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Version: 2.12 (deprecated)

Advanced target selection

Alternative techniques to tell Pants which files/targets to run on.


See File arguments vs. target arguments for the normal techniques for telling Pants what to run on.

See Project introspection for queries that you can run and then pipe into another Pants run, such as running over certain target types.

Running over changed files with --changed-since

Because Pants understands Git, it can find which files have changed since a certain commit through the --changed-since option.

For example, to lint all uncommitted files, run:

./pants --changed-since=HEAD lint

To run against another branch, run:

./pants --changed-since=origin/main lint

By default, --changed-since will only run over files directly changed. Often, though, you will want to run over any dependees of those changed files, meaning any targets that depend on the changed files. Use --changed-dependees=direct or --changed-dependees=transitive for this:

$ ./pants \
--changed-since=origin/main \
--changed-dependees=transitive \
test
Using a version control system other than Git?

Please message us on Slack or open a GitHub issue (see Community). We would be happy to look into adding support for your VCS, such as helping you with a PR to add support.

Tags: annotating targets

Every target type has a field called tags, which allows you to add a sequence of strings. The strings can be whatever you'd like, such as "integration_test".

BUILD
python_tests(
name="integration",
sources=["*_integration_test.py"],
tags=["skip_lint", "integration_test"],
)

You can then filter by tags with the global --tag option, like this:

./pants --tag=integration_test list ::

To exclude certain tags, prefix with a -:

./pants --tag='-integration_test' list ::

You can even combine multiple includes and excludes:

./pants --tag='+type_checked,skip_lint' --tag='-integration_test' list ::

--spec-files

The global option --spec-files allows you to pass a file containing target addresses and/or file names/globs to Pants.

Each entry must be separated by a new line.

For example:

$ ./pants --spec-files=targets.txt list
Tip: centralized allow/block lists

Whereas tags are useful for decentralized allow/block lists, --spec-files is useful when you want to define one single list of targets or files.

Piping to other Pants runs

To pipe a Pants run, use your shell's | pipe operator and xargs:

./pants dependees helloworld/util | xargs ./pants  list

You can, of course, pipe multiple times:

$ ./pants dependees helloworld/util | \
xargs ./pants filter --target-type=python_source | \
xargs ./pants lint
Alternative: use --spec-files

Sometimes, you may want to reuse the output of a Pants run for multiple subsequent Pants runs. Rather than repeating xargs multiple times, you can generate a file through stdout redirection and --spec-files.

For example:

$ ./pants dependencies helloworld/util > util_dependencies.txt
$ ./pants --spec-files=util_dependencies.txt lint

If you don't want to save the output to an actual file—such as to not pollute version control—you can use a variable and a named pipe:

$ TARGETS=$(./pants dependencies helloworld/util)
$ ./pants --spec-files=<(echo $TARGETS) lint

Sharding the input targets

You can leverage shell piping to partition the input targets into multiple shards.

For example, to split your Python tests into 10 shards, and select shard 0:

./pants list :: | xargs ./pants filter --target-type=python_test | awk 'NR % 10 == 0' | ./pants test