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Configuring a CI service

Configuring a CI service

cibuildwheel works on many popular CI services. Others may work, but it will depend on the software installed on the CI machine/image. See the platforms page for details.

GitHub Actions [linux/mac/windows] {: #github-actions}

To build Linux, macOS, and Windows wheels using GitHub Actions, create a .github/workflows/build_wheels.yml file in your repo.

!!! tab "Action" For GitHub Actions, cibuildwheel provides an action you can use. This is concise and enables easier auto updating via GitHub's Dependabot; see Automatic updates.

> .github/workflows/build_wheels.yml

```yaml
{% include "../examples/github-minimal.yml" %}
```

Use `env:` to pass [build options](options.md) and `with:` to set
`package-dir: .`, `output-dir: wheelhouse` and `config-file: ''`
locations (those values are the defaults). You can also pass a
comma-separated list of extras to install additional packages.
For example, `extras: "uv"` to make uv available for cibuildwheel to use.

!!! tab "pipx" The GitHub Actions runners have pipx installed, so you can easily build in just one line. This is internally how the action works; the main benefit of the action form is easy updates via GitHub's Dependabot.

> .github/workflows/build_wheels.yml

```yaml
{% include "../examples/github-pipx.yml" %}
```

!!! tab "Generic" This is the most generic form using setup-python and pip; it looks the most like the other CI examples. If you want to avoid having setup that takes advantage of GitHub Actions features or pipx being preinstalled, this might appeal to you.

> .github/workflows/build_wheels.yml
{%
   include-markdown "../README.md"
   start="<!--generic-github-start-->"
   end="<!--generic-github-end-->"
%}

Commit this file, and push to GitHub - either to your default branch, or to a PR branch. The build should start automatically.

For more info on this file, check out the docs.

examples/github-deploy.yml extends this minimal example to include Android, iOS and Pyodide builds, and a demonstration of how to automatically upload the built wheels to PyPI.

Azure Pipelines [linux/mac/windows] {: #azure-pipelines}

To build Linux, Mac, and Windows wheels on Azure Pipelines, create a azure-pipelines.yml file in your repo.

azure-pipelines.yml

{% include "../examples/azure-pipelines-minimal.yml" %}

Commit this file, enable building of your repo on Azure Pipelines, and push.

Wheels will be stored for you and available through the Pipelines interface. For more info on this file, check out the docs.

Travis CI [linux/windows] {: #travis-ci}

To build Linux and Windows wheels on Travis CI, create a .travis.yml file in your repo.

.travis.yml

{% include "../examples/travis-ci-minimal.yml" %}

Commit this file, enable building of your repo on Travis CI, and push.

Then setup a deployment method by following the Travis CI deployment docs, or see Delivering to PyPI. For more info on .travis.yml, check out the docs.

examples/travis-ci-deploy.yml extends this minimal example with a demonstration of how to automatically upload the built wheels to PyPI.

CircleCI [linux/mac] {: #circleci}

To build Linux and Mac wheels on CircleCI, create a .circleci/config.yml file in your repo,

.circleci/config.yml

{% include "../examples/circleci-minimal.yml" %}

Commit this file, enable building of your repo on CircleCI, and push.

!!! note CircleCI doesn't enable free macOS containers for open source by default, but you can ask for access. See here for more information.

CircleCI will store the built wheels for you - you can access them from the project console. Check out the CircleCI docs for more info on this config file.

Gitlab CI [linux] {: #gitlab-ci}

To build Linux wheels on Gitlab CI, create a .gitlab-ci.yml file in your repo,

.gitlab-ci.yml

{% include "../examples/gitlab-minimal.yml" %}

Commit this file, and push to Gitlab. The pipeline should start automatically.

Gitlab will store the built wheels for you - you can access them from the Pipelines view. Check out the Gitlab docs for more info on this config file.

Cirrus CI [linux/mac/windows] {: #cirrus-ci}

To build Linux, Mac, and Windows wheels on Cirrus CI, create a .cirrus.yml file in your repo,

.cirrus.yml

{% include "../examples/cirrus-ci-minimal.yml" %}

Commit this file, enable building of your repo on Cirrus CI, and push.

Cirrus CI will store the built wheels for you - you can access them from the individual task view. Check out the Cirrus CI docs for more info on this config file.

⚠️ Got an error? Check the FAQ.

Other CI services

AppVeyor {: #appveyor}

Appveyor official support was dropped in cibuildwheel v3.0, due to a lack of CI credits. However, it can probably still be used as-is. Check the Appveyor example from the cibuildwheel v2.0 branch: appveyor-minimal.yml.

Next steps

Once you've got the wheel building successfully, you might want to set up testing or automatic releases to PyPI.

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