Unified Conda and Pip requirements management.
Project description
🚀 UniDep - Unified Conda and Pip Dependency Management 🚀
unidep
streamlines Python project dependency management by allowing a single requirements.yaml
file to handle both Conda and Pip dependencies.
This approach enables the creation of a unified Conda environment.yaml
, while also integrating with setup.py
or pyproject.toml
.
As a command-line interface (CLI) tool, unidep
merges multiple requirements.yaml
files into a consolidated environment.yaml
, and supports generating consistent conda-lock
files, which is particularly useful for monorepos.
Additionally, it facilitates the installation of Conda, Pip, and local dependencies with a single unidep install
command.
With unidep
, manage all your dependencies efficiently in one place.
:rocket: Features
- 🔗 Unified Management: Single-file handling of Conda and Pip dependencies.
- ⚙️ Project Tool Integration: Easily works with
pyproject.toml
andsetup.py
, sorequirements.yaml
is used duringpip install
. - 🏢 Monorepo Support: Merge multiple
requirements.yaml
into one Conda environmentenvironment.yaml
using the CLI tool and maintain a global and per-packageconda-lock
files. - 🌍 Platform-Specific Support: Specify dependencies for different operating systems or architectures.
- 🛠️ Conflict Resolution: Simplifies complex dependency management by resolving version conflicts.
- 🔄
unidep install
CLI: Automates installation of Conda, Pip, and local package dependencies.
:books: Table of Contents
:package: Installation
To install unidep
, run the following command:
pip install -U unidep
or
conda install -c conda-forge unidep
:page_facing_up: requirements.yaml
structure
unidep
processes requirements.yaml
files with a specific format (similar but not the same as a Conda environment.yaml
file):
- name (Optional): For documentation, not used in the output.
- channels: List of sources for packages, such as
conda-forge
. - dependencies: Mix of Conda and Pip packages.
Example
Example of a requirements.yaml
file:
name: example_environment
channels:
- conda-forge
dependencies:
- numpy # same name on conda and pip
- conda: python-graphviz # When names differ between Conda and Pip
pip: graphviz
- pip: slurm-usage # pip-only
- conda: mumps # conda-only
# Use platform selectors; below only on linux64
- conda: cuda-toolkit # [linux64]
platforms: # (Optional) specify platforms that are supported (like conda-lock)
- linux-64
- osx-arm64
includes:
- ../other-project-using-unidep # include other projects that use unidep
- ../common-requirements.yaml # include other requirements.yaml files
⚠️ unidep
can process this file in pyproject.toml
or setup.py
and create a environment.yaml
file.
For a more in-depth example, see the example
directory.
Key Points
- Standard names (e.g.,
- numpy
) are assumed to be the same for Conda and Pip. - Use
conda: <package>
andpip: <package>
to specify different names across platforms. - Use
pip:
to specify packages that are only available through Pip. - Use
conda:
to specify packages that are only available through Conda. - Use
# [selector]
to specify platform-specific dependencies. - Use
platforms:
to specify the platforms that are supported. - Use
includes:
to include otherrequirements.yaml
files and merge them into one.
Using the CLI unidep
will combine these dependencies into a single conda installable environment.yaml
file.
Platform Selectors
This tool supports a range of platform selectors that allow for specific handling of dependencies based on the user's operating system and architecture. This feature is particularly useful for managing conditional dependencies in diverse environments.
Supported Selectors
The following selectors are supported:
linux
: For all Linux-based systems.linux64
: Specifically for 64-bit Linux systems.aarch64
: For Linux systems on ARM64 architectures.ppc64le
: For Linux on PowerPC 64-bit Little Endian architectures.osx
: For all macOS systems.osx64
: Specifically for 64-bit macOS systems.arm64
: For macOS systems on ARM64 architectures (Apple Silicon).macos
: An alternative toosx
for macOS systems.unix
: A general selector for all UNIX-like systems (includes Linux and macOS).win
: For all Windows systems.win64
: Specifically for 64-bit Windows systems.
