install packages and run Python with them
Project description
pip-run provides on-demand temporary package installation for a single interpreter run.
It replaces this series of commands (or their Windows equivalent):
$ virtualenv --python pythonX.X --system-site-packages $temp/env $ $temp/env/bin/pip install pkg1 pkg2 -r reqs.txt $ $temp/env/bin/python ... $ rm -rf $temp/env
With this single-line command:
$ pythonX.X -m pip-run pkg1 pkg2 -r reqs.txt -- ...
Features include
Downloads missing dependencies and makes their packages available for import.
Installs packages to a special staging location such that they’re not installed after the process exits.
Relies on pip to cache downloads of such packages for reuse.
Leaves no trace of its invocation (except files in pip’s cache).
Supersedes installed packages when required.
Relies on packages already satisfied [1].
Re-uses the pip tool chain for package installation.
pip-run is not intended to solve production dependency management, but does aim to address the other, one-off scenarios around dependency management:
trials and experiments
build setup
test runners
just in time script running
interactive development
bug triage
pip-run is a compliment to Pip and Virtualenv and Setuptools, intended to more readily address the on-demand needs.
Installation
pip-run is meant to be installed in the system site packages alongside pip, though it can also be installed in a virtualenv.
Usage
as script launcher
as runtime dependency context manager
as interactive interpreter in dependency context
as module launcher (akin to python -m)
Invoke pip-run from the command-line using the console entry script (simply pip-run) or using the module executable ( python -m pip-run). This latter usage is particularly convenient for testing a command across various Python versions.
Parameters following pip-run are passed directly to pip install, so pip-run numpy will install numpy (reporting any work done during the install) and pip-run -v -r requirements.txt will verbosely install all the requirements listed in a file called requirements.txt (quiet is the default). Any environment variables honored by pip are also honored.
Following the parameters to pip install, one may optionally include a -- after which any parameters will be passed to a Python interpreter in the context.
See pip-run --help for more details.
Examples
The examples folder in this project includes some examples demonstrating the power and usefulness of the project. Read the docs on those examples for instructions.
Module Script Runner
Perhaps the most powerful usage of pip-run is its ability to invoke executable modules and packages via runpy (aka python -m):
$ pip-run pycowsay -- -m pycowsay "moove over, pip-run" ------------------- < moove over, pip-run > ------------------- \ ^__^ \ (oo)\_______ (__)\ )\/\ ||----w | || ||
Command Runner
Note that everything after the – is passed to the python invocation, so it’s possible to have a one-liner that runs under a dependency context:
$ python -m pip-run requests -- -c "import requests; print(requests.get('https://pypi-hypernode.com/project/pip-run').status_code)" 200
As long as pip-run is installed in each of Python environments on the system, this command can be readily repeated on the other python environments by specifying the relevant interpreter:
$ python2.7 -m pip-run ...
or on Windows:
$ py -2.7 -m pip-run ...
Script Runner
pip-run can run a Python file with indicated dependencies. Because arguments after -- are passed directly to the Python interpreter and because the Python interpreter will run any script, invoking a script with dependencies is easy. Consider this script “myscript.py”:
#!/usr/bin/env python
import requests
req = requests.get('https://pypi-hypernode.com/project/pip-run')
print(req.status_code)
To invoke it while making sure requests is present:
$ pip-run requests – myscript.py
pip-run will make sure that requests is installed then invoke the script in a Python interpreter configured with requests and its dependencies.
For added convenience when running scripts, pip-run will infer the beginning of Python parameters if it encounters a filename of a Python script that exists, allowing for omission of the -- for script invocation:
$ pip-run requests myscript.py
Script-declared Dependencies
Building on Script Runner above, pip-run also allows dependencies to be declared in the script itself so that the user need not specify them at each invocation.
To declare dependencies in a script, add a __requires__ variable to the script:
#!/usr/bin/env python
__requires__ = ['requests']
import requests
req = requests.get('https://pypi-hypernode.com/project/pip-run')
print(req.status_code)
With that declaration in place, one can now invoke pip-run without declaring any parameters to pip:
$ pip-run myscript.py 200
The format for requirements must follow PEP 508.
Other Script Directives
pip-run also recognizes a global __index_url__ attribute. If present, this value will supply --index-url to pip with the attribute value, allowing a script to specify a custom package index:
#!/usr/bin/env python
__requires__ = ['my_private_package']
__index_url__ = 'https://my.private.index/'
import my_private_package
...
