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pip-review is a convenience wrapper around pip. It can list available updates by deferring to pip list --outdated. It can also automatically or interactively install available updates for you by deferring to pip install.
Example, report-only:
$ pip-review
requests==0.13.4 is available (you have 0.13.2)
redis==2.4.13 is available (you have 2.4.9)
rq==0.3.2 is available (you have 0.3.0)Example, actually install everything:
$ pip-review --auto
... <pip install output>Example, run interactively, ask to upgrade for each package:
$ pip-review --interactive
requests==0.14.0 is available (you have 0.13.2)
Upgrade now? [Y]es, [N]o, [A]ll, [Q]uit y
...
redis==2.6.2 is available (you have 2.4.9)
Upgrade now? [Y]es, [N]o, [A]ll, [Q]uit n
rq==0.3.2 is available (you have 0.3.0)
Upgrade now? [Y]es, [N]o, [A]ll, [Q]uit y
...Example, preview for update target list by pip list --outdated format, with run interactively or install everything:
$ pip-review --interactive --preview
Package  Version Latest Type
-----------------------------
redis    2.4.9   2.6.2  wheel
requests 0.13.2  0.14.0 wheel
rq       0.3.0   0.3.4  wheel
-----------------------------
... < --interactive processing >$ pip-review --auto --preview
... <same above and pip install output>Example, only preview for update target list:
$ pip-review --preview-only
Package  Version Latest Type
-----------------------------
redis    2.4.9   2.6.2  wheel
requests 0.13.2  0.14.0 wheel
rq       0.3.0   0.3.4  wheel
-----------------------------Run pip-review -h for a complete overview of the options.
Note: If you want to pin specific packages to prevent them from automatically
being upgraded, you can use a constraint file (similar to requirements.txt):
$ export PIP_CONSTRAINT="${HOME}/constraints.txt"
$ cat $PIP_CONSTRAINT
pyarrow==0.14.1
pandas<0.24.0
$ pip-review --auto
...Set this variable in .bashrc or .zshenv to make it persistent.
Alternatively, this option can be specified in pip.conf, e.g.:
- Linux:
$ cat ~/.config/pip/pip.conf
[global]
constraint = /home/username/constraints.txt- Windows:
$ cat $HOME\AppData\Roaming\pip\pip.ini
[global]
constraint = '$HOME\Roaming\pip\constraints.txt'The conf file are dependent of the user, so If you use multiple users you must define config file for each of them. https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/user_guide/#constraints-files
Since version 0.5, you can also invoke pip-review as python -m pip_review. This can be useful if you are using multiple versions of Python next to each other.
Before version 1.0, pip-review had its own logic for finding package updates instead of relying on pip list --outdated.
Like pip, pip-review updates all packages, including pip and pip-review.
To install, simply use pip:
$ pip install pip-reviewDecide for yourself whether you want to install the tool system-wide, or inside a virtual env. Both are supported.
To test with your active Python version:
$ ./run-tests.shTo test under all (supported) Python versions:
$ toxThe tests run quite slow, since they actually interact with PyPI, which involves downloading packages, etc. So please be patient.
pip-review was originally part of pip-tools but
has been discontinued as such. See Pin Your Packages by Vincent
Driessen for the original introduction. Since there are still use cases, the
tool now lives on as a separate package.