12. Entornos Virtuales y Paquetes¶
12.1. Introducción¶
Las aplicaciones en Python usualmente hacen uso de paquetes y módulos que no forman parte de la librería estándar. Las aplicaciones a veces necesitan una versión específica de una librería, debido a que dicha aplicación requiere que un bug particular haya sido solucionado o bien la aplicación ha sido escrita usando una versión obsoleta de la interface de la librería.
Esto significa que tal vez no sea posible para una instalación de Python cumplir los requerimientos de todas las aplicaciones. Si la aplicación A necesita la versión 1.0 de un módulo particular y la aplicación B necesita la versión 2.0, entonces los requerimientos entran en conflicto e instalar la versión 1.0 o 2.0 dejará una de las aplicaciones sin funcionar.
The solution for this problem is to create a virtual environment (often shortened to «virtualenv»), a self-contained directory tree that contains a Python installation for a particular version of Python, plus a number of additional packages.
Different applications can then use different virtual environments. To resolve the earlier example of conflicting requirements, application A can have its own virtual environment with version 1.0 installed while application B has another virtualenv with version 2.0. If application B requires a library be upgraded to version 3.0, this will not affect application A’s environment.
12.2. Creando Entornos Virtuales¶
The script used to create and manage virtual environments is called
pyvenv. pyvenv will usually install the most
recent version of Python that you have available; the script is also
installed with a version number, so if you have multiple versions of
Python on your system you can select a specific Python version by
running pyvenv-3.4
or whichever version you want.
To create a virtualenv, decide upon a directory where you want to place it and run pyvenv with the directory path:
pyvenv tutorial-env
Esto creará la carpeta tutorial-env
si no existe, y también creará las subcarpetas conteniendo la copia del intérprete Python, la librería estándar y los archivos de soporte.
Once you’ve created a virtual environment, you need to activate it.
En Windows, ejecuta:
tutorial-env/Scripts/activate
En Unix o MacOS, ejecuta:
source tutorial-env/bin/activate
(Este script está escrito para la consola bash. Si usas las consolas csh or fish, hay scripts alternativos activate.csh
y activate.fish
que deberá usar en su lugar).
Activating the virtualenv will change your shell’s prompt to show what
virtualenv you’re using, and modify the environment so that running
python
will get you that particular version and installation of
Python. For example:
-> source ~/envs/tutorial-env/bin/activate
(tutorial-env) -> python
Python 3.4.3+ (3.4:c7b9645a6f35+, May 22 2015, 09:31:25)
...
>>> import sys
>>> sys.path
['', '/usr/local/lib/python34.zip', ...,
'~/envs/tutorial-env/lib/python3.4/site-packages']
>>>
12.3. Manejando paquetes con pip¶
Once you’ve activated a virtual environment, you can install, upgrade,
and remove packages using a program called pip. By default
pip
will install packages from the Python Package Index,
<https://pypi.python.org/pypi>. You can browse the Python Package Index
by going to it in your web browser, or you can use pip
’s
limited search feature:
(tutorial-env) -> pip search astronomy
skyfield - Elegant astronomy for Python
gary - Galactic astronomy and gravitational dynamics.
novas - The United States Naval Observatory NOVAS astronomy library
astroobs - Provides astronomy ephemeris to plan telescope observations
PyAstronomy - A collection of astronomy related tools for Python.
...
pip
tiene varios subcomandos: «search», «install», «uninstall», «freeze», etc. (consulta la guía Installing Python Modules para la documentación completa de pip
.)
You can install the latest version of a package by specifying a package’s name:
-> pip install novas
Collecting novas
Downloading novas-3.1.1.3.tar.gz (136kB)
Installing collected packages: novas
Running setup.py install for novas
Successfully installed novas-3.1.1.3
You can also install a specific version of a package by giving the
package name followed by ==
and the version number:
-> pip install requests==2.6.0
Collecting requests==2.6.0
Using cached requests-2.6.0-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Installing collected packages: requests
Successfully installed requests-2.6.0
If you re-run this command, pip
will notice that the requested
version is already installed and do nothing. You can supply a
different version number to get that version, or you can run pip
install --upgrade
to upgrade the package to the latest version:
-> pip install --upgrade requests
Collecting requests
Installing collected packages: requests
Found existing installation: requests 2.6.0
Uninstalling requests-2.6.0:
Successfully uninstalled requests-2.6.0
Successfully installed requests-2.7.0
pip uninstall
seguido de uno o varios nombres de paquetes desinstalará los paquetes del entorno virtual.
pip show
will display information about a particular package:
(tutorial-env) -> pip show requests
---
Metadata-Version: 2.0
Name: requests
Version: 2.7.0
Summary: Python HTTP for Humans.
Home-page: http://python-requests.org
Author: Kenneth Reitz
Author-email: me@kennethreitz.com
License: Apache 2.0
Location: /Users/akuchling/envs/tutorial-env/lib/python3.4/site-packages
Requires:
pip list
will display all of the packages installed in the virtual
environment:
(tutorial-env) -> pip list
novas (3.1.1.3)
numpy (1.9.2)
pip (7.0.3)
requests (2.7.0)
setuptools (16.0)
pip freeze
will produce a similar list of the installed packages,
but the output uses the format that pip install
expects.
A common convention is to put this list in a requirements.txt
file:
(tutorial-env) -> pip freeze > requirements.txt
(tutorial-env) -> cat requirements.txt
novas==3.1.1.3
numpy==1.9.2
requests==2.7.0
The requirements.txt
can then be committed to version control and
shipped as part of an application. Users can then install all the
necessary packages with install -r
:
-> pip install -r requirements.txt
Collecting novas==3.1.1.3 (from -r requirements.txt (line 1))
...
Collecting numpy==1.9.2 (from -r requirements.txt (line 2))
...
Collecting requests==2.7.0 (from -r requirements.txt (line 3))
...
Installing collected packages: novas, numpy, requests
Running setup.py install for novas
Successfully installed novas-3.1.1.3 numpy-1.9.2 requests-2.7.0
pip
tiene muchas más opciones. Consulte la guía Installing Python Modules para obtener documentación completa de pip
. Cuando haya escrito un paquete y desee que esté disponible en el índice de paquetes de Python, consulte la guía Distributing Python Modules.