virtualenv is a tool to create isolated Python environments. Unfortunately, it does not expose a native Python API. This package aims to provide an API in the form of a wrapper around virtualenv.
It can be used to create and delete environments and perform package management inside the environment.
Full support is provided for Python 2.7 and Python 3.3+.
The latest stable release is available on PyPi:
$ pip install virtualenv-api
Please note that the distribution is named virtualenv-api
, yet the Python
package is named virtualenvapi
.
Alternatively, you may fetch the latest version from git:
$ pip install git+https://github.com/sjkingo/virtualenv-api.git
- To begin managing an environment (it will be created if it does not exist):
from virtualenvapi.manage import VirtualEnvironment
env = VirtualEnvironment('/path/to/environment/name')
You may also specify the Python interpreter to use in this environment by
passing the python
argument to the class constructor (new in 2.1.3):
env = VirtualEnvironment('/path/to/environment/name', python='python3')
If you have already activated a virtualenv and wish to operate on it, simply
call VirtualEnvironment
with no arguments:
env = VirtualEnvironment()
New in 2.1.7:
An optional argument readonly
may be provided (defaults to False
) that
will prevent all operations that could potentially modify the environment.
- Check if the
mezzanine
package is installed:
>>> env.is_installed('mezzanine')
False
- Install the latest version of the
mezzanine
package:
>>> env.install('mezzanine')
- A wheel of the latest version of the
mezzanine
package (new in 2.1.4):
>>> env.wheel('mezzanine')
- Install version 1.4 of the
django
package (this is pip’s syntax):
>>> env.install('django==1.4')
- Upgrade the
django
package to the latest version:
>>> env.upgrade('django')
- Upgrade all packages to their latest versions (new in 2.1.7):
>>> env.upgrade_all()
- Uninstall the
mezzanine
package:
>>> env.uninstall('mezzanine')
Packages may be specified as name only (to work on the latest version), using
pip’s package syntax (e.g. django==1.4
) or as a tuple of ('name',
'ver')
(e.g. ('django', '1.4')
).
- A package may be installed directly from a git repository (must end
with
.git
):
>>> env.install('git+git://github.com/sjkingo/cartridge-payments.git')
New in 2.1.10:
- A package can be installed in pip's editable mode by prefixing the package name with -e (this is pip's syntax):
>>> env.install('-e git+https://github.com/stephenmcd/cartridge.git')
- Instances of the environment provide an
installed_packages
property:
>>> env.installed_packages
[('django', '1.5'), ('wsgiref', '0.1.2')]
- A list of package names is also available in the same manner:
>>> env.installed_package_names
['django', 'wsgiref']
- Search for a package on PyPI (changed in 2.1.5: this now returns a dictionary instead of list):
>>> env.search('virtualenv-api')
{'virtualenv-api': 'An API for virtualenv/pip'}
>>> len(env.search('requests'))
231
- The old functionality (pre 2.1.5) of
env.search
may be used:
>>> list(env.search('requests').items())
[('virtualenv-api', 'An API for virtualenv/pip')]
Verbose output from each command is available in the environment’s
build.log
file, which is appended to with each operation. Any errors are
logged to build.err
.