Skip to main content

Bash helpers for navigating and managing Python VirtualEnvs.

Project description

https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/envie.svg https://img.shields.io/badge/platform-GNU/Linux,%20BSD,%20Darwin/OS%20X-red.svg https://img.shields.io/badge/shell-bash-blue.svg https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/envie.svg https://api.travis-ci.org/randomir/envie.svg?branch=master

Envie is a set of shell utilities (in bash) aiming to increase your productivity when dealing with mundane Python virtual environment tasks, like creating, destroying, listing/discovering, and switching/activating environments.

Where Envie really shines is auto-discovery, auto-activation and auto-creation of virtual envs relevant to your project (or executable). It holds no assumptions on virtual env dir location in relation to your code, but works best if they’re near (nested, in level, or one level up).

Motivation

I like to keep my virtual environments close to source (especially in production). With hundreds of projects on disk, this enables me to keep environment dir names short and relevant to project (since a project can sometimes have several environments, e.g. dev, prod, test), and environments easier to maintain in general.

If you structure your files/projects in any of the ways depicted in Fig 1. below, you’ll find Envie particularly helpful.

work                            work                                /srv
│                               │                                   │
├── plucky                      ├── jsonplus                        ├── production
│   ├── env       <--           │   ├── .git                        │   ├── website
│   ├── plucky                  │   ├── django                      │   │   ├── pythonenv     <--
│   ├── tests                   │   │   ├── env                     │   │   ├── var
│   └── ...                     │   │   │   ├── dev      <--        │   │   └── src
│                               │   │   │   └── prod     <--        :   :       ├── .git
├── blog                        │   │   ├── tests                   :   :       └── ...
│   ├── .env      <--           │   │   │   ├── env      <--        .   .
:   ├── .git                    :   :   :   ├── test_1.py
:   ├── _posts                  :   :   :   └── ...
.   └── ...                     .   .   .

(a) env in level with src       (b) env nested under src           (c) env one level above src

Figure 1. Several ways to keep your environments local to the code.

Easy activation

To activate the closest virtual environment in vicinity, just type envie (Fig 1.a and 1.c):

~/work/plucky$ envie
Activated virtual environment at 'env'.

/srv/production/website/src$ envie
Activated virtual environment at '../pythonenv'.

If several equally close environments are found (Fig 1.b), you’ll be prompted to select the exact env. But, you can avoid it with a cunning use of fuzzy-filtering, for example:

~/work/jsonplus$ envie dev
Activated virtual environment at 'django/env/dev'.

Discovery and filtering have no limits on depth, so you can activate your project environment like:

~$ envie jsonplus dev
Activated virtual environment at 'work/jsonplus/django/env/dev'.

Implicit activation

Sometimes you don’t care about activating the relevant environment in your shell. You just want your script to run in the correct env. Easy peasy (ref. Fig 1.b):

~/work/jsonplus$ envie ./django/tests/test_1.py
Activated virtual environment at 'django/tests/env'.
# running test ...

It doesn’t have to be a Python script:

~/work/plucky$ envie run make test
Activated virtual environment at 'env'.
# running 'make' with python from env

And it works from a hash bang too:

#!/usr/bin/env envie

You can even activate the closest environment after the fact, from your Python program (changing the environment from global to closest):

#!/usr/bin/python
import envie.activate_closest

Terse & pip-infused create

Sure, you can use virtualenv --python=python3 --no-site-packages env, but isn’t this simpler?

$ envie create -3

# or, shorter:
$ mkenv3

And how about also installing your pip requirements in one go?

$ mkenv -r dev-requirements.txt env/dev

Or, creating a temporary/throw-away environment with some packages installed, then hacking in an interactive Python session, and finally destroying the complete environment upon exit:

$ mkenv -t -p requests -p 'plucky>=0.4' && python && rmenv -f

Details and more examples are available in envie create, envie remove, and envie-tmp docs.

