databricks-cli/bundle/artifacts/whl/infer.go

51 lines
1.5 KiB
Go

package whl
import (
"context"
"fmt"
"github.com/databricks/cli/bundle"
"github.com/databricks/cli/libs/diag"
"github.com/databricks/cli/libs/python"
)
type infer struct {
name string
}
func (m *infer) Apply(ctx context.Context, b *bundle.Bundle) diag.Diagnostics {
artifact := b.Config.Artifacts[m.name]
py, err := python.DetectExecutable(ctx)
if err != nil {
return diag.FromErr(err)
}
// Note: using --build-number (build tag) flag does not help with re-installing
// libraries on all-purpose clusters. The reason is that `pip` ignoring build tag
// when upgrading the library and only look at wheel version.
// Build tag is only used for sorting the versions and the one with higher build tag takes priority when installed.
// It only works if no library is installed
// See https://github.com/pypa/pip/blob/a15dd75d98884c94a77d349b800c7c755d8c34e4/src/pip/_internal/index/package_finder.py#L522-L556
// https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/4781
//
// Thus, the only way to reinstall the library on all-purpose cluster is to increase wheel version manually or
// use automatic version generation, f.e.
// setup(
// version=datetime.datetime.utcnow().strftime("%Y%m%d.%H%M%S"),
// ...
//)
artifact.BuildCommand = fmt.Sprintf(`"%s" setup.py bdist_wheel`, py)
return nil
}
func (m *infer) Name() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("artifacts.whl.Infer(%s)", m.name)
}
func InferBuildCommand(name string) bundle.Mutator {
return &infer{
name: name,
}
}