Project structure and files
The pyproject.toml
Python project metadata is defined in a
pyproject.toml
file. uv
requires this file to identify the root directory of a project.
Tip
uv init
can be used to create a new project. See Creating projects for
details.
A minimal project definition includes a name and version:
Additional project metadata and configuration includes:
The project environment
When working on a project with uv, uv will create a virtual environment as needed. While some uv
commands will create a temporary environment (e.g., uv run --isolated
), uv also manages a
persistent environment with the project and its dependencies in a .venv
directory next to the
pyproject.toml
. It is stored inside the project to make it easy for editors to find — they need
the environment to give code completions and type hints. It is not recommended to include the
.venv
directory in version control; it is automatically excluded from git
with an internal
.gitignore
file.
To run a command in the project environment, use uv run
. Alternatively the project environment can
be activated as normal for a virtual environment.
When uv run
is invoked, it will create the project environment if it does not exist yet or ensure
it is up-to-date if it exists. The project environment can also be explicitly created with
uv sync
.
It is not recommended to modify the project environment manually, e.g., with uv pip install
. For
project dependencies, use uv add
to add a package to the environment. For one-off requirements,
use uvx
or
uv run --with
.
Tip
If you don't want uv to manage the project environment, set managed = false
to disable automatic locking and syncing of the project. For example:
The lockfile
uv creates a uv.lock
file next to the pyproject.toml
.
uv.lock
is a universal or cross-platform lockfile that captures the packages that would be
installed across all possible Python markers such as operating system, architecture, and Python
version.
Unlike the pyproject.toml
, which is used to specify the broad requirements of your project, the
lockfile contains the exact resolved versions that are installed in the project environment. This
file should be checked into version control, allowing for consistent and reproducible installations
across machines.
A lockfile ensures that developers working on the project are using a consistent set of package versions. Additionally, it ensures when deploying the project as an application that the exact set of used package versions is known.
The lockfile is created and updated during uv invocations that use the project environment, i.e.,
uv sync
and uv run
. The lockfile may also be explicitly updated using uv lock
.
uv.lock
is a human-readable TOML file but is managed by uv and should not be edited manually.
There is no Python standard for lockfiles at this time, so the format of this file is specific to uv
and not usable by other tools.