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py-unused-deps

Find unused dependencies in your Python projects.

This application works by inspecting the metadata of your distribution and its dependencies. This means the current project must be installed and py-unused-deps must be run from within the same environment as the project, and its dependencies, are installed within. For example running in on this repo:

$ python -m venv .venv
$ source .venv/bin/activate
$ pip install .
$ py-unused-deps --distribution py-unused-deps

Usage

usage: py-unused-deps [-h] [-d DISTRIBUTION] [-n] [-v] [-i IGNORE] [-e EXTRAS] [-r REQUIREMENTS]
                      [--include INCLUDE] [--exclude EXCLUDE] [--config-file CONFIG_FILE]
                      [filepaths ...]

positional arguments:
  filepaths             Paths to scan for dependency usage

options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -d DISTRIBUTION, --distribution DISTRIBUTION
                        The distribution to scan for unused dependencies
  -n, --no-distribution
  -v, --verbose
  -i IGNORE, --ignore IGNORE
                        Dependencies to ignore when scanning for usage. For example, you might want to
                        ignore a linter that you run but don't import
  -e EXTRAS, --extra EXTRAS
                        Extra environment to consider when loading dependencies
  -r REQUIREMENTS, --requirement REQUIREMENTS
                        File listing extra requirements to scan for
  --include INCLUDE     Pattern to match on files when measuring usage
  --exclude EXCLUDE     Pattern to match on files or directory to exclude when measuring usage
  --config-file CONFIG_FILE
                        File to load config from

Specifying a Distribution

There are two ways to scan for unused dependencies, if you have an installable project you can specify it with the --dependency flag. Otherwise, if you just have a list Python files and some dependencies e.g. in a requirements.txt file you can use the --no-distribution flag. Exactly one of these flags must be specified.

File Discovery

The positional filepaths provides the location to search for files. Files under this path are matched according to the --include argument. This can be given multiple times and arguments are used interpreted as wildcard patterns (specifically, they are parsed to fnmatch.fnmatch. The default is to include files that match against *.py or *.pyi.

Files can be excluded with the --exclude flag, which can also be given multiple times. Similarly to --include these are interpreted as shell wildcard patterns, with the addition that:

  • Patterns are matched against entire directory names, so __pycache__ will exclude any directory containing __pycache__
  • Patterns are expanded using os.path.abspath

The default list of exclude patterns is: .svn, CVS, .bzr, .hg, .git, __pycache__, .tox, .nox, .eggs, *.egg, .venv, venv,

Extra dependencies

You distribution may contain extra optional dependencies to be installed like pip install --editable .[tests]. To also scan these you can use the --extra flag. This can be used multiple times:

$ pip install --editable .[tests,security]
$ py-unused-deps --extra tests --extra security

Requirements File

Similar to above, you may have a distribution with some dev-only dependencies that you want to ensure you're using, e.g. for tests. If these dependencies are in a file you can include them with the --requirement flag:

$ pip install --editable .
$ pip install --requirement requirements-tests.txt
$ py-unused-deps --requirement requirements-test.txt

Note: this flag does not support the full requirements spec as defined by pip but just comments and requirement specifications.

For example, each of the following requirements would be included:

pytest
pytest-cov
beautifulsoup4
docopt == 0.6.1
requests [security] >= 2.8.1, == 2.8.* ; python_version < "2.7"
urllib3 @ https://github.com/urllib3/urllib3/archive/refs/tags/1.26.8.zip

But all of the following would be skipped:

# unsupported: pip specific flags
-r other-requirements.txt
-c constraints.txt

# unsupported: paths
./downloads/numpy-1.9.2-cp34-none-win32.whl

# unsupported: plain URL
http://wxpython.org/Phoenix/snapshot-builds/wxPython_Phoenix-3.0.3.dev1820+49a8884-cp34-none-win_amd64.whl

Configuration from file

By default, configuration will be searched for in pyproject.toml under the key tool.py-unused-deps:

# pyproject.toml example
[tool.py-unused-deps]
verbose = 1

Otherwise, configuration may be stored in any TOML file under the key py-unused-deps, this file can then be passed via the --configuration-file argument.

# non pyproject.toml example
[py-unused-deps]
verbose = 1

The types of configuration variables and how they map to the flags:

  • filepaths: array of strings
  • distribution (-d/--distribution): string
  • no_distribution (-n/--no-distribution): bool
  • ignore (-i/--ignore): array of strings
  • extras (-e/--extra): array of strings
  • requirements (-r/--requirement): array of strings
  • include (-i/--include): array of strings
  • exclude (-i/--exclude): array of strings
  • verbose (-v/--verbose): integer

pre-commit

This repo includes a pre-commit hook to run py-unused-deps by default it will simply run py-unused-deps --no-distribution. Since py-unused-deps requires the dependencies and any distribution to be installed it is run as a system hook, so wherever it is run will need these pieces installed.

See pre-commit-config.yaml for an example usage.

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