run nox
. You should see something
like this:
$ nox
nox > Running session lint
nox > Creating virtualenv using python3.7 in .nox/lint
nox > pip install flake8
nox > flake8 example.py
nox > Session lint was successful.
✨ You've now successfully used Nox for the first time! ✨
The rest of this tutorial will take you through other common things you'll likely want to do with Nox. You can also jump into :doc:`usage` and :doc:`config` docs if you want.
Nox more or less passes session.install
through to pip
, so you can
install stuff in the usual way. Here's some examples:
To install one or more packages at a time:
@nox.session
def tests(session):
# same as pip install pytest protobuf>3.0.0
session.install("pytest", "protobuf>3.0.0")
...
To install a requirements.txt
file:
@nox.session
def tests(session):
# same as pip install -r requirements.txt
session.install("-r", "requirements.txt")
...
If your project is a Python package and you want to install it:
@nox.session
def tests(session):
# same as pip install .
session.install(".")
...
In some cases such as Python binary extensions, your package may depend on
code compiled outside of the Python ecosystem. To make sure a low-level
dependency (e.g. libfoo
) is available during installation
@nox.session
def tests(session):
...
session.run_always(
"cmake", "-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug",
"-S", libfoo_src_dir,
"-B", build_dir,
external=True,
)
session.run_always(
"cmake",
"--build", build_dir,
"--config", "Debug",
"--target", "install",
external=True,
)
session.install(".")
...
The session.run
function lets you run commands within the context of your
session's virtual environment. Here's a few examples:
You can install and run Python tools:
@nox.session
def tests(session):
session.install("pytest")
session.run("pytest")
If you want to pass more arguments to a program just add more arguments to run
:
@nox.session
def tests(session):
session.install("pytest")
session.run("pytest", "-v", "tests")
You can also pass environment variables:
@nox.session
def tests(session):
session.install("pytest")
session.run(
"pytest",
env={
"FLASK_DEBUG": "1"
}
)
See :func:`nox.sessions.Session.run` for more options and examples for running programs.
Once you have multiple sessions in your Noxfile you'll notice that Nox will
run them all by default. While this is useful, it often useful to just run
one or two at a time. You can use the --sessions
argument (or -s
) to
select which sessions to run. You can use the --list
argument to show which
sessions are available and which will be run. Here's some examples:
Here's a Noxfile with three sessions:
import nox
@nox.session
def test(session):
...
@nox.session
def lint(session):
...
@nox.session
def docs(session):
...
If you just run nox --list
you'll see that all sessions are selected:
Sessions defined in noxfile.py:
* test
* lint
* docs
sessions marked with * are selected,
sessions marked with - are skipped.
If you run nox --list --sessions lint
you'll see that only the lint session
is selected:
Sessions defined in noxfile.py:
- test
* lint
- docs
sessions marked with * are selected,
sessions marked with - are skipped.
And if you run nox --sessions lint
Nox will just run the lint session:
nox > Running session lint
nox > Creating virtualenv using python3 in .nox/lint
nox > ...
nox > Session lint was successful.
In the Noxfile, you can specify a default set of sessions to run. If so, a plain
nox
call will only trigger certain sessions:
import nox
nox.options.sessions = ["lint", "test"]
If you set this to an empty list, Nox will not run any sessions by default, and
will print a helpful message with the --list
output when a user does not
specify a session to run.
There are many more ways to select and run sessions! You can read more about invoking Nox in :doc:`usage`.
If you want to queue up (or "notify") another session from the current one, you can use the session.notify
function:
@nox.session
def tests(session):
session.install("pytest")
session.run("pytest")
# Here we queue up the test coverage session to run next
session.notify("coverage")
@nox.session
def coverage(session):
session.install("coverage")
session.run("coverage")
You can queue up any session you want, not just test and coverage sessions, but this is a very commonly used pattern.
Now running nox --session tests
will run the tests session and then the coverage session.
You can also pass the notified session positional arguments:
@nox.session
def prepare_thing(session):
thing_path = "./path/to/thing"
session.run("prepare", "thing", thing_path)
session.notify("consume_thing", posargs=[thing_path])
@nox.session
def consume_thing(session):
# The 'consume' command has the arguments
# sent to it from the 'prepare_thing' session
session.run("consume", "thing", *session.posargs)
Note that this will only have the desired effect if selecting sessions to run via the --session/-s
flag. If you simply run nox
, all selected sessions will be run.
Many projects need to support either a specific version of Python or multiple
Python versions. You can have Nox run your session against multiple
interpreters by specifying python
to @nox.session
. Here's some examples:
If you want your session to specifically run against a single version of Python only:
@nox.session(python="3.7")
def test(session):
...
If you want your session to run against multiple versions of Python:
@nox.session(python=["2.7", "3.6", "3.7"])
def test(session):
...
You'll notice that running nox --list
will show that this one session has
been expanded into three distinct sessions:
Sessions defined in noxfile.py:
* test-2.7
* test-3.6
* test-3.7
You can run all of the test
sessions using nox --sessions test
or run
an individual one using the full name as displayed in the list, for example,
nox --sessions test-3.5
. More details on selecting sessions can be found
over in the :doc:`usage` documentation.
You can read more about configuring the virtual environment used by your sessions over at :ref:`virtualenv config`.
Some projects, especially in the data science community, need to test that they work in a conda environment. If you want your session to run in a conda environment:
@nox.session(venv_backend="conda")
def test(session):
...
Install packages with conda:
session.conda_install("pytest")
It is possible to install packages with pip into the conda environment, but
it's a best practice only install pip packages with the --no-deps
option.
This prevents pip from breaking the conda environment by installing
incompatible versions of packages already installed with conda.
session.install("contexter", "--no-deps")
session.install("-e", ".", "--no-deps")
"mamba"
is also allowed as a choice for venv_backend
, which will
use/require mamba instead of conda.
Just like Nox can handle running against multiple interpreters, Nox can also handle running your sessions with a list of different arguments using the :func:`nox.parametrize` decorator.
Here's a short example of using parametrization to test against two different versions of Django:
@nox.session
@nox.parametrize("django", ["1.9", "2.0"])
def test(session, django):
session.install(f"django=={django}")
session.run("pytest")
If you run nox --list
you'll see that Nox expands your one session into
multiple sessions. One for each argument value that you want to be passed to
your session:
Sessions defined in noxfile.py:
* test(django='1.9')
* test(django='2.0')
:func:`nox.parametrize` has an interface and usage intentionally similar to pytest's parametrize. It's an extremely powerful feature of Nox. You can read more about parametrization and see more examples over at :ref:`parametrized`.
You can add tags to your sessions to help you organize your development tasks:
@nox.session(tags=["style", "fix"])
def black(session):
session.install("black")
session.run("black", "my_package")
@nox.session(tags=["style", "fix"])
def isort(session):
session.install("isort")
session.run("isort", "my_package")
@nox.session(tags=["style"])
def flake8(session):
session.install("flake8")
session.run("flake8", "my_package")
If you run nox -t style
, Nox will run all three sessions:
* black
* isort
* flake8
If you run nox -t fix
, Nox will only run the black
and isort
sessions:
* black
* isort
- flake8
If you run nox -t style fix
, Nox will run all sessions that match any of
the tags, so all three sessions:
* black
* isort
* flake8
Look at you! You're now basically an expert at Nox! ✨
For this point you can:
- Read more docs, such as :doc:`usage` and :doc:`config`.
- Give us feedback or contribute, see :doc:`CONTRIBUTING`.
Have fun! 💜