When would the -e
, or --editable
option be useful with pip install
?
For some projects the last line in requirements.txt is -e .
. What does it do exactly?
As the man page says it:
-e,--editable <path/url>
Install a project in editable mode (i.e. setuptools "develop mode") from a local project path or a VCS url.
So you would use this when trying to install a package locally, most often in the case when you are developing it on your system. It will just link the package to the original location, basically meaning any changes to the original package would reflect directly in your environment.
Some nuggets around the same here and here.
An example run can be:
pip install -e .
or
pip install -e ~/ultimate-utils/ultimate-utils-proj-src/
note the second is the full path to where the setup.py
would be at.
-e .
. Will it make some package from setup.py editable in site-packages? Sorry, need an example maybe.
-e
option (pip install -e mypackage
) and use it in your environment (e.g. within your other project like from mypackage import custom_function
) then, when you make any change to your custom_function
, you will able to use this updated version without re-installing it again (with pip install
or python setup.py
), which would happen in case of omitting -e
flag.
pip install -r requirements.txt
, it will install all required packages and then (if there is -e .
) it should install current package in develop mode (e.g. you are in mypackage
folder and it's equivalent of running pip install -e .
, so any change in mypackage
is directly reflected in your environment). No other packages are touched by this.
Concrete example of using --editable
in development
If you play with this test package as in:
cd ~
git clone https://github.com/cirosantilli/vcdvcd
cd vcdvcd
git checkout 5dd4205c37ed0244ecaf443d8106fadb2f9cfbb8
python -m pip install --editable . --user
it outputs:
Obtaining file:///home/ciro/bak/git/vcdvcd
Installing collected packages: vcdvcd
Attempting uninstall: vcdvcd
Found existing installation: vcdvcd 1.0.6
Can't uninstall 'vcdvcd'. No files were found to uninstall.
Running setup.py develop for vcdvcd
Successfully installed vcdvcd-1.0.6
The Can't uninstall 'vcdvcd'
is normal: it tried to uninstall any existing vcdvcd
to then replace them with the "symlink-like mechanism" that is produced in the following steps, but failed because there were no previous installations.
Then it generates a file:
~/.local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/vcdvcd.egg-link
which contains:
/home/ciro/vcdvcd
.
and acts as a "symlink" to the Python interpreter.
So now, if I make any changes to the git source code under /home/ciro/vcdvcd
, it reflects automatically on importers who can from any directory do:
python -c 'import vcdvcd'
Note however that at my pip
version at least, binary files installed with --editable
, such as the vcdcat
script provided by that package via scripts=
on setup.py
, do not get symlinked, just copied to:
~/.local/bin/vcdcat
just like for regular installs, and therefore updates to the git repository won't directly affect them.
By comparison, a regular non --editable
install from the git source:
python -m pip uninstall vcdvcd
python -m pip install --user .
produces a copy of the installed files under:
~/.local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/vcdvcd
Uninstall of an editable package as done above requires a new enough pip as mentioned at: How to uninstall editable packages with pip (installed with -e)
Tested in Python 3.8, pip 20.0.2, Ubuntu 20.04.
Recommendation: develop directly in-tree whenever possible
The editable setup is useful when you are testing your patch to a package through another project.
If however you can fully test your change in-tree, just do that instead of generating an editable install which is more complex.
E.g., the vcdvcd package above is setup in a way that you can just cd
into the source and do ./vcdcat
without pip installing the package itself (in general, you might need to install dependencies from requirements.txt
though), and the import vcdvcd
that that executable does (or possibly your own custom test) just finds the package correctly in the same directory it lives in.
pip -e
? e.g. do I need as an argument the path to the project where setup.py
is or the setup.py
itself? e.g. pip -e path/src/setup.py
or pip -e path/src/
?
Aug 31, 2021 at 19:08
git clone
, that is as concrete as it gets. You will have cd
ed into the setup.py
directory.
