For comparison to pipsi, see how does this compare to pipsi?
pipx uses the word "binary" to describe a CLI application that can be run directly from the command line. These files are located in the bin
directory of a Python installation, alongside other executables. Despite the name, they do not necessarily contain binary data.
if you are using pipx < v0.10 see issue #41
What pipx does for you:
- Run the latest version of a CLI application from a package in a temporary virtual environment, leaving your system untouched after it finishes
- Install packages to isolated virtual environments, while globally exposing their CLI applications so you can run them from anywhere
- Easily list, upgrade, and uninstall packages that were installed with pipx
- Runs with regular user permissions, never calling
sudo pip install ...
(you aren't doing that, are you? 😄).
pipx combines the features of JavaScript's npx - which ships with node - and Python's pipsi. pipx does not ship with pip but I consider it to be an important part of bootstrapping your system, similar to how node ships with npm and npx.
pipx makes running the latest version of a program as easy as
pipx BINARY [ARGS...]
This will install the package in a temporary directory, invoke the binary, then clean up after itself, leaving your system untouched. Try it!
pipx cowsay moo
Notice that you don't need to execute any install commands to run the binary.
You can run .py files directly, too.
pipx https://gist.githubusercontent.com/cs01/fa721a17a326e551ede048c5088f9e0f/raw/6bdfbb6e9c1132b1c38fdd2f195d4a24c540c324/pipx-demo.py
pipx is working!
It also makes (safely) installing a program globally as easy as
pipx install PACKAGE
This automatically creates a virtual environment, installs the package, and symlinks the package's CLI binaries to a location on your PATH
. For example, pipx install cowsay
makes the cowsay
command available globally, but sandboxes the cowsay package in its own virtual environment. pipx never needs to run as sudo to do this.
@tkossak
Thank you! Great tool btw. I already use it instead of pipsi :)
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cs01/pipx/master/get-pipx.py | python3
pipx is on PyPI as pipx-app
, though the recommended way to install pipx is to use the above command.
If python3 is not found on your PATH or there is a syntax error/typo, curl
will fail with the error message: "(23) Failed writing body."
To see options when getting pipx
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cs01/pipx/master/get-pipx.py | python3 - --help
To install from the latest master
curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/cs01/pipx/master/get-pipx.py | python3 - --src git+https://github.com/cs01/pipx.git
python 3.6+ is required to install pipx. pipx can run binaries from packages with Python 3.3+. Don't have Python 3.6 or later? See Python 3 Installation & Setup Guide.
pipx works on macOS, linux, and Windows.
pipx upgrade pipx-app
pipx uninstall pipx-app
pipx BINARY
pipx [--spec PACKAGE] [--python PYTHON] BINARY [ARGS...]
pipx {install,upgrade,upgrade-all,uninstall,uninstall-all,list} [--help]
pipx
can be invoked to directly run a binary (pipx BINARY
) or to run a pipx command (pipx COMMAND
). The commands are
install, upgrade, upgrade-all, uninstall, uninstall-all, reinstall-all, list
You can run pipx COMMAND --help
for details on each command. You cannot run a binary with the same name as a pipx command.
pipx BINARY
pipx [--python PYTHON] [--spec SPEC] BINARY [ARGS...]
pipx enables you to test various combinations of Python versions and package versions in ephemeral environments:
pipx BINARY # latest version of binary is run with python3
pipx --spec PACKAGE==2.0.0 BINARY # specific version of package is run
pipx --python 3.4 BINARY # Installed and invoked with specific Python version
pipx --python 3.7 --spec PACKAGE=1.7.3 BINARY
pipx --spec git+https://url.git BINARY # latest version on master is run
pipx --spec git+https://url.git@branch BINARY
pipx --spec git+https://url.git@hash BINARY
pipx cowsay moo
pipx --version # prints pipx version
pipx cowsay --version # prints cowsay version
pipx --python pythonX cowsay
pipx --spec cowsay==2.0 cowsay --version
pipx --spec git+https://github.com/ambv/black.git black
pipx --spec git+https://github.com/ambv/black.git@branch-name black
pipx --spec git+https://github.com/ambv/black.git@git-hash black
pipx --spec https://github.com/ambv/black/archive/18.9b0.zip black --help
pipx https://gist.githubusercontent.com/cs01/fa721a17a326e551ede048c5088f9e0f/raw/6bdfbb6e9c1132b1c38fdd2f195d4a24c540c324/pipx-demo.py
The install command is the preferred way to globally install binaries from python packages on your system. It creates an isolated virtual environment for the package, then in a folder on your PATH creates symlinks to all the binaries provided by the installed package. It does not link to the package's dependencies.