Usage
Selectors are used in requirements.yaml
files to conditionally include dependencies based on the platform:
dependencies:
- some-package # [unix]
- another-package # [win]
- special-package # [osx64]
- pip: cirq # [macos]
conda: cirq # [linux]
In this example:
some-package
is included only in UNIX-like environments (Linux and macOS).another-package
is specific to Windows.special-package
is included only for 64-bit macOS systems.cirq
is managed bypip
on macOS and byconda
on Linux. This demonstrates how you can specify different package managers for the same package based on the platform.
Implementation
The tool parses these selectors and filters dependencies according to the platform where it's being run. This is particularly useful for creating environment files that are portable across different platforms, ensuring that each environment has the appropriate dependencies installed.
Conflict Resolution
unidep
features a conflict resolution mechanism to manage version conflicts and platform-specific dependencies in requirements.yaml
files. This functionality ensures optimal package version selection based on specified requirements.
How It Works
-
Version Pinning Priority:
unidep
gives priority to version-pinned packages when multiple versions of the same package are specified. For instance, if bothfoo
andfoo <1
are listed,foo <1
is selected due to its specific version pin. -
Minimal Scope Selection:
unidep
resolves platform-specific dependency conflicts by preferring the version with the most limited platform scope. For instance, givenfoo <1 # [linux64]
andfoo >1
, it installsfoo <1
exclusively on Linux-64 andfoo >1
on all other platforms. This approach ensures platform-specific requirements are precisely met. -
Resolving Intractable Conflicts: When conflicts are irreconcilable (e.g.,
foo >1
vs.foo <1
),unidep
issues a warning and defaults to the first encountered specification.
:memo: Usage
With pyproject.toml
or setup.py
To use unidep
in your project, you can configure it in pyproject.toml
. This setup works alongside a requirements.yaml
file located in the same directory. The behavior depends on your project's setup:
- When using only
pyproject.toml
: Thedependencies
field inpyproject.toml
will be automatically populated based on the contents ofrequirements.yaml
. - When using
setup.py
: Theinstall_requires
field insetup.py
will be automatically populated, reflecting the dependencies defined inrequirements.yaml
.
Here's an example pyproject.toml
configuration:
[build-system]
build-backend = "setuptools.build_meta"
requires = ["setuptools", "unidep"]
[project]
dynamic = ["dependencies"]
In this configuration, unidep
is included as a build requirement, allowing it to process the Python dependencies in the requirements.yaml
file and update the project's dependencies accordingly.
:memo: As a CLI
See example for more information or check the output of unidep -h
for the available sub commands:
usage: unidep [-h]
{merge,install,install-all,conda-lock,pip,conda,version} ...
Unified Conda and Pip requirements management.
positional arguments:
{merge,install,install-all,conda-lock,pip,conda,version}
Subcommands
merge Combine multiple (or a single) `requirements.yaml`
files into a single Conda installable
`environment.yaml` file.
install Automatically install all dependencies from one or
more `requirements.yaml` files. This command first
installs dependencies with Conda, then with Pip.
Finally, it installs local packages (those containing
the `requirements.yaml` files) using `pip install [-e]
./project`.
install-all Install dependencies from all `requirements.yaml`
files found in the current directory or specified
directory. This command first installs dependencies
using Conda, then Pip, and finally the local packages.
conda-lock Generate a global `conda-lock.yml` file for a
collection of `requirements.yaml` files. Additionally,
create individual `conda-lock.yml` files for each
`requirements.yaml` file consistent with the global
lock file.
pip Get the pip requirements for the current platform
only.
conda Get the conda requirements for the current platform
only.
version Print version information of unidep.
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
unidep merge
Use unidep merge
to scan directories for requirements.yaml
file(s) and combine them into an environment.yaml
file.
See unidep merge -h
for more information:
usage: unidep merge [-h] [-o OUTPUT] [-n NAME] [--stdout]
[--selector {sel,comment}] [-d DIRECTORY] [-v]
[--platform {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}]
[--depth DEPTH]
Combine multiple (or a single) `requirements.yaml` files into a single Conda
installable `environment.yaml` file. Example usage: `unidep merge --directory
. --depth 1 --output environment.yaml` to search for `requirements.yaml` files
in the current directory and its subdirectories and create `environment.yaml`.
