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Configuring conda-forge.yml

You can configure how conda-forge is set up and built via the conda-forge.yml file that is present in the root directory of a feedstock.

Rerendering the feedstock after you modify this file is usually required and always a good idea (see Rerendering feedstocks).

The next section describes in detail the top-level fields in conda-forge.yml.

conda-forge.yml schema

info
This documentation is autogenerated from conda-smithy's JSON Schema.

This model describes in detail the top-level fields in conda-forge.yml. General configuration options are described below within the Fields specifications. Additional examples are provided as part of the object description. Values and options are subject to change, and will be flagged as Deprecated as appropriate.

appveyor

AppVeyor CI settings. This is usually read-only and should not normally be manually modified. Tools like conda-smithy may modify this, as needed.

azure

Azure Pipelines CI settings. This is usually read-only and should not normally be manually modified. Tools like conda-smithy may modify this, as needed. For example:

azure:
# flag for forcing the building all supported providers
force: False
# toggle for storing the conda build_artifacts directory (including the
# built packages) as an Azure pipeline artifact that can be downloaded
store_build_artifacts: False
# toggle for freeing up some extra space on the default Azure Pipelines
# linux image before running the Docker container for building
free_disk_space: False
# limit the amount of CI jobs running concurrently at a given time
# each OS will get its proportional share of the configured value
max_parallel: 25

Below is an example configuration for setting up a self-hosted Azure agent for Linux:

azure:
settings_linux:
pool:
name: your_local_pool_name
demands:
- some_key -equals some_value
workspace:
clean: all
strategy:
maxParallel: 1

Below is an example configuration for adding a swapfile on an Azure agent for Linux:

azure:
settings_linux:
swapfile_size: 10GiB

bot

This dictates the behavior of the conda-forge auto-tick bot which issues automatic version updates/migrations for feedstocks. A valid example is:

bot:
# can the bot automerge PRs it makes on this feedstock
automerge: true
# only automerge on successful version PRs, migrations are not automerged
automerge: 'version'
# only automerge on successful migration PRs, versions are not automerged
automerge: 'migration'

# only open PRs if resulting environment is solvable, useful for tightly coupled packages
check_solvable: true

# The bot.inspection key in the conda-forge.yml can have one of seven possible values and controls
# the bots behaviour for automatic dependency updates:
inspection: hint # generate hints using source code (backwards compatible)
inspection: hint-all # generate hints using all methods
inspection: hint-source # generate hints using only source code
inspection: hint-grayskull # generate hints using only grayskull
inspection: update-all # update recipe using all methods
inspection: update-source # update recipe using only source code
inspection: update-grayskull # update recipe using only grayskull
inspection: disabled # don't update recipe, don't generate hints

# any branches listed in this section will get bot migration PRs in addition
# to the default branch
abi_migration_branches:
- 'v1.10.x'

version_updates:
# use this for packages that are updated too frequently
random_fraction_to_keep: 0.1 # keeps 10% of versions at random
exclude:
- '08.14'

The abi_migration_branches feature is useful to, for example, add a long-term support (LTS) branch for a package.

build_platform

This is a mapping from the target platform to the build platform for the package to be built. For example, the following builds a osx-64 package on the linux-64 build platform using cross-compiling.

build_platform:
osx_64: linux_64

Leaving this field empty implicitly requests to build a package natively. i.e.

build_platform:
linux_64: linux_64
linux_ppc64le: linux_ppc64le
linux_aarch64: linux_aarch64
osx_64: osx_64
osx_arm64: osx_arm64
win_64: win_64

build_with_mambabuild

Deprecated

build_with_mambabuild is deprecated, use conda_build_tool instead.

channel_priority

The channel priority level for the conda solver during feedstock builds. For extra information, see the Strict channel priority section on conda documentation.

choco

This parameter allows for conda-smithy to run chocoloatey installs on Windows when additional system packages are needed. This is a list of strings that represent package names and any additional parameters. For example,

choco:
# install a package
- nvidia-display-driver

# install a package with a specific version
- cuda --version=11.0.3

This is currently only implemented for Azure Pipelines. The command that is run is choco install {entry} -fdv -y --debug. That is, choco install is executed with a standard set of additional flags that are useful on CI.

circle

Circle CI settings. This is usually read-only and should not normally be manually modified. Tools like conda-smithy may modify this, as needed.

clone_depth

The depth of the git clone.

compiler_stack

Deprecated

Compiler stack environment variable. This is used to specify the compiler stack to use for builds. Deprecated.

compiler_stack: comp7

conda_build

Settings in this block are used to control how conda build runs and produces artifacts. An example of the such configuration is:

conda_build:
pkg_format: 2
zstd_compression_level: 16
error_overlinking: False

conda_build_tool

Use this option to choose which tool is used to build your recipe.

conda_forge_output_validation

This field must be set to True for feedstocks in the conda-forge GitHub organization. It enables the required feedstock artifact validation as described in Output Validation and Feedstock Tokens.

conda_install_tool

Use this option to choose which tool is used to provision the tooling in your feedstock.

conda_solver

Choose which conda solver plugin to use for feedstock builds.

config_version

The conda-smithy config version to be used for conda_build_config.yaml files in recipe and conda-forge-pinning. This should not be manually modified.

docker

This is a mapping for Docker-specific configuration options. Some options are

docker:
executable: docker
command: "bash"

drone

Drone CI settings. This is usually read-only and should not normally be manually modified. Tools like conda-smithy may modify this, as needed.