The result: binaries you can run from anywhere, located in packages you can cleanly upgrade or uninstall. Guaranteed to not have dependency version conflicts or interfere with your OS's python packages. All without running sudo
.
pipx install PACKAGE
pipx install --python PYTHON PACKAGE
pipx install --spec VCS_URL PACKAGE
pipx install --spec ZIP_FILE PACKAGE
pipx install --spec TAR_GZ_FILE PACKAGE
The argument to --spec
is passed directly to pip install
.
The default virtual environment location is ~/.local/pipx/venvs
and can be overridden by setting the environment variable PIPX_HOME
.
The default binary location is ~/.local/bin
and can be overridden by setting the environment variable PIPX_BIN_DIR
.
pipx install cowsay
pipx install --python python3.6 cowsay
pipx install --python python3.7 cowsay
pipx install --spec git+https://github.com/ambv/black black
pipx --spec git+https://github.com/ambv/black.git@branch-name black
pipx --spec git+https://github.com/ambv/black.git@git-hash black
pipx install --spec https://github.com/ambv/black/archive/18.9b0.zip black
pipx install --spec black[d] black
Note: pipx determines a package's binaries (also known as entry points, console scripts, or scripts) by inspecting metadata about the package. Sometimes a package is built in such a way that pipx cannot determine its binaries. In such cases, please create an issue.
Upgrades a package within its virtual environments by running pip install --upgrade PACKAGE
.
pipx upgrade PACKAGE
Upgrades all packages within their virtual environments by running pip install --upgrade PACKAGE
.
pipx upgrade-all
Adds a package to an existing pipx-managed virtual environment.
pipx inject PACKAGE DEPENDENCY
One use of the inject command is setting up a REPL with some useful extra packages.
pipx install ptpython
pipx inject ptpython requests
pipx inject ptpython pendulum
After running the above commands, you will be able to import and use the requests
and pendulum
packages inside a ptpython
repl.
Uninstalls a package by deleting its virtual environment and any symlinks that point to its binaries.
pipx uninstall PACKAGE
Uninstalls all packages (including pipx)
pipx uninstall-all
Reinstalls all packages using a different version of Python.
pipx reinstall-all PYTHON
Specify a version of Python to associate all installed packages with. Packages are uninstalled, then installed with pip install PACKAGE
. This is useful if you upgraded to a new version of Python and want all your packages to use the latest as well.
If you originally installed a package from a source other than PyPI, this command may behave in unexpected ways since it will reinstall from PyPI.
Lists installed packages/binaries
pipx list
results in something like
venvs are in /Users/user/.local/pipx/venvs
symlinks to binaries are in /Users/user/.local/bin
package black 18.9b0, Python 3.7.0
- black
- blackd
package pipx-app 0.10.0, Python 3.7.0
- pipx
I'll use the python package black
as an example. The black
package ships with a binary called black. You can run it with pipx just like this.
pipx black --help
Usage: black [OPTIONS] [SRC]...
The uncompromising code formatter.
...
Black just ran, but you didn't have to run venv
or install commands. How easy was that!?
pipx makes safely installing the program to globally accessible, isolated environment as easy as
pipx install black
so now black
will be available globally, wherever you want to use it, but not mixed in with your OS's Python packages.
black --help # now available globally
Usage: black [OPTIONS] [SRC]...
The uncompromising code formatter.
...