These are the defaults, so you can also just run `unidep merge`.
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-o OUTPUT, --output OUTPUT
Output file for the conda environment, by default
`environment.yaml`
-n NAME, --name NAME Name of the conda environment, by default `myenv`
--stdout Output to stdout instead of a file
--selector {sel,comment}
The selector to use for the environment markers, if
`sel` then `- numpy # [linux]` becomes `sel(linux):
numpy`, if `comment` then it remains `- numpy #
[linux]`, by default `sel`
-d DIRECTORY, --directory DIRECTORY
Base directory to scan for `requirements.yaml`
file(s), by default `.`
-v, --verbose Print verbose output
--platform {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}, -p {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}
The platform(s) to get the requirements for. Multiple
platforms can be specified. By default, the current
platform (`linux-64`) is used.
--depth DEPTH Maximum depth to scan for `requirements.yaml` files,
by default 1
unidep install
Use unidep install
on one or more requirements.yaml
files and install the dependencies on the current platform using conda, then install the remaining dependencies with pip, and finally install the current package with pip install [-e] .
.
See unidep install -h
for more information:
usage: unidep install [-h] [-v] [-e] [--skip-local] [--skip-pip]
[--skip-conda] [--no-dependencies]
[--conda-executable {conda,mamba,micromamba}]
[--dry-run]
files [files ...]
Automatically install all dependencies from one or more `requirements.yaml`
files. This command first installs dependencies with Conda, then with Pip.
Finally, it installs local packages (those containing the `requirements.yaml`
files) using `pip install [-e] ./project`. Example usage: `unidep install
requirements.yaml` for a single file. For multiple files or folders: `unidep
install ./project1 ./project2`. The command accepts both file paths and
directories containing a `requirements.yaml` file. Use `--editable` or `-e` to
install the local packages in editable mode. See `unidep install-all` to
install all `requirements.yaml` in the current folder.
positional arguments:
files The `requirements.yaml` file(s) to parse or folder(s)
that contain those file(s), by default `.`
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-v, --verbose Print verbose output
-e, --editable Install the project in editable mode
--skip-local Skip installing local dependencies
--skip-pip Skip installing pip dependencies from
`requirements.yaml`
--skip-conda Skip installing conda dependencies from
`requirements.yaml`
--no-dependencies Skip installing dependencies from `requirements.yaml`
file(s) and only install local package(s). This passes
the `--no-dependencies` flag to `pip install`. Useful
after installing a `conda-lock.yml` file because then
all dependencies have already been installed.
--conda-executable {conda,mamba,micromamba}
The conda executable to use
--dry-run, --dry Only print the commands that would be run
unidep install-all
Use unidep install-all
on a folder with packages that contain requirements.yaml
files and install the dependencies on the current platform using conda, then install the remaining dependencies with pip, and finally install the current package with pip install [-e] ./package1 ./package2
.
See unidep install -h
for more information:
usage: unidep install [-h] [-v] [-e] [--skip-local] [--skip-pip]
[--skip-conda] [--no-dependencies]
[--conda-executable {conda,mamba,micromamba}]
[--dry-run]
files [files ...]
Automatically install all dependencies from one or more `requirements.yaml`
files. This command first installs dependencies with Conda, then with Pip.
Finally, it installs local packages (those containing the `requirements.yaml`
files) using `pip install [-e] ./project`. Example usage: `unidep install
requirements.yaml` for a single file. For multiple files or folders: `unidep
install ./project1 ./project2`. The command accepts both file paths and
directories containing a `requirements.yaml` file. Use `--editable` or `-e` to
install the local packages in editable mode. See `unidep install-all` to
install all `requirements.yaml` in the current folder.
positional arguments:
files The `requirements.yaml` file(s) to parse or folder(s)
that contain those file(s), by default `.`
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-v, --verbose Print verbose output
-e, --editable Install the project in editable mode
--skip-local Skip installing local dependencies
--skip-pip Skip installing pip dependencies from
`requirements.yaml`
--skip-conda Skip installing conda dependencies from
`requirements.yaml`
--no-dependencies Skip installing dependencies from `requirements.yaml`
file(s) and only install local package(s). This passes
the `--no-dependencies` flag to `pip install`. Useful
after installing a `conda-lock.yml` file because then
all dependencies have already been installed.
