/conda.el

Emacs helper library (and minor mode) to work with conda environments

Primary LanguageEmacs LispMIT LicenseMIT

conda.el

Build Status MELPA

Emacs library for working with conda environments, largely ported from virtualenvwrapper.el.

what it does

  • Makes Python shells, interactive shells, eshell, anaconda-mode, and so on aware of your conda environments
  • Detects and auto-activates the right conda environment for a particular buffer.

running tests

Using makem.sh:

make v=v sandbox=/tmp install-deps=t test-ert

make v=v`

basic usage

  • Install conda (included if you have installed Anaconda or Miniconda)

  • Install from MELPA (M-x package-install conda), or just put conda.el on your load path.

  • Add it to your configuration (e.g. your .emacs or init.el). Something like this should work:

    (require 'conda)
    ;; if you want interactive shell support, include:
    (conda-env-initialize-interactive-shells)
    ;; if you want eshell support, include:
    (conda-env-initialize-eshell)
    ;; if you want auto-activation (see below for details), include:
    (conda-env-autoactivate-mode t)
    ;; if you want to automatically activate a conda environment on the opening of a file:
    (add-to-hook 'find-file-hook (lambda () (when (bound-and-true-p conda-project-env-path)
                                              (conda-env-activate-for-buffer))))
  • If your Anaconda installation is anywhere other than the default (~/.anaconda3) then set the conda-anaconda-home custom variable to the installation path. For instance, if you installed miniconda via Homebrew on macOS, this should work:

    (custom-set-variables
     '(conda-anaconda-home "/usr/local/Caskroom/miniconda/base/"))

    Also, if you have configured your Anaconda environment directory differently from the default (i.e. not relative to the Anaconda installation), you additionally need to set the conda-env-home-directory. For example, if it's at ~/anaconda3/ (while your main Anaconda installation might be at /opt/anaconda):

    (setq conda-env-home-directory (expand-file-name "~/anaconda3/"))
    

    Especially if you've changed from the default configuration, be sure to double-check that your Conda environments are correctly located. The default subdirectory is envs, so if your conda-env-home-directory is ~/anaconda3 then by default environments will be looked for in ~/anaconda3/envs. You can change this with the conda-env-subdirectory setting:

    (setq 
      conda-env-home-directory (expand-file-name "~/anaconda3/") ;; as in previous example; not required
      conda-env-subdirectory "myenvs")
    

    Now environments will be searched for under ~/anaconda3/myenvs.

  • Use M-x conda-env-activate to activate conda environments and M-x conda-env-deactivate to deactivate them. You can also use M-x conda-env-activate-for-buffer to try and detect the correct conda environment for a buffer, or use the conda-env-autoactivate-mode minor mode to do this automatically (see below for more details).

what do activating and deactivating actually do?

As with virtualenvwrapper.el, activating a conda environment does:

  1. Sets python-shell-virtualenv-path to the environment's directory so that when you open a new python shell, it is aware of the environment's installed packages and modules.
  2. The environment's bin directory is prepended to the PATH environment variable and Emacs' internal exec-path, so that when a process is launched from Emacs it is aware of any executables installed in the virtualenv (e.g py.test, pep8, etc.). This comes in handy for FlyCheck to correctly lint your code, or to use M-! nosetests to run your tests, and so on.
  3. The VIRTUAL_ENV environment variable is set to the environment's directory so any tools that depend on this variable function correctly (such as jedi).
  4. pythonic-activate is called on the environment to ensure any other Python- related code is initialized with the right working path, version of Python, and so on.

When you deactivate, all these things are undone. You can safely modify your PATH and exec-path while a virtualenv is active and expect the changes not to be destroyed.

This covers everything except interactive shells, which are covered in the next section.

shells

This thing supports two types of interactive shells, the eshell and the interactive subshell (what you get when you do M-x shell).

interactive shell

Support for interactive shell is turned on by calling conda-env-initialize-interactive-shell. After this is done, whenever you call shell, the shell will start in the correct conda environment. Note that changing the environment in Emacs will not affect any running shells and vice-versa; they are independent processes.

WARNINGS

This feature is a pretty big hack and works by advising the shell function. This works fine if you haven't otherwise tricked out or advised it, but if this is the case it may break.

eshell

Support for eshell is turned on by calling conda-env-initialize-eshell. After doing this, any new eshells you launch will be in the correct environment and have access to installed executables, etc. The mode also provides a variety of virtualenvwrapper-like commands that work identically to their bash/zsh counterparts (described in detail below). Note that in contrast to how interactive shells work, Eshell shares an environment with Emacs, so if you activate or deactivate in one, the other is affected as well. Note that this requires the variable eshell-modify-global-environment to be set to true -- running conda-env-initialize-eshell causes this to occur.

command reference

The commands this mode provides are prefixed with conda- (right now, the majority start with conda-env- since they deal with environments). All commands can be called interactively using M-x. Many of these commands have also been aliased without prefixes as eshell functions, so you can call them on the eshell just as you would in bash or zsh. For example:

eshell> activate myenv
eshell> deactivate

All will do what would expect.

conda-env-activate

Prompts for the name of a conda environment and activates it as described above. Can also be called noninteractively as (conda-env-activate "<NAME>").

conda-env-deactivate

Deactivates the current conda environment, undoing everything that conda-env-activate did. This can also be called noninteractively as (conda-env-deactivate).

conda-env-list

List all available conda environments, in a temp buffer.

useful macros

There is a conda-with-env macro, which takes the name of a conda environment and then any number of forms and executes those forms with that environment active.

Since it's common to want to execute shell commands, there is a convenience macro conda-with-env-shell-command, which takes a string, interpreted as a shell command, and do exactly what you'd expect. So for example, you can do (conda-with-env-shell-command "myenv" "conda install pep8") to install pep8 in the myenv conda environment. It can also be called interactively and will prompt for a command to run if so.

keybindings

Just like virtualenvwrapper.el, no keybindings defined here. Do what you like!

automatically activating a virtualenv in a particular project

It's also common to want to have an environment automatically activated when you open a file in a certain project. This can be done with the conda-env-autoactivate-mode minor mode, which will:

  • check for a per-directory local variable setting the conda-project-env-path variable with either the name or the full path to an existing conda environment
  • search up the directory tree for a file defining a conda environment, such as an environment.yml file, and try to activate the named environment

displaying the currently active environment on the mode line

The name of the currently active conda environment is stored in the variable conda-env-current-name. If you want to have it displayed on your customized mode line you can just add (:exec (list conda-env-current-name))) somewhere in your mode-line-format. If you don't customize your mode line and just want to have the current virtualenv displayed, you can do:

(setq-default mode-line-format (cons '(:exec conda-env-current-name) mode-line-format))

eshell prompt customization

You might also want to have the name of your current conda environment appear on the eshell prompt. You can do this by a pretty similar mechanism, just include conda-env-current-name in your eshell-prompt-function somewhere.

More about customizing the eshell prompt on the EmacsWiki.

bugs / comments / contributions

Please open an issue or a PR! I'm happy to pull in contributions or take suggestions for improvements.