Aside: I just want to take a second to note how different this is from using
sudo pip install ...
(which you should NEVER do). Usingsudo pip install ...
will mix Python packages installed and required by your OS with whatever you just installed. This can result in very bad things happening. And since all the dependencies were installed along with it (and you have no idea what they were), you can't easily uninstall them -- you have to know every single one and runsudo pip uninstall ...
for them!
You can uninstall packages with
pipx uninstall black
This uninstalls the black package and all of its dependencies, but doesn't affect any other packages or binaries.
Here are some programs you can try out with no obligation. If you've never used the program before, make sure you add the --help
flag so it doesn't do something you don't expect. If you decide you want to install, you can run pipx install PACKAGE
instead.
pipx install ansible # IT automation
pipx asciinema # Record and share your terminal sessions, the right way.
pipx black # uncompromising Python code formatter
pipx --spec babel pybabel # internationalizing and localizing Python applications
pipx --spec chardet chardetect # detect file encoding
pipx cookiecutter # creates projects from project templates
pipx create-python-package # easily create and publish new Python packages
pipx flake8 # tool for style guide enforcement
pipx gdbgui # browser-based gdb debugger
pipx hexsticker # create hexagon stickers automatically
pipx ipython # powerful interactive Python shell
pipx pipenv # python dependency/environment management
pipx poetry # python dependency/environment/packaging management
pipx pylint # source code analyzer
pipx pyinstaller # bundles a Python application and all its dependencies into a single package
pipx pyxtermjs # fully functional terminal in the browser
pipx install shell-functools # Functional programming tools for the shell
When running a binary (pipx BINARY
), pipx will
- create a temporary directory
- create a virtualenv inside it with
python -m venv
- update pip to the latest version
- install the desired package in the virtualenv
- invoke the binary
- erase the temporary directory leaving your system untouched
When installing a package and its binaries (pipx install package
) pipx will
- create directory ~/.local/pipx/venvs/PACKAGE
- create a virtualenv in ~/.local/pipx/venvs/PACKAGE
- update pip to the latest version
- install the desired package in the virtualenv
- create symlinks in ~/.local/bin that point to new binaries in ~/.local/pipx/venvs/PACKAGE/bin (such as ~/.local/bin/black -> ~/.local/pipx/venvs/black/bin/black)
- As long as
~/.local/bin/
is on your PATH, you can now invoke the new binaries globally
These are all things you can do yourself, but pipx automates them for you. If you are curious as to what pipx is doing behind the scenes, you can always use pipx --verbose ...
.
To develop pipx
first clone the repository, then create and activate a virtual environment.
python -m venv pipxvenv
source pipxvenv/bin/activate
Next install pipx in "editable mode".
pip install -e .
Now make your changes and run pipx
as you normally would. Your changes will be used as soon as they are saved.
Make sure your changes pass tests by running
python test.py
Note that travis integration tests do not pass because of a bug in travis' virtualenv creation (see #25).
- pipx is under active development. pipsi is no longer maintained.
- pipx and pipsi both install packages in a similar way
- pipx always makes sure you're using the latest version of pip
- pipx has the ability to run a binary in one line, leaving your system unchanged after it finishes (
pipx BINARY
) where pipsi does not - pipx adds more useful information to its output
- pipx has more CLI options such as upgrade-all, reinstall-all, uninstall-all
- pipx is more modern. It uses Python 3.6+, and venv instead of virtualenv.
- pipx works with Python homebrew installations while pipsi does not (at least on my machine)
- pipx defaults to less verbose output
- pipx allows you to see each command it runs by passing the --verbose flag
- pipx prints emojies 😀
run with this is focused on running arbitrary Python code in ephemeral environments while pipx is focused on running Python binaries in ephemeral and non-ephemeral environments.
For example these two commands both install poetry to an ephemeral environment and invoke poetry with --help
.
pipx poetry --help
rwt poetry -- -m poetry --help
pipx was inspired by pipsi and npx.
pipx was created and is maintained by Chad Smith.
Contributions and feedback from