Aug 31, 2021 at 19:16
pip install -e
without .
you can do for example: pip install -e ~/ultimate-utils/ultimate-utils-proj-src/
where path/src
is the path to the src of the project where setup.py
is at.
Aug 31, 2021 at 21:26
From Working in "development" mode:
Although not required, it’s common to locally install your project in “editable” or “develop” mode while you’re working on it. This allows your project to be both installed and editable in project form.
Assuming you’re in the root of your project directory, then run:
pip install -e .
Although somewhat cryptic,
-e
is short for--editable
, and.
refers to the current working directory, so together, it means to install the current directory (i.e. your project) in editable mode.
Some additional insights into the internals of setuptools and distutils from “Development Mode”:
Under normal circumstances, the
distutils
assume that you are going to build a distribution of your project, not use it in its “raw” or “unbuilt” form. If you were to use thedistutils
that way, you would have to rebuild and reinstall your project every time you made a change to it during development.Another problem that sometimes comes up with the
distutils
is that you may need to do development on two related projects at the same time. You may need to put both projects’ packages in the same directory to run them, but need to keep them separate for revision control purposes. How can you do this?Setuptools allows you to deploy your projects for use in a common directory or staging area, but without copying any files. Thus, you can edit each project’s code in its checkout directory, and only need to run build commands when you change a project’s C extensions or similarly compiled files. You can even deploy a project into another project’s checkout directory, if that’s your preferred way of working (as opposed to using a common independent staging area or the site-packages directory).
To do this, use the
setup.py develop
command. It works very similarly tosetup.py install
, except that it doesn’t actually install anything. Instead, it creates a special.egg-link
file in the deployment directory, that links to your project’s source code. And, if your deployment directory is Python’ssite-packages
directory, it will also update theeasy-install.pth
file to include your project’s source code, thereby making it available onsys.path
for all programs using that Python installation.
pip -e
? e.g. do I need as an argument the path to the project where setup.py
is or the setup.py
itself? e.g. pip -e path/src/setup.py
or pip -e path/src/
?
Aug 31, 2021 at 19:08
pip install -e
without .
you can do for example: pip install -e ~/ultimate-utils/ultimate-utils-proj-src/
where path/src
is the path to the src of the project where setup.py
is at.
Aug 31, 2021 at 21:26
It is important to note that pip uninstall
can not uninstall a module that has been installed with pip install -e
. So if you go down this route, be prepared for things to get very messy if you ever need to uninstall. A partial solution is to (1) reinstall, keeping a record of files created, as in sudo python3 -m setup.py install --record installed_files.txt
, and then (2) manually delete all the files listed, as in e.g. sudo rm -r /usr/local/lib/python3.7/dist-packages/tdc7201-0.1a2-py3.7.egg/
(for release 0.1a2 of module tdc7201). This does not 100% clean everything up however; even after you've done it, importing the (removed!) local library may succeed, and attempting to install the same version from a remote server may fail to do anything (because it thinks your (deleted!) local version is already up to date).
Still none of the duplicates explain in a proper way what
pip install -e .
or-e .
inrequirements.txt
means.I understand
pip install -e package
installs the package in editable mode, placing a link in thevenv
site packages.
But it is not so clear when.
is specified instead ofpackage
.Where is the package installed then, where is the link placed, if at all?
What is the difference betweenpip install -r reqs.txt
with thereqs
in thereqs.txt
andpip install -e .
with thereqs
in thesetup.cfg
?
The comment by Wör Du Schnaffzig brings up the need for a clearer explanation of what happens when you use pip install -e .
or specify -e .
in a requirements.txt
file, as opposed to specifying a package name.
When pip install -e .
is executed, the .
represents the current directory you are in. That is typically the root directory of the Python package you are developing.
What pip
does in this case is that it installs the package in a way that links back to this directory, rather than copying the files to the site-packages
directory. That means that any changes you make to the source code will be reflected when you import the package in Python, without having to reinstall the package.
pip
locates the setup.py
(legacy) or pyproject.toml
file in the current directory (the .
