A simpler tool for creating venvs in a central location
Project description
mkenv is a simpler tool for creating virtualenvs in a central location.
It consists of the 5% of virtualenvwrapper that I actually use, and is in some ways meant to complement virtualenv rather than completely wrapping or hiding it.
Installation
The usual:
$ pip install mkenv
Usage
Usage is similar to mkvirtualenv, although mkenv passes arguments directly through to virtualenv:
$ mkenv nameofvenv -- -p pypy
will create a virtual environment in an appropriate platform-specific data directory, or in the directory specified by WORKON_HOME for compatibility.
Temporary Virtualenvs
I also find mktmpenv useful for quick testing. To support its use case, mkenv currently supports a different but similar style of temporary virtualenv.
Invoking:
$ venv=$(mkenv -t)
in your shell will create (or re-create) a global temporary virtualenv, and print its bin/ subdirectory (which in this case will be then stored in the venv variable). It can subsequently be used by, e.g.:
$ $venv/python
or:
$ $venv/pip ...
et cetera.
You may prefer using:
$ cd $(mkenv -t)
as your temporary venv workflow if you’re into that sort of thing instead.
The global virtualenv is cleared each time you invoke mkenv -t. Unless you care, unlike virtualenvwrapper’s mktmpenv, there’s no need to care about cleaning it up, whenever it matters for the next time, it will be cleared and overwritten.
mkenv may support the more similar “traditional” one-use virtualenv in the future, but given that it does not activate virtualenvs by default (see below), the current recommendation for this use case would be to simply use the virtualenv binary directly.
Why don’t I use virtualenvwrapper?
virtualenvwrapper is great! I’ve used it for a few years. But I’ve slowly settled on a much smaller subset of its functionality that I like to use. Specifically:
I don’t like activating virtualenvs.
virtualenvs are magical and hacky enough on their own, and piling activation on top just makes things even more messy, especially if you’re moving around between different projects in a shell. Some people use cd tricks to solve this, but I just want simiplicity.
I don’t need project support.
I’ve never attached a project to a virtualenv. I just use a naming convention, naming the virtualenv with the name of the repo (with simple coersion), and then using dynamic directory expansion in my shell to handle association.
Basically, I just want a thing that is managing a central repository of virtualenvs for me. So that’s what mkenv does!
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