Supplying parameters to Pip
If you’ve been using pip-run, you may have defined some requirements in the __requires__ of a script, but now you wish to install those to a more permanent environment. pip-run provides a routine to facilitate this case:
$ python -m pip_run.read-deps script.py my_dependency
If you’re on Unix, you may pipe this result directly to pip:
$ pip install $(python -m pip_run.read-deps script.py)
And since pipenv uses the same syntax, the same technique works for pipenv:
$ pipenv install $(python -m pip_run.read-deps script.py)
Interactive Interpreter
pip-run also offers a painless way to run a Python interactive interpreter in the context of certain dependencies:
$ /clean-install/python -m pip-run boto >>> import boto >>>
Experiments and Testing
Because pip-run provides a single-command invocation, it is great for experiments and rapid testing of various package specifications.
Consider a scenario in which one wishes to create an environment where two different versions of the same package are installed, such as to replicate a broken real-world environment. Stack two invocations of pip-run to get two different versions installed:
$ pip-run keyring==21.8.0 -- -m pip-run keyring==22.0.0 -- -c "import importlib.metadata, pprint; pprint.pprint([dist._path for dist in importlib.metadata.distributions() if dist.metadata['name'] == 'keyring'])" [PosixPath('/var/folders/03/7l0ffypn50b83bp0bt07xcch00n8zm/T/pip-run-a3xvd267/keyring-22.0.0.dist-info'), PosixPath('/var/folders/03/7l0ffypn50b83bp0bt07xcch00n8zm/T/pip-run-1fdjsgfs/keyring-21.8.0.dist-info')]
How Does It Work
pip-run effectively does the following:
pip install -t $TMPDIR
PYTHONPATH=$TMPDIR python
cleanup
For specifics, see pip_run.run().
Limitations
Due to limitations with pip, pip-run cannot run with “editable” (-e) requirements.
pip-run uses a sitecustomize module to ensure that .pth files in the requirements are installed. As a result, any environment that has a sitecustomize module will find that module masked when running under pip-run.
Comparison with pipx
The pipx project is another mature project with similar goals. Both projects expose a project and its dependencies in ephemeral environments. The main difference is pipx primarily exposes Python binaries (console scripts) from those environments whereas pip-run exposes a Python context (including runpy scripts).
Feature |
pip-run |
pipx |
---|---|---|
user-mode operation |
✓ |
✓ |
invoke console scripts |
✓ |
|
invoke runpy modules |
✓ |
|
run standalone scripts |
✓ |
|
interactive interpreter with deps |
✓ |
|
re-use existing environment |
✓ |
|
ephemeral environments |
✓ |
✓ |
persistent environments |
✓ |
|
PEP 582 support |
✓ |
|
Specify optional dependencies |
✓ |
|
Python 2 support |
✓ |
Comparison with virtualenvwrapper mktmpenv
The mkvirtualenv project attempts to address some of the use-cases that pip-run solves, especially with the mktmpenv command, which destroys the virtualenv after deactivation. The main difference is that pip-run is transient only for the invocation of a single command, while mktmpenv lasts for a session.
Feature |
pip-run |
mktmpenv |
---|---|---|
create temporary package environment |
✓ |
✓ |
re-usable across python invocations |
✓ |
|
portable |
✓ |
|
one-line invocation |
✓ |
|
multiple interpreters in session |
✓ |
|
run standalone scripts |
✓ |
|
interactive interpreter with deps |
✓ |
✓ |
re-use existing environment |
✓ |
|
ephemeral environments |
✓ |
✓ |
persistent environments |
✓ |
Integration
The author created this package with the intention of demonstrating the capability before integrating it directly with pip in a command such as pip run. After proposing the change, the idea was largely rejected in pip 3971.
If you would like to see this functionality made available in pip, please upvote or comment in that ticket.
Versioning
pip-run uses semver, so you can use this library with confidence about the stability of the interface, even during periods of great flux.
Testing
Invoke tests with tox.
For Enterprise
Available as part of the Tidelift Subscription.
This project and the maintainers of thousands of other packages are working with Tidelift to deliver one enterprise subscription that covers all of the open source you use.
Security Contact
To report a security vulnerability, please use the Tidelift security contact. Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure.
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.