pip-tools = pip-compile + pip-sync
A set of command line tools to help you keep your pip
-based packages fresh,
even when you've pinned them. You do pin them, right?
Installation
As part of a Python project's environment tooling (similar to pip
), it's
recommended to install pip-tools
in each project's virtual environment:
$ source /path/to/venv/bin/activate
(venv)$ pip install pip-tools
Note: all of the remaining example commands assume you've activated your project's virtual environment.
pip-compile
Example usage for The pip-compile
command lets you compile a requirements.txt
file from
your dependencies, specified in either setup.py
or requirements.in
.
Run it with pip-compile
or python -m piptools compile
. If you use
multiple Python versions, you can run pip-compile
as py -X.Y -m piptools
compile
on Windows and pythonX.Y -m piptools compile
on other systems.
setup.py
Requirements from Suppose you have a Flask project, and want to pin it for production.
If you have a setup.py
with install_requires=['Flask']
, then run
pip-compile
without any arguments:
$ pip-compile
#
# This file is autogenerated by pip-compile
# To update, run:
#
# pip-compile --output-file requirements.txt setup.py
#
click==6.7 # via flask
flask==0.12.2
itsdangerous==0.24 # via flask
jinja2==2.9.6 # via flask
markupsafe==1.0 # via jinja2
werkzeug==0.12.2 # via flask
pip-compile
will produce your requirements.txt
, with all the Flask
dependencies (and all underlying dependencies) pinned. You should put
requirements.txt
under version control.
setup.py
Without If you don't use setup.py
(it's easy to write one), you can create a
requirements.in
file to declare the Flask dependency:
# requirements.in
Flask
Now, run pip-compile requirements.in
:
$ pip-compile requirements.in
#
# This file is autogenerated by pip-compile
# To update, run:
#
# pip-compile --output-file requirements.txt requirements.in
#
click==6.7 # via flask
flask==0.12.2
itsdangerous==0.24 # via flask
jinja2==2.9.6 # via flask
markupsafe==1.0 # via jinja2
werkzeug==0.12.2 # via flask
And it will produce your requirements.txt
, with all the Flask dependencies
(and all underlying dependencies) pinned. You should put both
requirements.in
and requirements.txt
under version control.
Using hashes
If you would like to use Hash-Checking Mode available in pip
since
version 8.0, pip-compile
offers --generate-hashes
flag:
$ pip-compile --generate-hashes requirements.in
#
# This file is autogenerated by pip-compile
# To update, run:
#
# pip-compile --generate-hashes --output-file requirements.txt requirements.in
#
click==6.7 \
--hash=sha256:29f99fc6125fbc931b758dc053b3114e55c77a6e4c6c3a2674a2dc986016381d \
--hash=sha256:f15516df478d5a56180fbf80e68f206010e6d160fc39fa508b65e035fd75130b \
# via flask
flask==0.12.2 \
--hash=sha256:0749df235e3ff61ac108f69ac178c9770caeaccad2509cb762ce1f65570a8856 \
--hash=sha256:49f44461237b69ecd901cc7ce66feea0319b9158743dd27a2899962ab214dac1
itsdangerous==0.24 \
--hash=sha256:cbb3fcf8d3e33df861709ecaf89d9e6629cff0a217bc2848f1b41cd30d360519 \
# via flask
jinja2==2.9.6 \
--hash=sha256:2231bace0dfd8d2bf1e5d7e41239c06c9e0ded46e70cc1094a0aa64b0afeb054 \
--hash=sha256:ddaa01a212cd6d641401cb01b605f4a4d9f37bfc93043d7f760ec70fb99ff9ff \
# via flask
markupsafe==1.0 \
--hash=sha256:a6be69091dac236ea9c6bc7d012beab42010fa914c459791d627dad4910eb665 \
# via jinja2
werkzeug==0.12.2 \
--hash=sha256:903a7b87b74635244548b30d30db4c8947fe64c5198f58899ddcd3a13c23bb26 \
--hash=sha256:e8549c143af3ce6559699a01e26fa4174f4c591dbee0a499f3cd4c3781cdec3d \
# via flask
Updating requirements
To update all packages, periodically re-run pip-compile --upgrade
.
To update a specific package to the latest or a specific version use the
--upgrade-package
or -P
flag:
$ pip-compile --upgrade-package flask # only update the flask package
$ pip-compile --upgrade-package flask --upgrade-package requests # update both the flask and requests packages
$ pip-compile -P flask -P requests==2.0.0 # update the flask package to the latest, and requests to v2.0.0
You can combine --upgrade
and --upgrade-package
in one command, to
provide constraints on the allowed upgrades. For example to upgrade all
packages whilst constraining requests to the latest version less than 3.0:
$ pip-compile --upgrade --upgrade-package 'requests<3.0'
Output File
To output the pinned requirements in a filename other than
requirements.txt
, use --output-file
. This might be useful for compiling
multiple files, for example with different constraints on flask to test a
library with both versions using tox:
$ pip-compile --upgrade-package 'flask<1.0' --output-file requirements-flask0x.txt
$ pip-compile --upgrade-package 'flask<2.0' --output-file requirements-flask1x.txt
Configuration
You might be wrapping the pip-compile
command in another script. To avoid
confusing consumers of your custom script you can override the update command
generated at the top of requirements files by setting the
CUSTOM_COMPILE_COMMAND
environment variable.
$ CUSTOM_COMPILE_COMMAND="./pipcompilewrapper" pip-compile requirements.in
#
# This file is autogenerated by pip-compile
# To update, run:
#
# ./pipcompilewrapper
#
flask==0.10.1
itsdangerous==0.24 # via flask
jinja2==2.7.3 # via flask
markupsafe==0.23 # via jinja2
werkzeug==0.10.4 # via flask
pip-sync
Example usage for Now that you have a requirements.txt
, you can use pip-sync
to update
your virtual environment to reflect exactly what's in there. This will
install/upgrade/uninstall everything necessary to match the
requirements.txt
contents.
Run it with pip-sync
or python -m piptools sync
. If you use multiple
Python versions, you can also run py -X.Y -m piptools sync
on Windows and
pythonX.Y -m piptools sync
on other systems.
Be careful: pip-sync
is meant to be used only with a
requirements.txt
generated by pip-compile
.
$ pip-sync
Uninstalling flake8-2.4.1:
Successfully uninstalled flake8-2.4.1
Collecting click==4.1
Downloading click-4.1-py2.py3-none-any.whl (62kB)
100% |................................| 65kB 1.8MB/s
Found existing installation: click 4.0
Uninstalling click-4.0:
Successfully uninstalled click-4.0
Successfully installed click-4.1
To sync multiple *.txt
dependency lists, just pass them in via command
line arguments, e.g.
$ pip-sync dev-requirements.txt requirements.txt
Passing in empty arguments would cause it to default to requirements.txt
.
If you use multiple Python versions, you can run pip-sync
as
py -X.Y -m piptools sync ...
on Windows and
pythonX.Y -m piptools sync ...
on other systems.
Note: pip-sync
will not upgrade or uninstall packaging tools like
setuptools
, pip
, or pip-tools
itself. Use pip install --upgrade
to upgrade those packages.
Other useful tools
- pipdeptree to print the dependency tree of the installed packages.
requirements.in
/requirements.txt
syntax highlighting:- requirements.txt.vim for Vim.
- Python extension for VS Code for VS Code.