mamba repoquery
While Mamba is primarily a drop-in replacement for Conda, one of the extra features it provides is solid functionality for dependency and reverse dependency querying through its repoquery
command. However, note that this is only for environment-level relationships, so the packages must be installed and the environment activated.
Demo
Note that this is years out from the original question, so I'm just going demo with a mpi4py
install and use the versions that get installed.
$ mamba create -n so-mpi4py mpi4py
## installs 24 packages
$ conda activate so-mpi4py
(so-mpi4py) $ mamba repoquery whoneeds mpich
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/ / \_/ \_/ \_/ \ o \__,
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|/
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mamba (0.19.0) supported by @QuantStack
GitHub: https://github.com/mamba-org/mamba
Twitter: https://twitter.com/QuantStack
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Executing the query mpich
Name Version Build Depends Channel
────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
mpi4py 3.1.3 py310hd348148_0 mpich >=3.4,<4.0.0a0 conda-forge/osx-64
Personally, I usually use the tree format, with
(so-mpi4py) $ mamba repoquery whoneeds --tree mpich
mpich[3.4.2]
└─ mpi4py[3.1.3]
Real-World Example
More of a testimonial to its usefulness, I had noticed at some point that one of my R environments somehow ended up with Python installed. I'm very strict about this, so I reached for mamba repoquery whoneeds
and found:
(bioc_3_12) host:dir usr$ mamba repoquery whoneeds -t python
Executing the query python
python[3.9.2]
├─ numpy[1.20.2]
│ └─ colormath[3.0.0]
│ └─ spectra[0.0.11]
│ └─ r-rspectra[0.16_0] # <- this package is the culprit!
│ └─ r-uwot[0.1.10]
├─ networkx[2.5]
│ └─ colormath already visited
├─ certifi[2021.5.30]
│ └─ setuptools[49.6.0]
│ ├─ networkx already visited
│ └─ pip[21.0.1]
├─ python_abi[3.9]
│ ├─ numpy already visited
│ ├─ certifi already visited
│ └─ setuptools already visited
├─ colormath already visited
├─ spectra already visited
├─ decorator[4.4.2]
│ └─ networkx already visited
├─ wheel[0.36.2]
│ └─ pip already visited
├─ pip already visited
└─ setuptools already visited
Turned out the r-spectra
package recipe in Conda Forge had misstated one of its dependencies to be a Python package (spectra
) rather than a C++ dynamic library (spectralib
).