Deprecation Notice: Since PEP-621 is now accepted, it is advised to use pyproject.toml
to store the Project's dependency list. Here are some projects supporting PEP-621
Python package management using pip, requirements file & setup.cfg.
- Adviced to install only inside virtualenv
Install from PyPI
pip install pipm
Note:
- This tool manipulates all your requirements file. So be sure to use a version control software to keep track of the changes.
- Both
pip
andpipm
command will work as the same. - Create a virtualenv for the project and install pipm with
pip install pipm
- Create an alias as
alias pip=pipm
or use as it is -pipm
- install all your dependencies from the base requirements file (
requirements.txt
)
pipm install
pipm install --all # *requirements*.txt - all environment -> test/prod/dev
pipm install pkg-name
pipm install pkg-name --dev # as development dependency
pipm install pkg-name --test # as testing dependency
- Remove one or more packages. Their dependencies will also get uninstalled. No orphaned packages.
pipm uninstall pkg-name
pipm update
pipm update --dev
- No new set of files.
*-requirements.txt
works like the lockfile with pinned versions - Just a wrapper around the standard pip's
install/uninstall
command. So all the cli options will work - Handles multiple
requirements
files and setup.cfg stores abstract dependencies.
- a wrapper around standard
pip install
command and accepts all the standard options
Below are the things that pipm
brings to the table
- Extra functionality
- when package names are given it will be saved to the requirements.txt file in the current directory.
If you have
requirements
directory structure withbase.txt
inside then that file will be used. Otherwise it will create one in the current directory. - when no package name is given then it is equivalent to
-r requirements.txt
and it will install all requirements from the current directory
- when package names are given it will be saved to the requirements.txt file in the current directory.
If you have
- Additional options:
It will search for the matching one in the following pattern
<name>-requirements.txt
orrequirements/<name>.txt
orrequirements-<name>.txt
the below saves to file when package name given otherwise equivalent to passing requirements file name.--dev
- saves to development requirements--prod
- saves to production requirements--test
- saves to testing requirements--doc
- saves to documentation requirements--env <name>
- if you have any special set of requirements that belong to a separate file you could pass the name here.
- a wrapper around standard
pip uninstall
command - alias
rm
is available - when uninstalling a package, this command also checks packages that are no longer required by any of user installed packages and removes them
- ofcourse it removes the packages from
requirements
files
- new command
- equivalent to calling
pip install
with--upgrade
flag - update a single package or the whole environment when no argument given.
- by default the packages are updated interactively
- set
--auto-update
to disable this
- set
- extends the standard freeze command to save the currently installed packages
- clone the repository and create new virtualenv
git clone git@github.com:jnoortheen/pipm.git
cd pipm
pew new pipm -a .
pip install -r dev-requirements.txt
- to test from local sources
pip install -e .
- Commit message should follow this style-guide.
- run
invoke test
from the root directory.
- rm will check whether a package is present in setup.cfg