).site-packages
, pip
creates a file in site-packages
that points to the current project directory (this is the "link" that is mentioned)..egg-link
file (mentioned, for instance, in pypa/pip
issue 10476)which contains the path to the project directory and a simple .
indicating that this directory is the one to be added to sys.path
.When -e .
is included in a requirements.txt
file and pip install -r requirements.txt
is run, it does the same thing as pip install -e .
but as part of processing the requirements file.
To directly address Wör Du Schnaffzig's questions:
.
is specified, the "package" is your project in the current directory. It is "installed" in such a way that Python will use the source code in the current directory instead of the code in site-packages
..egg-link
file) is placed in the site-packages
directory of the current Python environment (whether that is a virtual environment or the global Python environment).pip install -r reqs.txt
with requirements specified inside reqs.txt
and pip install -e .
with requirements in setup.cfg
is that:
pip install -r reqs.txt
) installs the packages listed in reqs.txt
normally (copying them to site-packages
),pip install -e .
) installs the current directory as an editable package and processes dependencies as specified in setup.cfg
or setup.py
.+-----------------+ +------------------+
| Current Dir (.) | ---> | pip install -e . |
+-----------------+ +------------------+
|
| (Editable Mode Link)
v
+----------------------------+ +-----------------------+
| .egg-link in site-packages | ---> | Source Code Directory |
+----------------------------+ +-----------------------+
|
| (Immediate Reflection of Changes)
v
+--------------------+
| Python Environment |
+--------------------+
In practice, using -e .
is like telling Python, "Please always refer back to this specific directory for the code of this package, even if I'm running Python code from somewhere else."
The site-packages
directory will contain a reference to the package's source code directory, not the package code itself. That allows you to work on your codebase and have those changes immediately available everywhere that Python environment is used without reinstallation.
See also "setuptools / Development Mode (a.k.a. “Editable Installs”)"
As suggested in previous answers, there is no symlinks that are getting created. How does '-e' option work? -> It just updates the file "PYTHONDIR/site-packages/easy-install.pth" with the project path specified in the 'command pip install -e'. So each time python search for a package it will check this directory as well => any changes to the files in this directory is instantly reflected.
setup.py
. With pyproject.toml
based projects, the entry to the easy-install.pth file is not added unless using the deprecated compat mode with pip. This has the implication that some IDE tools will not find pyproject.toml based editable installed packages without some extra help (like: adding a .pth file entry).
Dec 8, 2023 at 7:31
The chief reason this is useful is because it frees your development from having to bother with all the repeated pip installs from local sources.
Imagine you have to fix a bug that requires an API change to three packages. You edit one of them, pip install it locally, test the other one on these new changes to the first, edit the second and likewise install it locally and go to edit the third package find that it has broke between the two edits and you need to go back and edit the first again, pip install etc etc. That’s a lot of development friction to have to bother with all these intermediate pip install steps.
What is more desirable in this type of multi package dependency package development is to instead install them all in editable mode. Then you can freely edit and make changes and test without ever needing to do the intermediate pip installs to get the packages working off your latest draft. You do the upfront editable install from source, get to hacking and testing and when everything is proven you can commit the changes to all packages and ship a parallel release for all packages.
Also another reason is it helps with code navigation in IDEs where you always want to navigate to dependency packages in a repo, especially a monorepo, where multiple packages live. You can enumerate in configurations many includes folders for the IDE to know of the many locations where a package can live or the interpreter that is selected in the IDE can have editable installs set to the clone of your repo and likewise be able to navigate to folders especially if those package folders do aliasing in their setup.py logic.
pip install -e
runssetup.py develop
.pip install -e
without.
you can do for example:pip install -e ~/ultimate-utils/ultimate-utils-proj-src/
wherepath/src
is the path to the src of the project wheresetup.py
is at.