# Configuration Scikit-build-core supports a powerful unified configuration system. Every option in scikit-build-core can be specified in one of three ways: as a `pyproject.toml` option (preferred if static), as a config-settings options (preferred if dynamic), or as an environment variable. Note that config-settings options can optionally be prefixed with `skbuild.`, for example `-C skbuild.logging.level=INFO`. (verbosity)= ## Verbosity By default, the CMake configuration output is always shown, but it may be hidden behind the build frontend setting, e.g. `pip` requires including `-v` argument in order to display any output. You can increase the verbosity of the build with two settings - `build.verbose` is a shortcut for verbose build output (i.e. `cmake --build ... -v`), and `logging.level` controls scikit-build-core's internal logging. An example (with all configuration styles) of setting both is: ````{tab} pyproject.toml ```toml [tool.scikit-build] build.verbose = true logging.level = "INFO" ``` ```` `````{tab} config-settings ````{tab} pip ```console $ pip install . -v --config-settings=build.verbose=true --config-settings=logging.level=INFO ``` ```` ````{tab} build ```console $ pipx run build --wheel -Cbuild.verbose=true -Clogging.level=INFO ``` ```` ````{tab} cibuildwheel ```toml [tool.cibuildwheel.config-settings] "build.verbose" = true "logging.level" = "INFO" ``` ```` ````` ````{tab} Environment ```yaml SKBUILD_BUILD_VERBOSE: true SKBUILD_LOGGING_LEVEL: "INFO" ``` ```` :::{warning} In general, the environment variable method is intended as an emergency workaround for legacy tooling. ::: :::{versionchanged} 0.10 `cmake.verbose` was renamed to `build.verbose`. ::: ## Minimum version & defaults Scikit-build-core, like CMake, has a special minimum required version setting. If you set this, you get two benefits. First, if the version is less than this version, you get a nice error message. But, more importantly, if scikit-build-core is a newer version than the version set here, it will select older defaults to help ensure your package can continue to build, even if a default value changes in the future. This should help reduce the chance of ever needed an upper cap on the scikit-build-core version, as upper caps are discouraged. It is recommended you set this value as high as you feel comfortable with, and probably keep in sync with your build-system requirements. ```toml [tool.scikit-build] minimum-version = "0.2" ``` In your `pyproject.toml`, you can specify the special string `"build-system.requires"`, which will read the minimum version from your build-system requirements directly; you must specify a minimum there to use this automatic feature. ```toml [build-system] requires = ["scikit-build-core>=0.10"] [tool.scikit-build] minimum-version = "build-system.requires" ``` :::{versionchanged} 0.10 The `"build-system.requires"` option was added. ::: :::{warning} The following behaviors are affected by `minimum-version`: - `minimum-version` 0.5+ (or unset) provides the original name in metadata and properly normalized SDist names. - `minimum-version` 0.5+ (or unset) strips binaries by default. - `minimum-version` 0.8+ (or unset) `cmake.minimum-version` and `ninja.minimum-version` are replaced with `cmake.version` and `ninja.version`. - `minimum-version` 0.10+ (or unset) `cmake.targets` and `cmake.verbose` are replaced with `build.targets` and `build.verbose`. The CMake minimum version will be detected if not given. ::: ## CMake and Ninja minimum versions You can select a different minimum version for CMake and Ninja. Scikit-build-core will automatically decide to download a wheel for these (if possible) when the system version is less than this value. For example, to require a recent CMake and Ninja: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] cmake.version = ">=3.26.1" ninja.version = ">=1.11" ``` You can try to read the version from your CMakeLists.txt with the special string `"CMakeLists.txt"`. This is an error if the minimum version was not statically detectable in the file. If your `minimum-version` setting is unset or set to "0.10" or higher, scikit-build-core will still try to read this if possible, and will fall back on ">=3.15" if it can't read it. You can also enforce ninja to be required even if make is present on Unix: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] ninja.make-fallback = false ``` You can also control the FindPython backport; by default, a backport of CMake 3.26.1's FindPython will be used if the CMake version is less than 3.26.1; you can turn this down if you'd like ("3.15", scikit-build-core's minimum version, would turn it off). ```toml [tool.scikit-build] backport.find-python = "3.15" ``` ```{versionadded} 0.8 These used to be called `cmake.minimum-version` and `ninja.minimum-version`, and only took a single value. Now they are full specifier sets, allowing for more complex version requirements, like `>=3.15,!