exclusive_config_file

Exclusive conda-build config file to replace conda-forge-pinning. For advanced usage only.

github

Mapping for GitHub-specific configuration options. The defaults are as follows:

github:
user_or_org: conda-forge
repo_name: "my_repo"
branch_name: main
tooling_branch_name: main

github_actions

GitHub Actions CI settings. This is usually read-only and should not normally be manually modified. Tools like conda-smithy may modify this, as needed.

idle_timeout_minutes

Configurable idle timeout. Used for packages that don't have chatty enough builds. Applicable only to circleci and travis.

idle_timeout_minutes: 60

matrix

Deprecated

Build matrices were used to specify a set of build configurations to run for each package pinned dependency. This has been deprecated in favor of the provider field. More information can be found in the Build Matrices section of the conda-forge docs.

max_py_ver

Deprecated

Maximum Python version. This is used to specify the maximum Python version to use for builds. Deprecated.

max_py_ver: 37

max_r_ver

Deprecated

Maximum R version. This is used to specify the maximum R version to use for builds. Deprecated.

max_r_ver: 34

min_py_ver

Deprecated

Minimum Python version. This is used to specify the minimum Python version to use for builds. Deprecated.

min_py_ver: 27

min_r_ver

Deprecated

Minimum R version. This is used to specify the minimum R version to use for builds. Deprecated.

min_r_ver: 34

noarch_platforms

Platforms on which to build noarch packages. The preferred default is a single build on linux_64.

noarch_platforms: linux_64

To build on multiple platforms, e.g. for simple packages with platform-specific dependencies, provide a list.

noarch_platforms:
- linux_64
- win_64

os_version

This key is used to set the OS versions for linux_* platforms. Valid entries map a linux platform and arch to either cos6 or cos7. Currently cos6 is the default for linux-64. All other linux architectures use CentOS 7. Here is an example that enables CentOS 7 on linux-64 builds

os_version:
linux_64: cos7

package

Default location for a package feedstock directory basename.

private_upload

Whether to upload to a private channel.

private_upload: False

provider

The provider field is a mapping from build platform (not target platform) to CI service. It determines which service handles each build platform. If a desired build platform is not available with a selected provider (either natively or with emulation), the build will be disabled. Use the build_platform field to manually specify cross-compilation when no providers offer a desired build platform.

The following are available as supported build platforms:

  • linux_64
  • osx_64
  • win_64
  • linux_aarch64
  • linux_ppc64le
  • linux_s390x
  • linux_armv7l

The following CI services are available:

  • azure
  • circle
  • travis
  • appveyor
  • None or False to disable a build platform.
  • default to choose an appropriate CI (only if available)
  • native to choose an appropriate CI for native compiling (only if available)
  • emulated to choose an appropriate CI for compiling inside an emulation of the target platform (only if available)

For example, switching linux_64 & osx_64 to build on Travis CI, with win_64 on Appveyor:

provider:
linux_64: travis
osx_64: travis
win_64: appveyor

Currently, x86_64 platforms are enabled, but other build platforms are disabled by default. i.e. an empty provider entry is equivalent to the following:

provider:
linux_64: azure
osx_64: azure
win_64: azure
linux_ppc64le: None
linux_aarch64: None

To enable linux_ppc64le and linux_aarch64 add the following:

provider:
linux_ppc64le: default
linux_aarch64: default

recipe_dir

The relative path to the recipe directory. The default is:

recipe_dir: recipe

remote_ci_setup

This option can be used to override the default conda-forge-ci-setup package. Can be given with ${url or channel_alias}::package_name, defaults to conda-forge channel_alias if no prefix is given.

remote_ci_setup: ["conda-forge-ci-setup=4", "conda-build>=24.1"]

secrets

List of secrets to be used in GitHub Actions. The default is an empty list and will not be used.

shellcheck

Shell scripts used for builds or activation scripts can be linted with shellcheck. This option can be used to enable shellcheck and configure its behavior. This is not enabled by default, but can be enabled like so:

shellcheck:
enabled: True

skip_render

This option specifies a list of files which conda smithy will skip rendering. This is useful for files that are not templates, but are still in the recipe directory. The default value is an empty list [], which will consider that all files can be rendered. For example, if you want to skip rendering the .gitignore and LICENSE.txt files, you can add the following:

skip_render:
- .gitignore
- LICENSE.txt

templates

This is mostly an internal field for specifying where template files reside. You shouldn't need to modify it.

test

This is used to configure on which platforms a recipe is tested.

test: native_and_emulated

Will do testing only if the platform is native or if there is an emulator.

test: native

Will do testing only if the platform is native.

test_on_native_only

Deprecated

This was used for disabling testing for cross-compiling.

warning
This has been deprecated in favor of the top-level `test` field. It is now mapped to `test: native_and_emulated`.

travis

Travis CI settings. This is usually read-only and should not normally be manually modified. Tools like conda-smithy may modify this, as needed.

upload_on_branch

This parameter restricts uploading access on work from certain branches of the same repo. Only the branch listed in upload_on_branch will trigger uploading of packages to the target channel. The default is to skip this check if the key upload_on_branch is not in conda-forge.yml. To restrict uploads to the main branch:

upload_on_branch: main

woodpecker

Woodpecker CI settings. This is usually read-only and should not normally be manually modified. Tools like conda-smithy may modify this, as needed.