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Some background: The project I'm working on uses python-ldap library. Since we are a mixed-OS development team (some use Linux, some macOS and some Windows), I'm trying to make the project build on all environments. Unfortunately, python-ldap is not officially supported for Windows, but there are unofficial wheels maintained by Christoph Gohlke. I've tested the wheel file and it works fine.

The problem: how do I tell Poetry to use the wheel on Windows and the official python-ldap package on Linux and macOS?

I've tried multiple things, including using multiple constraint dependencies and markers:

python-ldap = [
    { markers = "sys_platform == 'linux'", version = "*" },
    { markers = "sys_platform == 'win32'", path="lib/python_ldap-3.2.0-cp36-cp36m-win_amd64.whl" }

... but, judging from the poetry.lock file, it seems markers are then merged and just determine whether the library should be installed at all:

[[package]]
category = "main"
description = "Python modules for implementing LDAP clients"
marker = "sys_platform == \"linux\" or sys_platform == \"win32\""
name = "python-ldap"

Is there another way of dealing with platform-specific dependencies in Poetry?

1
  • I have the same problem. Currently I'm using commented out lines of dependencies, but it's far from ideal. Please tell me if you found a solution. Thanks! Apr 17, 2020 at 12:32

3 Answers 3

10

You can use the platform keyword

python-ldap = [
    { version = '*', platform = 'linux' },
]

Source

2
  • 1
    Even better, such as for faiss-cpu vs faiss-gpu - let the CLI do it for you. poetry add faiss-gpu --platform linux poetry add faiss-cpu --platform darwin
    – rjurney
    Dec 21, 2021 at 19:19
  • 1
    I don't understand how this answers the question. This only lists linux. As far as I can tell, there's no windows platform. Jul 14, 2023 at 13:53
10

The best way to do this is the use the --platform option with the poetry add command. For installing faiss on both Mac (faiss-cpu with no CUDA GPU support) and Linux (faiss-gpu with GPU/CUDA support available) you run the following commands:

# Add each package to your project
poetry add faiss-gpu --platform linux
poetry add faiss-cpu --platform darwin

# Thereafter just install
poetry install

As mentioned above, you can do this in the pyproject.toml file as described in the other answer, but the CLI is best. Be sure to poetry update if you edit pyproject.toml directly:

[tool.poetry.dependencies]
faiss-cpu = {version = "^1.7.1", platform = "darwin"}
faiss-gpu = {version = "^1.7.1", platform = "linux"}

Holla!

7
  • 1
    Why is using the CLI better than editing pyproject.toml directly?
    – burnpanck
    Aug 25, 2022 at 5:58
  • @burnpanck The arguments are that it prevents you from making a mistake, and that it updates the lock file and virtualenv automatically, but it's perfectly common to edit it manually, as well. Whatever works best for you.
    – mikenerone
    Sep 6, 2022 at 16:08
  • This does answer the questions, unfortunately. The package names are different in the answer, but the same in the original question.
    – bayer
    Feb 8, 2023 at 12:22
  • @bayer I'm not clear on what I should do to improve it - can you edit this or explain? Oh, the faiss stuff. Yeah, that came from my code. It seemed a clearer answer? I can add his code.
    – rjurney
    Apr 3, 2023 at 22:09
  • "The problem: how do I tell Poetry to use the wheel on Windows and the official python-ldap package on Linux and macOS?" No current answer shows this exact scenario. Jul 14, 2023 at 13:55
4

It looks like Poetry does not support well platform-specific dependency alternatives when one of the constrain contains a version tag unfortunately. For your solution to work, you would have to specify a path or url tag to a local or distant wheel instead.

I had the same issue with PyTorch dependencies and I was able to solve it by changing this:

[tool.poetry.dependencies]
python = "^3.10"
torch = [
    {platform = "linux", url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu118/torch-2.0.1%2Bcu118-cp310-cp310-linux_x86_64.whl"},
    {platform = "darwin", version = "2.0.1"},
]

to this:

[tool.poetry.dependencies]
python = "^3.10"
torch = [
    {platform = "darwin", url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu/torch-2.0.1-cp310-none-macosx_11_0_arm64.whl"},
    {platform = "linux", url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu118/torch-2.0.1%2Bcu118-cp310-cp310-linux_x86_64.whl"},
]

Notice the Linux specification which now links directly to the wheel file.

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