=3.18.0`. ``` ## Configuring source file inclusion Scikit-build-core defaults to using your `.gitignore` to select what to exclude from the source distribution. You can list files to explicitly include and exclude if you want: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] sdist.include = ["src/some_generated_file.txt"] sdist.exclude = [".github"] ``` By default, scikit-build-core will respect `SOURCE_DATE_EPOCH`, and will lock the modification time to a reproducible value if it's not set. You can disable reproducible builds if you prefer, however: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] sdist.reproducible = false ``` You can also request CMake to run during this step: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] sdist.cmake = true ``` :::{note} If you do this, you'll want to have some artifact from the configure in your source directory; for example: ```cmake include(FetchContent) set(PYBIND11_FINDPYTHON ON) if(NOT SKBUILD_STATE STREQUAL "sdist" AND EXISTS "${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/pybind11/CMakeLists.txt") message(STATUS "Using integrated pybind11") add_subdirectory(pybind11) else() FetchContent_Declare( pybind11 GIT_REPOSITORY https://github.com/pybind/pybind11.git GIT_TAG v2.12.0 SOURCE_DIR ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/pybind11) FetchContent_MakeAvailable(pybind11) endif() ``` The `/pybind11` directory is in the `.gitignore` and important parts are in `sdist.include`: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] sdist.cmake = true sdist.include = [ "pybind11/tools", "pybind11/include", "pybind11/CMakeLists.txt", ] ``` ::: ## Customizing the built wheel The wheel will automatically look for Python packages at `src/`, `python/`, and ``, in that order. If you want to list packages explicitly, you can. The final path element is the package. ```toml [tool.scikit-build] wheel.packages = ["python/src/mypackage"] ``` This can also be a table, allowing full customization of where a source package maps to a wheel directory. The final components of both paths must match due to the way editable installs work. The equivalent of the above is: ```toml [tool.scikit-build.wheel.packages] mypackage = "python/src/mypackage" ``` But you can also do more complex moves: ```toml [tool.scikit-build.wheel.packages] "mypackage/subpackage" = "python/src/subpackage" ``` :::{versionadded} 0.10 Support for the table form. ::: You can disable Python file inclusion entirely, and rely only on CMake's install mechanism: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] wheel.packages = [] ``` The install directory is normally site-packages; however, you can manually set that to a different directory if you'd like to avoid changing your CMake files. For example, to mimic scikit-build classic: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] wheel.install-dir = "mypackage" ``` :::{warning} You can select a different wheel target directory, as well, but that syntax is experimental; install to `${SKBUILD_DATA_DIR}`, etc. from within CMake instead for now. ::: By default, any `LICEN[CS]E*`, `COPYING*`, `NOTICE*`, or `AUTHORS*` file in the root of the build directory will be picked up. You can specify an exact list of files if you prefer, or if your license file is in a different directory. Globbing patterns are supported. ```toml [tool.scikit-build] wheel.license-files = ["LICENSE"] ``` You can exclude files from the built wheel (on top of the `sdist.exclude` list) as well (not guaranteed to be respected by editable installs): ```toml [tool.scikit-build] wheel.exclude = ["**.pyx"] ``` :::{versionchanged} 0.9 Previously these were matched on the source path, rather than the wheel path, and didn't apply to CMake output. ::: :::{note} There are two more settings that are primarily intended for `overrides` (see below). `wheel.cmake` defaults to `true`, and this enables/disables building with CMake. It also changes the default of `wheel.platlib` unless it's set explicitly; CMake builds assume `wheel.platlib = true`, and CMake-less builds assume `wheel.platlib = false` (purelib targeted instead). ::: ## Customizing the output wheel The python API tags for your wheel will be