I've come across situations where a current version of a package seems not to be working and requires reinstallation. But pip install -U
won't touch a package that is already up-to-date. I see how to force a reinstallation by first uninstalling (with pip uninstall
) and then installing, but is there a way to simply force an "update" to a nominally current version in a single step?
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1for those looking to re-install pip it self (if it stopped working for some reason ;) ), the answer can be found in this SO q&a – nsof Nov 16 '19 at 17:18
pip install --upgrade --force-reinstall <package>
When upgrading, reinstall all packages even if they are already up-to-date.
pip install -I <package>
pip install --ignore-installed <package>
Ignore the installed packages (reinstalling instead).
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2Any way to force an overwrite when using --target= flag? none of these worked for me. I get the destination path already exists error. – radtek Aug 5 '14 at 20:09
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@KeeganQuinn do you think that's what Karan meant by "When upgrading"...? I suppose so. But your clarification certainly helps me. – The Red Pea Sep 6 '15 at 18:32
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What if I want to make a change in zipline which is installed in the process of
pip install pipeline-live
, and simply pick up my change in zipline? – gseattle Jan 30 '19 at 6:18 -
Including
--upgrade
when--force-reinstall
is being used shouldn't be needed as of pip 10.0, FYI: github.com/pypa/pip/issues/1139 – cjerdonek Feb 1 '19 at 16:45 -
1@mrgloom The
using cached
just means it uses source files that where cached on the last install. To force re-download use the--no-cache-dir
flag. – lcnittl Jul 25 '19 at 7:03
You might want to have all three options: --upgrade
and --force-reinstall
ensures reinstallation, while --no-deps
avoids reinstalling dependencies.
$ sudo pip install --upgrade --no-deps --force-reinstall <packagename>
Otherwise you might run into the problem that pip starts to recompile Numpy or other large packages.
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2This also works for offline installs, while the excepted answer doesn't. – orodbhen Jun 1 '18 at 14:24
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5This is a better solution for packages with a large number of dependencies that do not need to be reinstalled. – Assil Ksiksi Nov 15 '18 at 15:43
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1
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@FinnÅrupNielsen why it should upgrade current version? as I understand here we want to reinstall package. What if
<package-name>==<package-version>
format is used? – mrgloom Aug 19 '19 at 17:06
If you want to reinstall packages specified in a requirements.txt file, without upgrading, so just reinstall the specific versions specified in the requirements.txt file:
pip install -r requirements.txt --ignore-installed
--force-reinstall
doesn't appear to force reinstall using python2.7 with pip-1.5
I've had to use
--no-deps --ignore-installed
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21You must specify
--upgrade
in addition to--force-reinstall
, or it won't have any effect. – Keegan Quinn Feb 12 '14 at 4:32
sudo pip3 install --upgrade --force-reinstall --no-deps --no-cache-dir <package-name>==<package-version>
Some relevant answers:
Difference between pip install options "ignore-installed" and "force-reinstall"
If you have a text file with loads of packages you need to add the -r flag
pip install --upgrade --no-deps --force-reinstall -r requirements.txt
In the case you need to force the reinstallation of pip itself you can do:
python -m pip install --upgrade --force-reinstall pip