Python 3.3 includes in its standard library the new package venv
. What does it do, and how does it differ from all the other packages that seem to match the regex (py)?(v|virtual|pip)?env
?
问题:
回答1:
PyPI packages not in the standard library:
virtualenv
is a very popular tool that creates isolated Python environments for Python libraries. If you're not familiar with this tool, I highly recommend learning it, as it is a very useful tool, and I'll be making comparisons to it for the rest of this answer.It works by installing a bunch of files in a directory (eg:
env/
), and then modifying thePATH
environment variable to prefix it with a custombin
directory (eg:env/bin/
). An exact copy of thepython
orpython3
binary is placed in this directory, but Python is programmed to look for libraries relative to its path first, in the environment directory. It's not part of Python's standard library, but is officially blessed by the PyPA (Python Packaging Authority). Once activated, you can install packages in the virtual environment usingpip
.pyenv
is used to isolate Python versions. For example, you may want to test your code against Python 2.6, 2.7, 3.3, 3.4 and 3.5, so you'll need a way to switch between them. Once activated, it prefixes thePATH
environment variable with~/.pyenv/shims
, where there are special files matching the Python commands (python
,pip
). These are not copies of the Python-shipped commands; they are special scripts that decide on the fly which version of Python to run based on thePYENV_VERSION
environment variable, or the.python-version
file, or the~/.pyenv/version
file.pyenv
also makes the process of downloading and installing multiple Python versions easier, using the commandpyenv install
.pyenv-virtualenv
is a plugin forpyenv
by the same author aspyenv
, to allow you to usepyenv
andvirtualenv
at the same time conveniently. However, if you're using Python 3.3 or later,pyenv-virtualenv
will try to runpython -m venv
if it is available, instead ofvirtualenv
. You can usevirtualenv
andpyenv
together withoutpyenv-virtualenv
, if you don't want the convenience features.virtualenvwrapper
is a set of extensions tovirtualenv
(see docs). It gives you commands likemkvirtualenv
,lssitepackages
, and especiallyworkon
for switching between differentvirtualenv
directories. This tool is especially useful if you want multiplevirtualenv
directories.pyenv-virtualenvwrapper
is a plugin forpyenv
by the same author aspyenv
, to conveniently integratevirtualenvwrapper
intopyenv
.pipenv
, by Kenneth Reitz (the author ofrequests
), is the newest project in this list. It aims to combinePipfile
,pip
andvirtualenv
into one command on the command-line. Thevirtualenv
directory typically gets placed in~/.local/share/virtualenvs/XXX
, withXXX
being a hash of the path of the project directory. This is different fromvirtualenv
, where the directory is typically in the current working directory.The Python Packaging Guide recommends
pipenv
when developing Python applications (as opposed to libraries). There does not seem to be any plans to supportvenv
instead ofvirtualenv
(#15). Confusingly, its command-line option--venv
refers to thevirtualenv
directory, notvenv
, and similarly, the environment variablePIPENV_VENV_IN_PROJECT
affects the location of thevirtualenv
directory, notvenv
directory (#1919).
Standard library:
pyvenv
is a script shipped with Python 3 but deprecated in Python 3.6 as it had problems (not to mention the confusing name). In Python 3.6+, the exact equivalent ispython3 -m venv
.venv
is a package shipped with Python 3, which you can run usingpython3 -m venv
(although for some reason some distros separate it out into a separate distro package, such aspython3-venv
on Ubuntu/Debian). It serves a similar purpose tovirtualenv
, and works in a very similar way, but it doesn't need to copy Python binaries around (except on Windows). Use this if you don't need to support Python 2. At the time of writing, the Python community seems to be happy withvirtualenv
and I haven't heard much talk ofvenv
.
Most of these tools complement each other. For instance, pipenv
integrates pip
, virtualenv
and even pyenv
if desired. The only tools that are true alternatives to each other here are venv
and virtualenv
.
Recommendation for beginners:
This is my personal recommendation for beginners: start by learning virtualenv
and pip
, tools which work with both Python 2 and 3 and in a variety of situations, and pick up the other tools once you start needing them.
回答2:
I would just avoid the use of virtualenv
after Python3.3+ and instead use the standard shipped library venv
. To create a new virtual environment you would type:
$ python3 -m venv <MYVENV>
virtualenv
tries to copy the Python binary into the virtual environment's bin directory. However it does not update library file links embedded into that binary, so if you build Python from source into a non-system directory with relative path names, the Python binary breaks. Since this is how you make a copy distributable Python, it is a big flaw. BTW to inspect embedded library file links on OS X, use otool
. For example from within your virtual environment, type:
$ otool -L bin/python
python:
@executable_path/../Python (compatibility version 3.4.0, current version 3.4.0)
/usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib (compatibility version 1.0.0, current version 1238.0.0)
Consequently I would avoid virtualenvwrapper
and pipenv
. pyvenv
is deprecated. pyenv
seems to be used often where virtualenv
is used but I would stay away from it also since I think venv
also does what pyenv
is built for.
venv
creates virtual environments in the shell that are fresh and sandboxed, with user-installable libraries, and it's multi-python safe. Fresh because virtual environments only start with the standard libraries that ship with python, you have to install any other libraries all over again with pip install
while the virtual environment is active. Sandboxed because none of these new library installs are visible outside the virtual environment, so you can delete the whole environment and start again without worrying about impacting your base python install. User-installable libraries because the virtual environment's target folder is created without sudo
in some directory you already own, so you won't need sudo
permissions to install libraries into it. Finally it is multi-python safe, since when virtual environments activate, the shell only sees the python version (3.4, 3.5 etc.) that was used to build that virtual environment.
pyenv
is similar to venv
in that it lets you manage multiple python environments. However with pyenv
you can't conveniently rollback library installs to some start state and you will likely need admin
privileges at some point to update libraries. So I think it is also best to use venv
.
In the last couple of years I have found many problems in build systems (emacs packages, python standalone application builders, installers...) that ultimately come down to issues with virtualenv
. I think python will be a better platform when we eliminate this additional option and only use venv
.
回答3:
Python Docs recommends the use of venv over pyenv. From the docs:
Note The pyvenv script has been deprecated as of Python 3.6 in favor of using python3 -m venv to help prevent any potential confusion as to which Python interpreter a virtual environment will be based on.
Ref: https://docs.python.org/3/library/venv.html