Without going through with the installation, I want to quickly see all the packages that pip install would install.
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Related: stackoverflow.com/q/9232568/183791 – dusan Jun 21 '12 at 22:41
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1Maybe yolk can help? – jadkik94 Jun 21 '12 at 22:51
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Another question including alternative answers for this problem: stackoverflow.com/questions/41816693/… – pgmank Sep 28 '19 at 14:43
The accepted answer is no longer relevant for more current versions of pip and does not give an immediate answer without perusing multiple comments so I am providing an updated answer.
This was tested with pip versions 8.1.2, 9.0.1, 10.0.1, and 18.1.
To get the output without cluttering your current directory on Linux use
pip download [package] -d /tmp --no-binary :all: -v
-d tells pip the directory that download should put files in.
Better, just use this script with the argument being the package name to get only the dependencies as output:
#!/bin/sh
PACKAGE=$1
pip download $PACKAGE -d /tmp --no-binary :all:-v 2>&1 \
| grep Collecting \
| cut -d' ' -f2 \
| grep -Ev "$PACKAGE(~|=|\!|>|<|$)"
Also available here.
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A very (very) crude reading of
requirements.txtusing this:< requirements.txt egrep -v "^#" | egrep -v "^$" | xargs -L 1 -I % sh -c 'echo %; echo "======"; ./deps.sh %; echo "";– Ian Clark Jun 11 '18 at 10:25 -
@hans-musgrave made a good point in another answer that I hadn't noticed previously, so updated the bash script to only exclude lines that match the package along with end of line or the start of a valid version specifier rather than any line that contains the package name. – Jmills Jun 25 '18 at 22:41
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4Some packages only provide binary, so
--no-binary :all:is not a good idea. A project which only shipped wheel and not sdist would fail. – wim Apr 19 '19 at 18:17 -
5This end up download and compile for all the dependence packages which can be very slow.... – Louis Yang Sep 4 '19 at 20:36
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2Note that this does not list dependencies that are already installed (which is fine for OP). – GPHemsley May 1 '20 at 8:31
Check out my project johnnydep!
Installation:
pip install johnnydep
Usage example:
$ johnnydep requests
name summary
------------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
requests Python HTTP for Humans.
├── certifi>=2017.4.17 Python package for providing Mozilla's CA Bundle.
├── chardet<3.1.0,>=3.0.2 Universal encoding detector for Python 2 and 3
├── idna<2.7,>=2.5 Internationalized Domain Names in Applications (IDNA)
└── urllib3<1.23,>=1.21.1 HTTP library with thread-safe connection pooling, file post, and more.
A more complex tree:
$ johnnydep ipython
name summary
-------------------------------- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
ipython IPython: Productive Interactive Computing
├── appnope Disable App Nap on OS X 10.9
├── decorator Better living through Python with decorators
├── jedi>=0.10 An autocompletion tool for Python that can be used for text editors.
│ └── parso==0.1.1 A Python Parser
├── pexpect Pexpect allows easy control of interactive console applications.
│ └── ptyprocess>=0.5 Run a subprocess in a pseudo terminal
├── pickleshare Tiny 'shelve'-like database with concurrency support
├── prompt-toolkit<2.0.0,>=1.0.4 Library for building powerful interactive command lines in Python
│ ├── six>=1.9.0 Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities
│ └── wcwidth Measures number of Terminal column cells of wide-character codes
├── pygments Pygments is a syntax highlighting package written in Python.
├── setuptools>=18.5 Easily download, build, install, upgrade, and uninstall Python packages
├── simplegeneric>0.8 Simple generic functions (similar to Python's own len(), pickle.dump(), etc.)
└── traitlets>=4.2 Traitlets Python config system
├── decorator Better living through Python with decorators
├── ipython-genutils Vestigial utilities from IPython
└── six Python 2 and 3 compatibility utilities
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I downloaded this and use it, it's a great package. BUT doesn't it require packages to be installed? The OP is specifically requesting an approach that doesn't require installation. Important to caveat. – so860 Aug 6 '19 at 16:28
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5@so860 No, it does not require the packages to be installed. That's the whole point, it works in an isolated environment. – wim Aug 6 '19 at 16:37
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1
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1@BenFarmer That's incorrect. It doesn't install packages, it reads the metadata from wheel files, which does require a package download- but not an installation. In the rare case that a project has published a source distribution but no compatible wheel is available, then pip will attempt to generate a wheel from the sdist (that is the only reliable way to get package metadata from sdist). In the most common case, there is no installation process. – wim Dec 22 '20 at 2:03
If and only if the package is install, you can use pip show <package>. Look for the Requires: filed at the end of the output. Clearly, this breaks your requirement but might be useful nonetheless.
