I would like to see a list of packages that depend on a certain package with PIP. That is, given django, I would like to see django-cms, django-filer, because I have these packages installed and they all have django as dependency.
5 Answers
Update (2021):
Since pip version 10 you can do:
pkg=httplib2
pip show $pkg | grep ^Required-by
or for bash
pkg=httplib2
grep ^Required-by <(pip show $pkg)
so you could create an alias like:
alias pyreq='pip show $pkg | grep ^Required-by'
and querying by:
pkg=httplib2 pyreq
which should give (for ubuntu):
Required-by: lazr.restfulclient, launchpadlib
Original:
Quite straightforward:
pip show <insert_package_name_here>| grep ^Requires
Or the other way around: (sorry i got it wrong!)
for NAME in $(pip freeze | cut -d= -f1); do REQ=$(pip show $NAME| grep Requires); if [[ "$REQ" =~ "$REQUIRES" ]]; then echo $REQ;echo "Package: $NAME"; echo "---" ; fi; done
before that set your search-string with:
REQUIRES=django
essentially you have to go through the whole list and query for every single one. That may take some time.
Edit: Also it does only work on installed packages, I don't see pip providing dependencies on not installed packages.
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2You got it wrong. I would like to see what required the given package, not what requires the given package.– linkyndyDec 17, 2013 at 14:17
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@DonQuestion But this only shows it for the currently installed packages right? Is there anyway to search through the whole PyPi list?– TijmeJul 18, 2017 at 16:14
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2This does not work, but returns an error: Usage: pip show [options] <package> ... no such option: ------------------ May 11, 2018 at 7:38
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1leaving this for my sad self while skipping warning to run this on a deprecated python version
for NAME in $(python -W ignore -m pip freeze | cut -d= -f1); do REQ=$(python -W ignore -m pip show $NAME| grep Requires); if [[ "$REQ" =~ "$REQUIRES" ]]; then echo $REQ;echo "Package: $NAME"; echo "---" ; fi; doneFeb 4, 2021 at 1:42
I know there's already an accepted answer here, but really, it seems to me that what you want is to use pipdeptree:
pip install pipdeptree
pipdeptree --help
pipdeptree -r -p django
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Should be accepted answer! Reason: 1. works on the python ecosystem, more comfortable for a python developer than the answer by @Don_Question. 2. Very simplistic commands 3. Mentions CLI Tool specifically designed to solve OP's question Jun 11, 2020 at 6:22
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You have a point here! But pipdeptree is much younger then the question. And if you need a one shot solution you really don't want to install a package, when you can do it in "one" line of shellscript! ;-) Feb 9, 2021 at 2:32
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3Just wanted to note explicitly that this (good) answer shares a limitation with accepted answer: it won't tell you about packages that aren't installed. (I came here looking for that additional functionality to troubleshoot a package that won't install on my M1 Mac.) Sep 21, 2021 at 16:09
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@PaulBissex were you able find any workaround for your case. Facing similar issue Nov 17, 2022 at 4:21
Since version 10, pip show also includes a "Required-by" entry. So just
pip show <package_name>
is enough nowadays. Or possibly
pip show <package_name> | grep ^Required-by
if you want to get just that single line for a script or whatever.
This one, for pip older than 1.3.1 will list all packages and it's dependencies, you can parse its output with any scripting language, for Requires ... django inclusions:
pip freeze | cut -f 1 -d'=' | xargs -L1 pip show
For example, following snippet:
import os
import re
package = 'numpy'
regex = re.compile('.*{}($|,).*'.format(package))
def chunks(l, n): return [l[i:i+n] for i in range(0, len(l), n)]
cmd = "pip freeze | cut -f 1 -d'=' | xargs -L1 pip show"
packages = os.popen(cmd).read()
pkg_infos = chunks(packages.splitlines(), 5)
print '\n'.join(x[1][6:] for x in filter(lambda x: regex.match(x[-1]), pkg_infos))
outputs pandas on my system.
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I was looking for something more straight-forward, something that requires only some shell commands.– linkyndyDec 17, 2013 at 14:20
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One liner based on requirements.txt. In this example I'm looking for funcsigs reverse dependency, and found mock. Just change funcsigs by something else.
cat requirements.txt | grep -v git | sed 's/==.*//' | xargs -I % echo 'pip show % 2>/dev/null | grep Requires | grep -q funcsigs && echo %' | sh
pip 1.4.1