run
Run a pex_binary
target.
To run an executable/script, simply use ./pants run
on a pex_binary
target, like this:
$ ./pants run project/app.py
or
$ ./pants run project:app
You may only run one target at a time.
The program will have access to the same environment used by the parent ./pants
process, so you can set environment variables in the external environment, e.g. FOO=bar ./pants run project/app.py
. (Pants will auto-set some values like $PATH
).
Pants will propagate the return code from the underlying executable. Run echo $?
after the Pants run to see the return code.
First, add the following target in some BUILD file (e.g., the one containing your other 3rd-party dependencies):
python_requirement_library(
name = "pydevd-pycharm",
requirements=["pydevd-pycharm==203.5419.8"], # Or whatever version you choose.
)
You can check this into your repo, for convenience.
Now, use the remote debugger as usual:
-
Start a Python remote debugging session in PyCharm, say on port 5000.
-
Add the following code at the point where you want execution to pause and connect to the debugger:
import pydevd_pycharm
pydevd_pycharm.settrace('localhost', port=5000, stdoutToServer=True, stderrToServer=True)
Run your executable with ./pants run
as usual.
Note: The first time you do so you may see some extra dependency resolution work, as pydevd-pycharm
has now been added to the binary's dependencies, via inference. If you have dependency inference turned off in your repo, you will have to manually add a temporary explicit dependency in your binary target on the pydevd-pycharm
target.
Run ./pants dependencies --transitive path/to/binary.py
to ensure that all the files you need are showing up, including for any resources you intend to use.
Passing arguments
To pass arguments to the script/executable, use --
at the end of the command, like this:
$ ./pants run project/app.py -- --arg1 arg2 arg3