Discovery

Activation of the closest environment is predicated on the discovery of the existing virtual environments below a certain directory with lsenv (envie list), and on the up-the-tree search with findenv (envie find):

~/work$ lsenv
plucky/env
blog/.env
jsonplus/django/env/dev
...

Install & configure

For convenience, envie is packaged and distributed as a Python package. You can install it system-wide with: (for user-local / source install, see Install in docs):

$ sudo pip install envie
$ envie config

# start clean:
$ . ~/.bashrc

# or, open a new shell

After install, be sure to run a (short and interactive) configuration procedure with envie config. If in doubt, go with the defaults. Running config is optional, but it will allow you to add Envie sourcing statement to .bashrc (enabling Bash completion and alias functions), and to enable environments indexing (faster search with locate).

Enable index

By default, envie uses the find command to search for environments. That approach is pretty fast when searching shallow trees. However, if you have a deeper directory trees, it’s often faster to use a pre-built directory index (i.e. the locate command). To enable a combined locate/find approach to search, run envie config.

When index is enabled, the combined approach is used by default (if not overriden with -f or -l switches). In the combined approach, if find doesn’t finish within 400ms, search via find is aborted and locate is allowed to finish (faster).

Testing

Run all test suites locally with:

$ make test

(after cloning the repo.)

Usage in short

envie [-1] [-f|-l] [<basedir>] [<keywords>] (alias chenv)

Interactively activate the closest environment (looking down, then up, with findenv), optionally filtered by a list of <keywords>. Start looking in <basedir> (defaults to .).

envie create [-2|-3|-e <pyexec>] [-r <pip_req>] [-p <pip_pkg>] [-a] [<envdir> | -t] (alias mkenv)

Create virtual environment in <envdir> (or in a temporary dir, -t) based on a Python interpreter <pyexec>, optionally installing Pip requirements from <pip_req> file, and/or <pip_pkg> requirement specifier(s).

envie remove (alias rmenv)

Destroy the active environment.

envie list [-f|-l] [<dir>] [<keywords>] (alias lsenv)

List all environments below <dir> directory, optionally filtered with a list of <keywords>.

envie find [-f|-l] [<dir>] [<keywords>] (alias findenv)

Find the closest environments by first looking down and then dir-by-dir up the tree, starting in <dir>; optionally filtered with a list of <keywords>.

envie <script>, envie python <script>

Run Python script in the closest virtual environment.

envie run <command>

Execute arbitrary command/builtin/file/alias/function in the closest virtual environment.

envie-tmp <script>

Create a new temporary (throw-away) virtual environment, install requirements specified inside the <script> file, run the <script>, and destroy the environment afterwards.

envie config

Interactively configure Envie.

envie index

(Re-)index virtual environments (for faster searches with locate).

envie help

Print usage help. For details on a specific command use the -h switch (like envie find -h, or mkenv -h).

Documentation

Documentation is hosted by ReadTheDocs, latest version being available at envie.rtfd.io.

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

envie-0.4.35.tar.gz (20.4 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

envie-0.4.35-py2.py3-none-any.whl (29.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2 Python 3

File details

Details for the file envie-0.4.35.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: envie-0.4.35.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 20.4 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for envie-0.4.35.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 6255a726ad667a81ac00e6947ab9ff774c5b06fb6f4d4abdf92dadb234abc492
MD5 9b83369bbec60e3e1a65e588f66889b2
BLAKE2b-256 8051b116076dc401726eb3861cfcc740bb30f96501c3b2e8476b00288769a078

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file envie-0.4.35-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for envie-0.4.35-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 e627c31d76644a3e41c9b95c7b434ce6e8f525d193fcd24d8723a11176aaf5b9
MD5 8c280a5ea00db185c0281c2cd58cde4e
BLAKE2b-256 c063773a86a35827666268e22139a85f27292b2f84127a2dd7cd746c7698e202

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