For example:
$ pip --version
pip 7.1.0 [...]
$ pip show pytest
---
Metadata-Version: 2.0
Name: pytest
Version: 2.7.2
Summary: pytest: simple powerful testing with Python
Home-page: http://pytest.org
Author: Holger Krekel, Benjamin Peterson, Ronny Pfannschmidt, Floris Bruynooghe and others
Author-email: holger at merlinux.eu
License: MIT license
Location: /home/usr/.tox/develop/lib/python2.7/site-packages
Requires: py
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3This only shows the direct requirements, all the transitive dependencies would be missing. And it requires an installation. So, it doesn't really answer the question. – wim Jun 18 '19 at 13:58
Note: the feature used in this answer was deprecated in 2014 and removed in 2015. Please see other answers that apply to modern
pip.
The closest you can get with pip directly is by using the --no-install argument:
pip install --no-install <package>
For example, this is the output when installing celery:
Downloading/unpacking celery
Downloading celery-2.5.5.tar.gz (945Kb): 945Kb downloaded
Running setup.py egg_info for package celery
no previously-included directories found matching 'tests/*.pyc'
no previously-included directories found matching 'docs/*.pyc'
no previously-included directories found matching 'contrib/*.pyc'
no previously-included directories found matching 'celery/*.pyc'
no previously-included directories found matching 'examples/*.pyc'
no previously-included directories found matching 'bin/*.pyc'
no previously-included directories found matching 'docs/.build'
no previously-included directories found matching 'docs/graffles'
no previously-included directories found matching '.tox/*'
Downloading/unpacking anyjson>=0.3.1 (from celery)
Downloading anyjson-0.3.3.tar.gz
Running setup.py egg_info for package anyjson
Downloading/unpacking kombu>=2.1.8,<2.2.0 (from celery)
Downloading kombu-2.1.8.tar.gz (273Kb): 273Kb downloaded
Running setup.py egg_info for package kombu
Downloading/unpacking python-dateutil>=1.5,<2.0 (from celery)
Downloading python-dateutil-1.5.tar.gz (233Kb): 233Kb downloaded
Running setup.py egg_info for package python-dateutil
Downloading/unpacking amqplib>=1.0 (from kombu>=2.1.8,<2.2.0->celery)
Downloading amqplib-1.0.2.tgz (58Kb): 58Kb downloaded
Running setup.py egg_info for package amqplib
Successfully downloaded celery anyjson kombu python-dateutil amqplib
Admittedly, this does leave some cruft around in the form of temporary files, but it does accomplish the goal. If you're doing this with virtualenv (which you should be), the cleanup is as easy as removing the <virtualenv root>/build directory.
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8The reason for this is that the metadata doesn't exist outside of setup.py so unlike say with
rpmordpkgwhere you build a metadata index on top and query thatpipandpypidon't work that way. So we have to pass over each requirement. – user146416 Jun 22 '12 at 15:40 -
12I tried
pip --no-install celerybut I receive the errorno such option: --no-install(pip 1.2.1) – Colonel Panic Dec 13 '12 at 20:35 -
4
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23
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4
The command pip install <package> --download <path> should be used, as mentioned in comments by @radtek, since as of 7.0.0 (2015-05-21), --no-install is removed from pip. This will download the dependencies needed into <path>.
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10Ridiculously,
--downloadhas been deprecated as well. The canonical command now appears to bepip download <package> -d /tmp --no-binary :all:as suggested by The Card Cheat. – Cecil Curry Aug 9 '16 at 5:03
Another option is to use a helper script similar to this one which uses the pip.req.parse_requirements API to parse requirements.txt files and a distutils.core.setup replacement to parse setup.py files.
I quote an alternative solution from @onnovalkering:
PyPi provides a JSON endpoint with package metadata:
>>> import requests >>> url = 'https://pypi.org/pypi/{}/json' >>> json = requests.get(url.format('pandas')).json() >>> json['info']['requires_dist'] ['numpy (>=1.9.0)', 'pytz (>=2011k)', 'python-dateutil (>=2.5.0)'] >>> json['info']['requires_python'] '>=2.7,!=3.0.*,!=3.1.*,!=3.2.*,!=3.3.*,!=3.4.*'For a specific package version, add an additional version segment to the URL:
https://pypi.org/pypi/pandas/0.22.0/json
Also if you are using conda (as suggested by @ShpielMeister), you can use:
conda info package==X.X.X
to display information, including dependencies for a particular version or:
conda info package
to display information, including dependencies about all supported versions of that package.
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1I downvoted because this json endpoint is not reliable. For an example look at
boto3, the requires_dist is null but that is a project which certainly has dependencies in the metadata. – wim Dec 18 '19 at 3:07