correct assuming you are building a CPython extension. If you are building a Limited ABI extension, you should set the wheel tags for the version you support: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] wheel.py-api = "cp38" ``` Scikit-build-core will only target ABI3 if the version of Python is equal to or newer than the one you set. `${SKBUILD_SABI_COMPONENT}` is set to `Development.SABIModule` when targeting ABI3, and is an empty string otherwise. If you are not using CPython at all, you can specify any version of Python is fine: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] wheel.py-api = "py3" ``` Or even Python 2 + 3 (you still will need a version of Python scikit-build-core supports to build the initial wheel): ```toml [tool.scikit-build] wheel.py-api = "py2.py3" ``` Some older versions of pip are unable to load standard universal tags; scikit-build-core can expand the macOS universal tags for you for maximum historic compatibility if you'd like: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] wheel.expand-macos-universal-tags = true ``` You can also specify a build tag: ```{conftabs} wheel.build-tag 1 ``` You can select only specific components to install: ```{conftabs} install.components ["python"] ``` And you can turn off binary stripping: ```{conftabs} install.strip False ``` ## Configuring CMake arguments and defines You can select a different build type, such as `Debug`: ```{conftabs} cmake.build-type "Debug" ``` You can specify CMake defines as strings or bools: ````{tab} pyproject.toml ```toml [tool.scikit-build.cmake.define] SOME_DEFINE = "Foo" SOME_OPTION = true ``` ```` You can even specify a CMake define as a list of strings: ````{tab} pyproject.toml ```toml [tool.scikit-build.cmake.define] FOOD_GROUPS = [ "Apple", "Lemon;Lime", "Banana", "Pineapple;Mango", ] ``` ```` Semicolons inside the list elements will be escaped with a backslash (`\`) and the resulting list elements will be joined together with semicolons (`;`) before being converted to command-line arguments. :::{versionchanged} 0.11 Support for list of strings. ::: `````{tab} config-settings ````{tab} pip ```console $ pip install . --config-settings=cmake.define.SOME_DEFINE=ON ``` ```` ````{tab} build ```console $ pipx run build --wheel -Ccmake.define.SOME_DEFINE=ON ``` ```` ````{tab} cibuildwheel ```toml [tool.cibuildwheel.config-settings] "cmake.define.SOME_DEFINE" = "ON" ``` ```` ````` ````{tab} Environment ```yaml SKBUILD_CMAKE_DEFINE: SOME_DEFINE=ON ``` ```` You can also (`pyproject.toml` only) specify a dict, with `env=` to load a define from an environment variable, with optional `default=`. ```toml [tool.scikit-build.cmake.define] SOME_DEFINE = {env="SOME_DEFINE", default="EMPTY"} ``` You can also manually specify the exact CMake args. Beyond the normal `SKBUILD_CMAKE_ARGS`, the `CMAKE_ARGS` space-separated environment variable is also supported (with some filtering for options scikit-build-core doesn't support overriding). ```{conftabs} cmake.args ["-DSOME_DEFINE=ON", "-DOTHER=OFF"] ``` :::{warning} Setting defines through `cmake.args` in `pyproject.toml` is discouraged because this cannot be later altered via command line. Use `cmake.define` instead. ::: You can also specify this using `CMAKE_ARGS`, space separated: ```yaml CMAKE_ARGS: -DSOME_DEFINE=ON -DOTHER=OFF ``` You can also specify only specific targets to build (leaving this off builds the default targets): ```{conftabs} build.targets ["python"] ``` :::{versionchanged} 0.10 `cmake.targets` was renamed to `build.targets`. ::: You can pass raw arguments directly to the build tool, as well: ```{conftabs} build.tool-args ["-j12", "-l13"] ``` ```{versionadded} 0.9.4 ``` ## Editable installs Experimental support for editable installs is provided, with some caveats and configuration. Recommendations: - Use `--no-build-isolation` when doing an editable install is recommended; you should preinstall your dependencies. - Automatic rebuilds do not have the original isolated build dir (pip deletes it), so select a `build-dir` when using editable installs, especially if you also enable automatic rebuilds. - You need to reinstall to pick up new files. Known limitations: - Resources (via `importlib.resources`) are not properly supported (yet). Currently experimentally supported except on Python 3.9 (3.8, 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, and 3.13 work). `importlib_resources` may work on Python 3.9. ```console # Very experimental rebuild on initial import feature $ pip install --no-build-isolation --config-settings=editable.rebuild=true -Cbuild-dir=build -ve. ``` Due to the length of this line already being long, you do not need to set the `experimental` setting to use editable installs, but please consider them experimental and subject to change. You can disable the verbose rebuild output with `editable.verbose=false` if you want. (Also available as the `SKBUILD_EDITABLE_VERBOSE` envvar when importing; this will override if non-empty, and `"0"` will disable verbose output). The default `editable.mode`, `"redirect"`, uses a custom redirecting finder to combine the static CMake install dir with the original source code. Python code added via scikit-build-core's package discovery will be found in the original location, so changes there are picked up on import, regardless of the `editable.rebuild` setting. :::{note} A second experimental mode, `"inplace"`, is also available. This does an in-place CMake build, so all the caveats there apply too -- only one build per source directory, you can't change to an out-of-source builds without removing the build artifacts, your source directory will be littered with build artifacts, etc. Also, to make your binaries importable, you should set `LIBRARY_OUTPUT_DIRECTORY` (include a generator expression, like the empty one `$<0:>` for multi-config generator support, like MSVC, so you don't have to set all possible `*_` variations) to make sure they are placed inside your source directory inside the Python packages; this will be run from the build directory, rather than installed. This will also not support automatic rebuilds. The build directory setting will be ignored if you use this and perform an editable install. You can detect this mode by checking for an in-place build and checking `SKBUILD` being set. With all the caveats, this is very logically simple (one directory) and a near identical replacement for `python setup.py build_ext --inplace`. Some third party tooling might work better with this mode. Scikit-build-core will simply install a `.pth` file that points at your source package(s) and do an inplace CMake build. On the command line, you can pass `-Ceditable.mode=inplace` to enable this mode. ::: ## Messages You can add a message to be printed after a successful or failed build. For example: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] messages.after-sucesss = "{green}Wheel successfully built" messages.after-failure = """ {bold.red}Sorry{normal}, build failed. Your platform is {platform.platform}. """ ``` This will be run through Python's formatter, so escape curly brackets if you need them. Currently, there are several formatter-style keywords available: `sys`, `platform` (parenthesis will be added for items like `platform.platform` for you), `__version__` for scikit-build-core's version, and style keywords. For styles, the colors are `default`, `red`, `green`, `yellow`, `blue`, `magenta`, `cyan`, and `white`. These can be accessed as `fg.*` or `bg.*`, without a qualifier the foreground is assumed. Styles like `normal`, `bold`, `italic`, `underline`, `reverse` are also provided. A full clearing of all styles is possible with `reset`. These all can be chained, as well, so `bold.red.bg.blue` is valid, and will produce an optimized escape code. Remember that you need to set the environment variable `FORCE_COLOR` to see colors with pip. ```{versionadded} 0.10 ``` ## Other options You can select a custom build dir; by default scikit-build-core will use a temporary dir. If you select a persistent one, you can get major rebuild speedups. ```{conftabs} build-dir "build/{wheel_tag}" ``` There are several values you can access through Python's formatting syntax. See [](./formatted.md). Scikit-build-core also strictly validates configuration; if you need to disable this, you can: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] strict-config = false ``` Scikit-build-core also occasionally has experimental features. This is applied to features that do not yet carry the same forward compatibility (using minimum-version) guarantee that other scikit-build-core features have. These can only be used if you enable them: ```toml [tool.scikit-build] experimental = true ``` You can also fail the build with `fail = true`. This is useful with overrides if you want to make a specific configuration fail. If this is set, extra dependencies like `"cmake"` will not be requested. ```{versionadded} 0.10 ``` ## Overrides The overrides system allows you to customize for a wide variety of situations. It is described at [](#overrides). ## Full Schema You can see the full schema at [](#schema).