Skip to main content

Bash helpers for navigating and managing Python VirtualEnvs.

Project description

At its core, envie is a set of Bash functions aiming to increase your productivity when dealing with mundane VirtualEnv tasks, like: creating, destroying, listing, switching and activating environments.

But envie really shines when it comes to auto-discovery and auto-activation of VirtualEnvs relevant to your project (or executable). Just say:

~/work/project-x$ envie manage.py migrate

~/work/project-y$ envie python tests.py

~$ envie python playground/plucky/tests/tests.py

or use it in a hash bang:

#!/usr/bin/env envie
import os
print(os.getenv("VIRTUAL_ENV"))

and in each of these cases the Python script will be executed in the closest virtual environment (for the definition of the closest environment see below, section Change/activate environment).

Summary

  • mkenv [<env>|"env"] [<pyexec>|"python"] - Create virtualenv in <env> based on Python version <pyexec>.

  • rmenv - Destroy the active environment.

  • chenv - Interactively activate the closest environment (looking down, then up, with lsupenv).

  • lsenv [-f|-l] [<start>|"." [<avoid>]] - List all environments below <start> directory, skipping <avoid> subdir.

  • lsupenv - Find the closest environments by first looking down and then dir-by-dir up the tree, starting with cwd.

  • cdenv - cd to the base dir of the currently active virtualenv ($VIRTUAL_ENV).

  • envie <script>, envie python <script> - Run python script in the closest virtual environment.

  • envie exec <command> - Execute arbitrary command/builtin/file/alias/function in the closest virtual environment.

  • envie init - Run (once) to enable (faster) searches with locate.

  • envie update - Run to re-index directories searched with updatedb.

  • envie register | unregister - Add/remove source statement to/from your .bashrc.

Examples

Create/destroy

To create a new VirtualEnv in the current directory, just type mkenv <envname>. This results with new environment created and activated in ./<envname>. When done with this environment, just type rmenv to destroy the active env.

stevie@caracal:~/demo$ ls
stevie@caracal:~/demo$ mkenv env
Creating python environment in 'env'.
Using Python 2.7.9 (/usr/bin/python).
(env)stevie@caracal:~/demo$ ls
env
(env)stevie@caracal:~/demo$ pip freeze
argparse==1.2.1
wsgiref==0.1.2
(env)stevie@caracal:~/demo$ rmenv
stevie@caracal:~/demo$ ls
stevie@caracal:~/demo$

Change/activate environment

Use chenv to activate the closest environment, tree-wise. We first look down the tree, then up the tree. If a single Python environment is found, it’s automatically activated. In case the multiple environments are found, a choice is presented to user.

stevie@caracal:~/demo$ ls -F
env/ project/ file1 file2 ...
stevie@caracal:~/demo$ chenv
(env)stevie@caracal:~/demo$

Assume the following tree exists:

~/demo
  |_ project1
  |  |_ env
  |  |  |_ ...
  |  |_ src
  |     |_ ...
  |_ project2
  |  |_ env
  |     |_ ...

Now, consider you work in ~/demo/project1/src/deep/path/to/module, but keep the environment in the env parallel to src. Instead of manually switching to env and activating it with something like source ../../../../../env/bin/activate, just type chenv (cde<TAB> should actually do it, if you use tab completion):

stevie@caracal:~/demo/project1/src/deep/path/to/module$ chenv
(env)stevie@caracal:~/demo/project1/src/deep/path/to/module$ which python
/home/stevie/demo/project1/env/bin/python

On the other hand, if there are multiple environments to choose from, you’ll get a prompt:

stevie@caracal:~/demo$ chenv
1) ./project1/env
2) ./project2/env
#? 2
(env)stevie@caracal:~/demo$ which python
/home/stevie/demo/project2/env/bin/python

Search/list environments

To search down the tree for valid Python VirtualEnvs, use lsenv. Likewise, to search up the tree, level by level, use lsupenv. chenv uses lsupenv when searching for environment to activate.

Install

For convenience, envie is packaged and distributed as a Python package. To install, simply type:

$ sudo pip install envie
$ envie register

The second line above will add a sourcing statement for envie to your .bashrc file.

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-0.4.5.tar.gz (8.9 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

envie-0.4.5-py2.py3-none-any.whl (11.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2 Python 3

File details

Details for the file envie-0.4.5.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: envie-0.4.5.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 8.9 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for envie-0.4.5.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 5b598070701dc581370bc45db934daff3392a31327d73bfc4285a98cae60ff35
MD5 eb7f8300c2eaca2ab641dc372176a1ae
BLAKE2b-256 88169b7d9bf005d0acf632fe00c6199069fbcfaa2710fb4add263da8302bd2f4

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file envie-0.4.5-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for envie-0.4.5-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 1c8178c38b93a602a44053773442b66cc1cbe7a176f348ebff75ea042915aed6
MD5 a491be6c9ec62b4e11fe523b5015a053
BLAKE2b-256 cce5914ac0e26b718b188d867180f9e91a530c373081d5277ce7b8259d504ed6

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