py_requirements_guesser | ||
.gitignore | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
setup.py |
Python-Requirements-Guesser
⚠️ This is alpha quality software. Work in progress
Attempt to guess requirements.txt
modules versions based on Git history.
What is the problem ?
Did you ever clone a repo with python code that didn't specify library versions in a requirements.txt
file ?
Or even worst: a repo without a requirements.txt
...
Reproducing results is hard, it's even harder when you have mismatched library versions.
Solution
There is a fair chance that the owner of the repo you just cloned installed most of it's packages using
pip install <package name>
This would have installed the latest available version at the time the command was runned.
Based on this, we look at the git commit history
to find out when a package was first imported in the code or when it was first added to the requirements.txt
file.
We then query Pypi
to retrieve the version available at the commit date.
Usage
Py-Requirements-Guesser
should be runned inside a git repository.
py-requirements-guesser --write {requirements.txt path}
You will be prompted by a serie of choice to orient the guessing process.
See video : Ascii show
Installation
This package doesn't have any dependencies.
To install the Py-Requirements-Guesser
:
git clone https://github.com/J3rome/py-requirements-guesser
python3 setup.py install
Package name mapping - Pipreqs
There might be mismatches between the name of a package on Pypi
and the name used to import
it (Ex : pip install PyYAML
& import yaml
).
There doesn't seem to be a straightforward way to do the mapping between Pypi
name and import
name.
The great PipReqs package (which was an inspiration for this package) manually maintains a mapping file between Pypi
names and the import
names.
They also maintain a list of the standard library module names.
For now, we grab the mapping and stdlib files at commit 90102acdbb23c09574d27df8bd1f568d34e0cfd3
.
Thanks guys !
Additional arguments
Py-Requirements-Guesser
can take 2 additional parameters :
--keep_unused_packages
: By default, unused packages are ignored. This parameter will force version guessing for the packages in requirements.txt
that are not imported
in the code anywhere.
--force_guess {package1},{package2},..
: By default, if your code contains a module named yaml.py
, import yaml
statements won't be analyzed. Use this argument if local modules have conflicting names with Pypi
packages to force version guessing.
TODO
- Guess/Pin the dependencies tree of the package Ex : Torch package will install numpy, etc
- Poetry support ?
- Jupyter notebook support
- Add guessing choice where user can choose version between the time the package was first imported and the date of the last commit on a python file
- Detect python & os versions. Some package versions might not be available for certain os or python versions
- Better output/UX
License
GNU GPLV3 see License
Contributing
Pull requests are welcomed ! Fill up an issue if you encounter any problem !