--conda-executable {conda,mamba,micromamba}
The conda executable to use
--dry-run, --dry Only print the commands that would be run
unidep conda-lock
Use unidep conda-lock
on one or multiple requirements.yaml
files and output the conda-lock file.
Optionally, when using a monorepo with multiple subpackages (with their own requirements.yaml
files), generate a lock file for each subpackage.
See unidep conda -h
for more information:
usage: unidep conda-lock [-h] [--only-global] [--check-input-hash]
[-d DIRECTORY] [-v]
[--platform {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}]
[--depth DEPTH]
Generate a global `conda-lock.yml` file for a collection of
`requirements.yaml` files. Additionally, create individual `conda-lock.yml`
files for each `requirements.yaml` file consistent with the global lock file.
Example usage: `unidep conda-lock --directory ./projects` to generate conda-
lock files for all `requirements.yaml` files in the `./projects` directory.
Use `--only-global` to generate only the global lock file. The `--check-input-
hash` option can be used to avoid regenerating lock files if the input hasn't
changed.
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
--only-global Only generate the global lock file
--check-input-hash Check existing input hashes in lockfiles before
regenerating lock files. This flag is directly passed
to `conda-lock`.
-d DIRECTORY, --directory DIRECTORY
Base directory to scan for `requirements.yaml`
file(s), by default `.`
-v, --verbose Print verbose output
--platform {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}, -p {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}
The platform(s) to get the requirements for. Multiple
platforms can be specified. By default, the current
platform (`linux-64`) is used.
--depth DEPTH Maximum depth to scan for `requirements.yaml` files,
by default 1
unidep pip
Use unidep pip
on a requirements.yaml
file and output the pip installable dependencies on the current platform (default).
See unidep pip -h
for more information:
usage: unidep pip [-h] [-f FILE] [-v]
[--platform {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}]
[--separator SEPARATOR]
Get the pip requirements for the current platform only. Example usage: `unidep
pip --file folder1 --file folder2/requirements.yaml --seperator ' ' --platform
linux-64` to extract all the pip dependencies specific to the linux-64
platform. Note that the `--file` argument can be used multiple times to
specify multiple `requirements.yaml` files and that --file can also be a
folder that contains a `requirements.yaml` file.
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-f FILE, --file FILE The `requirements.yaml` file to parse or folder that
contains that file, by default `requirements.yaml`
-v, --verbose Print verbose output
--platform {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}, -p {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}
The platform(s) to get the requirements for. Multiple
platforms can be specified. By default, the current
platform (`linux-64`) is used.
--separator SEPARATOR
The separator between the dependencies, by default ` `
unidep conda
Use unidep conda
on a requirements.yaml
file and output the conda installable dependencies on the current platform (default).
See unidep conda -h
for more information:
usage: unidep conda [-h] [-f FILE] [-v]
[--platform {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}]
[--separator SEPARATOR]
Get the conda requirements for the current platform only. Example usage:
`unidep conda --file folder1 --file folder2/requirements.yaml --seperator ' '
--platform linux-64` to extract all the conda dependencies specific to the
linux-64 platform. Note that the `--file` argument can be used multiple times
to specify multiple `requirements.yaml` files and that --file can also be a
folder that contains a `requirements.yaml` file.
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-f FILE, --file FILE The `requirements.yaml` file to parse or folder that
contains that file, by default `requirements.yaml`
-v, --verbose Print verbose output
--platform {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}, -p {linux-64,linux-aarch64,linux-ppc64le,osx-64,osx-arm64,win-64}
The platform(s) to get the requirements for. Multiple
platforms can be specified. By default, the current
platform (`linux-64`) is used.
--separator SEPARATOR
The separator between the dependencies, by default ` `
Limitations
- Conda-Focused: Best suited for Conda environments.
Try unidep
today for a streamlined approach to managing your Conda environment dependencies across multiple projects! 🎉👏
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