According to the setuptools
documentation, setuptools
version 30.3.0 (December 8, 2016) "allows using configuration files (usually setup.cfg) to define package’s metadata and other options which are normally supplied to setup()
function". Similar to running pip install -r requirements.txt
to install Python packages from a requirements file, is there a way to ask pip
to install the packages listed in the install_requires
option of a setup.cfg
configuration file?
4 Answers
If you have all your dependencies and other metadata defined in setup.cfg
, just create a minimal setup.py
file in the same directory that looks like this:
from setuptools import setup
setup()
From now on you can run pip install
and it will install all the dependencies defined in setup.cfg
as if they were declared in setup.py
.
-
3
-
7
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3Now it is even possible to accompany
setup.cfg
by emptypyproject.toml
instead of the minimalsetup.py
to allowpip install
. (pip 21.3.1, Python 3.8.10) Jan 12, 2022 at 10:50 -
4As of March 2022, with
setuptools>=61
, one can ditchsetup.cfg
in favor ofpyproject.toml
(docs).setuptools
is still working on letting one ditch the placeholdersetup.py
file in favor of just apyproject.toml
May 2, 2022 at 4:33 -
It does not work for me:
ERROR: You must give at least one requirement to install (see "pip help install")
MacOS 12.6.2 Chipset M1 - Python 3.10.9 Jan 10, 2023 at 16:36
If your setup.cfg
belongs to a well-formed package, you can do e.g.:
pip install -e .[tests,dev]
(install this package in place, with given extras)
afterwards you can pip uninstall
that package by name, leaving deps in place.
-
2Excellent! Thanks - I'm using
packages = find
in my project, andpip install -e .
worked like a charm. Jan 12, 2022 at 17:35
Here is my workaround. I use the following command to parse the install_requires
element from the setup.cfg
file and install the packages using pip
.
python3 -c "import configparser; c = configparser.ConfigParser(); c.read('setup.cfg'); print(c['options']['install_requires'])" | xargs pip install
Here is a more readable version of the Python script before the pipe in the above command line.
import configparser
c = configparser.ConfigParser()
c.read('setup.cfg')
print(c['options']['install_requires'])
-
This script as-is does not support packages that must be installed via
dependency_links
. Dec 12, 2017 at 20:30
No, pip does not currently have facilities for parsing requirements from setup.cfg
. It will only install dependencies along with the main package(s) provided in setup.py
.
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3Or, maybe you just want the requirements to be installed, but not the actual package? AFAIK, pip doesn't have the ability to read
setup.cfg
itself, all of the options are read in tosetup.py
bysetuptools.config.read_configuration
.– rnorrisSep 13, 2017 at 21:03 -
The comment by @rnorris is correct. I don't want to install the Python package itself, I want to install its dependencies. I want something like
pip install -r requirements.txt
, but something likepip install -r setup.cfg
. Sep 14, 2017 at 14:25 -
Pip itself does not support that. You will probably need to roll your own solution. Can I ask what you're trying to accomplish by installing the dependencies of a particular module, but not the module itself?– rnorrisSep 14, 2017 at 17:03
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4Installing the dependencies in a virtual environment in order to develop the project itself (without necessarily installing it). Sep 14, 2017 at 17:05
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4I think for the use case argentpepper mentions,
pip install --editable .
would be an appropriate solution. The intended use case of the--editable
flag is to make the development package available in the install environment and have any source changes show up without having to re-install the package.– rnorrisJan 14, 2021 at 18:06