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Olaf Górski
Olaf Górski

Posted on • Originally published at grski.pl

Pyenv, poetry and other rascals - modern Python dependency and version management

Poetry, pyenv and other rascals

On modern Python versions, environments and dependencies management.

PIP

Pip is a tool most of you should already know. It's used to install packages used in python development and since a couple of version already, is shipped with Python by default. But what does it exactly mean to install packages?

In short pip just provides tooling around downloading packages from Python Package Index – PYPI. It's a default index of Python packages where almost anyone can add packages. Default is a good word, because pip allows us to use different indexes. So for example your company could have it's self-hosted version of packages and then use it as a private version of pypi. This allows for example better packages verification, only private network calls during CI/CD/development processes. It's quite interesting option especially given latest malicious attacks on popular Python open source packages.

Package index

What exactly is a Package Index?

Actually nothing complex. It's just a http server, let's say, that provides a list of bundles of Python code – packages and some metadata about them. Nothing more.

Fun take-home assignment to experiment with something new: try to implement your own version of pypi and add there certain features like token-protected package access or even more tokens with granular permission feature.

Command overview

pip install package
pip install "package>=1.0"
pip install package==1.0
pip install r requirements.txt

pip uninstall package

pip list #  lists all packages globally
pip list --outdated

pip freeze  #  lists packages globally but without dependencies of pip and build stuff
pip freeze > requirements.txt  # most naive way of dependency management =

pip show package
pip search "query"
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Default package installation

Usually the case is that we have one, maximum two backwards incompatible versions of Python installed on our machine. In the past it used to be Python2 & Python3, Nowadays most of the time just Python3 is installed as Python2 reached EoL.

Anyhow. This means that in the Dark Ages or by default one would install the packages globally, for the whole system. That’s is bad for multitude of reasons. As for what installing package means, in a very big summary, it’s nothing more than downloading a bundle of python code structured in a certain way, that gets downloaded and put in a given directory of python installation, with additional steps possible inbetween.

What if project A requires package Z in version 1.0.0, but project B requires package Z in version 2.0.0? Would you reinstall this package every time you switch to different projects?

virtualenv

To combat the problem described in the previous paragraph -> packages getting installed globally, virtualenv came around. In short, it’s something that allows us to "create" another, "instance" of installation of Python. Eg. For a given project only instead of system-wide.

This way we can have various python package versions for various projects.

Subset of virtualenv functionalities comes integrated with default CPython installation from version 3.3 onwards as venv module.

Poetry

What if pip and virtualenv had a love child that was also doing steroids? Well, we'd obtain Poetry.

The problem with pip is usually dependency version management.

Even if we know, our project A, requires package Z in version 1.0.0, usually at the first glance, pip doesn’t tell us about the dependencies of this Z package.

It introduces the possibility of problems when your project reaches a point where it has a little bit more packages installed. Because these packages also have dependencies and their dependencies also have them.

Usually it’s not a dependency hell like in the JS worlds, but at some point it can also get a bit tricky if you only lock the dependencies at the top level.

And at some point, when you reach corporate-level size of a project, it’s almost guaranteed to have problems with this. Also if the versions of these dependencies aren’t guaranteed by default what about debugging?

I mean one build could have versions 1.2.3 of some dependency of a dependency, but another build, done 10 minutes earlier could have 1.2.2 if the versions aren’t resolved in a deterministic, guaranteed way. It enables nasty bugs to appear.

This also is a security risk, because if you do not know what version of the dependency exactly you have, a malicious version might find their way in without our explicit knowledge, which is a vulerability introduction opportunity.

We have something called dependency resolving and dependency locking*.

Basically it’s just a proces of making sure that we know the dependencies of our dependencies and their dependencies.

And also we have a clear account of their versions,usually signed with a hash*.

This allows something called deterministic builds which is one of the keys of modern CI/CDs and apps that adhere to the Twelve-factor app pattern.

This is exactly what Poetry does and it does this well.

Other than that, while we are at it, poetry also makes projecet management easier, takes care of creating and managing virtualenvs for you and enables easier, more centralised project configuration by introducing pyproject.toml

pyproject.toml is usually the new standard python package config file.

Oh also, it makes building the packages easier as it can bundle your python code and publish it to the package index of your choice.

Overall poetry is neat. Very neat.

Example pyproject.toml

[tool.poetry]
name = "django-boilerplate"
version = "0.1.0"
description = ""
authors = ["Your Name <you@example.com>"]

[tool.poetry.dependencies]
python = "^3.10"
django = "^4.0.6"
psycopg2-binary = "^2.9.3"
celery = {extras = ["redis"], version = "^5.2.7"}


[tool.poetry.dev-dependencies]
coverage = "^6.4.2"

isort = "^5.10.1"
flake8 = "^4.0.1"
black = "^22.6.0"

[build-system]
requires = ["poetry-core>=1.0.0"]
build-backend = "poetry.core.masonry.api"
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Pyenv

Python is a peculiar little animal that sheds its skin from time to time. Meaning Python itself, other than our dependencies, also has it’s own versions. Each version contains new features, various improvements. Some of them are sometimes even backwards incompatibile.

By default it’s not trivial to install various python versions and have them working properly on the same machine.

Why would you need that? Well, same as with dependencies. One project could depend on Python 3.10, the other on 2.7 and some other on 3.12.

We need something like virtualenv, that would provide isolation, but instead of a project-level for python dependnecies, instead for the system on the python version level.

How do we do that?

With pyenv. Juiced up pyenv with a neat plugin that let’s us create virtualenvs from different python versions/interpreter implementations.

Pyenv + pyenv-virtualenv is also nice in regard of integration with poetry.

Anyhow. So we have pyenv-virtualenv which is a virtualenv-like wrapper for pyenv, which in turn is a a wrapper around python versions management, working on poetry which is a wrapper for pip and pip-tools, integrated with virtualenv which is also kind of a wrapper.

So we have wrapper of a wrapper working on a wrapper of a wrapper. Wrapper-ception.

asciicast

Short how-to

  1. Install pyenv from official repository curl https://pyenv.run | bash
  2. After installation run exec $SHELL to restart shell and apply the changes
  3. Install desired version of python runtime (eg. 3.6.15) pyenv install 3.6.15
  4. Go to the project's root directory
  5. Install pyenv-virtualenv plugin from repository (in never versions it's included in pyenv.run script I think)
  6. Create virtualenv pyenv virtualenv 3.6.15 your-cool-virtualenv-name
  7. Set virtual env as local (make sure you are in project root dir) pyenv local your-cool-virtualenv-name for automatic venv activation

Piptools

If your project is simple enough or you do not want to be bother will all of the previous things you can use pip-tools to pin your dependencies and all that.

Check out my other articles:
Tenancy pattern in a SaaS product
How I created my own blogging system in less than 100 lines of code
Three types of managers - which one are you?
How to write README files like a pro

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