Skip to main content

pip2pi builds a PyPI-compatible package repository from pip requirements

Project description

pip2pi builds a PyPI-compatible package repository from pip requirements

https://travis-ci.org/wolever/pip2pi.png?branch=master

PyPI can go down, package maintainers can remove old tarballs, and downloading tarballs can take a long time. pip2pi helps to alleviate these problems by making it blindingly simple to maintain a PyPI-compatible repository of packages your software depends on.

$ pip2pi --help
Usage: pip2pi TARGET [PIP_OPTIONS] PACKAGES ...

Adds packages PACKAGES to PyPI-compatible package index at TARGET.

If TARGET contains ':' it will be treated as a remote path. The
package index will be built locally and rsync will be used to copy
it to the remote host.

PIP_OPTIONS can be any options accepted by `pip install -d`, like
`--index-url` or `--no-use-wheel`.

For example, to create a remote index:

    $ pip2pi example.com:/var/www/packages/ -r requirements.txt

To create a local index:

    $ pip2pi ~/Sites/packages/ foo==1.2

To pass arguments to pip:

    $ pip2pi ~/Sites/packages/ \
        --index-url https://example.com/simple \
        --no-use-wheel \
        -r requirements-base.txt \
        -r requirements-dev.txt \
        bar==3.1

Requirements

  1. pip

  2. A requirements.txt file for your project (optional, but useful)

  3. An HTTP server (optional, but useful)

Setup

Install pip2pi:

$ pip install pip2pi

And create the directory which will contain the tarballs of required packages, preferably somewhere under your web server’s document root:

$ mkdir /var/www/packages/

Mirroring Packages

To mirror a package and all of its requirements, use pip2tgz:

$ pip2tgz packages/ foo==1.2
...
$ ls packages/
foo-1.2.tar.gz
bar-0.8.tar.gz

Note that pip2tgz passes package arguments directly to pip, so packages can be specified in any format that pip recognizes:

$ cat requirements.txt
foo==1.2
http://example.com/baz-0.3.tar.gz
$ pip2tgz packages/ -r requirements.txt bam-2.3/
...
$ ls packages/
foo-1.2.tar.gz
bar-0.8.tar.gz
baz-0.3.tar.gz
bam-2.3.tar.gz

Building a Package Index

A directory full of .tar.gz files can be turned into PyPI-compatible “simple” package index using the dir2pi command:

$ ls packages/
bar-0.8.tar.gz
baz-0.3.tar.gz
foo-1.2.tar.gz
$ dir2pi packages/
$ find packages/
packages/
packages/bar-0.8.tar.gz
packages/baz-0.3.tar.gz
packages/foo-1.2.tar.gz
packages/simple
packages/simple/bar
packages/simple/bar/bar-0.8.tar.gz
packages/simple/baz
packages/simple/baz/baz-0.3.tar.gz
packages/simple/foo
packages/simple/foo/foo-1.2.tar.gz

But that’s a lot of work…

If running two commands seems like too much work… Take heart! The pip2pi command will run both of them for you… And it will use rsync to copy the new packages and index to a remote host!

$ pip2pi example.com:/var/www/packages/ foo==1.2
...
$ curl -I http://example.com/packages/simple/foo/foo-1.2.tar.gz | head -n1
HTTP/1.1 200 OK

But that’s still too much work…

Take heart! Your shell’s alias command can help. Add an alias like this to your shell’s runtime configuration file (hint: ~/.bashrc or similar):

alias pip2acmeco="pip2pi dev.acmeco.com:/var/www/packages/"

Now updating your package index will be as simple as:

$ pip2acmeco foo==1.2 -r bar/requirements.txt

Using Your New Package Index

To use the new package index, pass the --index-url= argument to pip:

$ pip install --index-url=http://example.com/packages/simple/ foo

Or, once it has been mirrored, prefix you requirements.txt with --index-url=...:

$ cat requirements.txt
--index-url=http://example.com/packages/simple/
foo==1.2

Without a web server

You can use your package index offline, too:

$ pip install --index-url=file:///var/www/packages/simple foo==1.2

Some Tips

When installing packages from source via python setup.py install or python setup.py install, you may need to create a setup.cfg, which points to your package index. Here are some examples for an offline package index in your Windows, Linux, or Mac file system:

[easy_install]
# Windows
# index_url = file:///C:/pip2pi/simple/

# Linux
# index_url = file:///home/myusername/.pip2pi/simple/

# Mac
index_url = file:///Users/myusername/.pip2pi/simple/

Note the triple /// after file: – two for the protocol, the third for the root of the local file system.

Keywords

  • Mirror PyPI

  • Offline PyPI

  • Create offline PyPI mirror

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

pip2pi-0.7.0rc1.tar.gz (238.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

pip2pi-0.7.0rc1-py2.py3-none-any.whl (12.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2 Python 3

File details

Details for the file pip2pi-0.7.0rc1.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: pip2pi-0.7.0rc1.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 238.0 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for pip2pi-0.7.0rc1.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 e780e23aff8db673f358ce0903d775f5ede5e5424f5c6c429ebc8f4611bcc888
MD5 fb366d6b048020a8c3391ea5e82eaaab
BLAKE2b-256 82c4b6866545f209819520d212f842bee47983c081071e66c21d7d8c3886516b

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file pip2pi-0.7.0rc1-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for pip2pi-0.7.0rc1-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 4714d99a21e07bb880bcbf0eb46af8024bac8976788f9d5e63c82c3ad0a1a908
MD5 83d4fe2e6fc3c7e328c797f18b191726
BLAKE2b-256 8c42d73bd20a34747361c85b92119d1fb36767cab851e5a0f866cfe387f37fb5

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page