Metadata-Version: 2.0
Name: pip-tools
Version: 1.10.2
Summary: pip-tools keeps your pinned dependencies fresh.
Home-page: https://github.com/jazzband/pip-tools/
Author: Vincent Driessen
Author-email: me@nvie.com
License: BSD
Platform: any
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Intended Audience :: System Administrators
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: BSD License
Classifier: Operating System :: OS Independent
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 2.7
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.4
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.5
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Classifier: Topic :: System :: Systems Administration
Requires-Dist: click (>=6)
Requires-Dist: first
Requires-Dist: setuptools
Requires-Dist: six

|buildstatus| |jazzband|

==================================
pip-tools = pip-compile + pip-sync
==================================

A set of command line tools to help you keep your ``pip``-based packages fresh,
even when you've pinned them.  `You do pin them, right?`_

.. image:: https://github.com/jazzband/pip-tools/raw/master/img/pip-tools-overview.png
   :alt: pip-tools overview for phase II

.. |buildstatus| image:: https://img.shields.io/travis/jazzband/pip-tools/master.svg
   :alt: Build status
   :target: https://travis-ci.org/jazzband/pip-tools
.. |jazzband| image:: https://jazzband.co/static/img/badge.svg
   :alt: Jazzband
   :target: https://jazzband.co/
.. _You do pin them, right?: http://nvie.com/posts/pin-your-packages/


Installation
============

.. code-block:: bash

    $ pip install --upgrade pip  # pip-tools needs pip==8.0 or higher (!)
    $ pip install pip-tools


Example usage for ``pip-compile``
=================================

Requirements from setup.py
--------------------------

Suppose you have a Flask project, and want to pin it for production.
If you have a ``setup.py`` with ``install_requires=['Flask']``, then run
``pip-compile`` without any arguments:

.. code-block:: bash

    $ pip-compile
    #
    # This file is autogenerated by pip-compile
    # To update, run:
    #
    #    pip-compile --output-file requirements.txt setup.py
    #
    click==6.7                # via flask
    flask==0.12.2
    itsdangerous==0.24        # via flask
    jinja2==2.9.6             # via flask
    markupsafe==1.0           # via jinja2
    werkzeug==0.12.2          # via flask

``pip-compile`` will produce your ``requirements.txt``, with all the Flask
dependencies (and all underlying dependencies) pinned.  You should put your
requirements file under version control.

Without setup.py
----------------

If you don't use ``setup.py`` (`it's easy to write one`_), you can instead
write the following line to a file:

.. code-block:: ini

    # requirements.in
    Flask

This time, run ``pip-compile requirements.in``:

.. code-block:: bash

    $ pip-compile requirements.in
    #
    # This file is autogenerated by pip-compile
    # To update, run:
    #
    #    pip-compile --output-file requirements.txt requirements.in
    #
    click==6.7                # via flask
    flask==0.12.2
    itsdangerous==0.24        # via flask
    jinja2==2.9.6             # via flask
    markupsafe==1.0           # via jinja2
    werkzeug==0.12.2          # via flask

And it will produce your ``requirements.txt``, with all the Flask dependencies
(and all underlying dependencies) pinned.  Don't forget to put this file under
version control as well.

.. _it's easy to write one: https://packaging.python.org/distributing/#configuring-your-project

Using hashes
------------

If you would like to use *Hash-Checking Mode* available in *pip* since version
8.0, ``pip-compile`` offers ``--generate-hashes`` flag:

.. code-block:: bash

    $ pip-compile --generate-hashes requirements.in
    #
    # This file is autogenerated by pip-compile
    # To update, run:
    #
    #    pip-compile --generate-hashes --output-file requirements.txt requirements.in
    #
    click==6.7 \
        --hash=sha256:29f99fc6125fbc931b758dc053b3114e55c77a6e4c6c3a2674a2dc986016381d \
        --hash=sha256:f15516df478d5a56180fbf80e68f206010e6d160fc39fa508b65e035fd75130b \
        # via flask
    flask==0.12.2 \
        --hash=sha256:0749df235e3ff61ac108f69ac178c9770caeaccad2509cb762ce1f65570a8856 \
        --hash=sha256:49f44461237b69ecd901cc7ce66feea0319b9158743dd27a2899962ab214dac1
    itsdangerous==0.24 \
        --hash=sha256:cbb3fcf8d3e33df861709ecaf89d9e6629cff0a217bc2848f1b41cd30d360519 \
        # via flask
    jinja2==2.9.6 \
        --hash=sha256:2231bace0dfd8d2bf1e5d7e41239c06c9e0ded46e70cc1094a0aa64b0afeb054 \
        --hash=sha256:ddaa01a212cd6d641401cb01b605f4a4d9f37bfc93043d7f760ec70fb99ff9ff \
        # via flask
    markupsafe==1.0 \
        --hash=sha256:a6be69091dac236ea9c6bc7d012beab42010fa914c459791d627dad4910eb665 \
        # via jinja2
    werkzeug==0.12.2 \
        --hash=sha256:903a7b87b74635244548b30d30db4c8947fe64c5198f58899ddcd3a13c23bb26 \
        --hash=sha256:e8549c143af3ce6559699a01e26fa4174f4c591dbee0a499f3cd4c3781cdec3d \
        # via flask

Updating requirements
---------------------

To update all packages, periodically re-run ``pip-compile --upgrade``.

To update a specific package to the latest or a specific version use the
``--upgrade-package`` or ``-P`` flag:

.. code-block:: bash

    $ pip-compile --upgrade-package flask  # only update the flask package
    $ pip-compile --upgrade-package flask --upgrade-package requests  # update both the flask and requests packages
    $ pip-compile -P flask -P requests==2.0.0  # update the flask package to the latest, and requests to v2.0.0

If you use multiple Python versions, you can run ``pip-compile`` as
``py -X.Y -m piptools compile ...`` on Windows and
``pythonX.Y -m piptools compile ...`` on other systems.

Configuration
-------------

You might be wrapping the pip-compile command in another script. To avoid
confusing consumers of your custom script you can override the update command
generated at the top of requirements files by setting the
``CUSTOM_COMPILE_COMMAND`` environment variable.

.. code-block:: bash

    $ CUSTOM_COMPILE_COMMAND="./pipcompilewrapper" pip-compile requirements.in
    #
    # This file is autogenerated by pip-compile
    # To update, run:
    #
    #    ./pipcompilewrapper
    #
    flask==0.10.1
    itsdangerous==0.24        # via flask
    jinja2==2.7.3             # via flask
    markupsafe==0.23          # via jinja2
    werkzeug==0.10.4          # via flask

Example usage for `pip-sync`
============================

Now that you have a ``requirements.txt``, you can use ``pip-sync`` to update
your virtual env to reflect exactly what's in there.  Note: this will
install/upgrade/uninstall everything necessary to match the ``requirements.txt``
contents.

.. code-block:: bash

    $ pip-sync
    Uninstalling flake8-2.4.1:
      Successfully uninstalled flake8-2.4.1
    Collecting click==4.1
      Downloading click-4.1-py2.py3-none-any.whl (62kB)
        100% |████████████████████████████████| 65kB 1.8MB/s
      Found existing installation: click 4.0
        Uninstalling click-4.0:
          Successfully uninstalled click-4.0
    Successfully installed click-4.1

To sync multiple ``*.txt`` dependency lists, just pass them in via command
line arguments, e.g.

.. code-block:: bash

    $ pip-sync dev-requirements.txt requirements.txt

Passing in empty arguments would cause it to default to ``requirements.txt``.

If you use multiple Python versions, you can run ``pip-sync`` as
``py -X.Y -m piptools sync ...`` on Windows and
``pythonX.Y -m piptools sync ...`` on other systems.


