pip seems to wantonly uninstall packages that are required! If a package explicitly declares a particular version of a package, it seems that pip ought to fail to uninstall that package, but it doesn't. Consider:
$ pip list | grep bar
bar 1.0
$ cat setup.py
from setuptools import setup, find_packages
def do_setup():
setup(
name='foo',
description='the foo package',
license='MIT',
version='1.0',
install_requires=[
'bar==1.0',
],
)
if __name__ == "__main__":
do_setup()
$ pip install .
Processing /Users/williamp/examples/pip/foo
Requirement already satisfied (use --upgrade to upgrade): foo==1.0 from file:///Users/williamp/examples/pip/foo in /Users/williamp/tmp/virt/lib/python2.7/site-packages
Requirement already satisfied: bar==1.0 in /Users/williamp/tmp/virt/lib/python2.7/site-packages (from foo==1.0)
$ cd ../bar
$ pip install dist/bar-1.1.tar.gz
Processing ./dist/bar-1.1.tar.gz
Building wheels for collected packages: bar
Running setup.py bdist_wheel for bar ... done
Stored in directory: /Users/williamp/Library/Caches/pip/wheels/bf/d3/68/6016190bb2084f62ba1107c63bea948f4cfbb2c129fa0cb102
Successfully built bar
Installing collected packages: bar
Found existing installation: bar 1.0
Uninstalling bar-1.0:
Successfully uninstalled bar-1.0
Successfully installed bar-1.1
It seems that I wind up in a situation where package foo is installed with an explicit dependency on bar == 1.0, but pip has uninstalled bar 1.0 and the system is now in an unstable state. Is there some simple config option I can pass to pip to tell it to not do this?
No, but you can check for this manually by running pip check:
$ pip check
No broken requirements found.
$ pip uninstall pytz
Uninstalling pytz-2017.3:
...
Proceed (y/n)? y
Successfully uninstalled pytz-2017.3
$ pip check
Django 2.0 requires pytz, which is not installed.
Dependency tracking has been a major issue with pip for a while now. It'll get fixed eventually, I hope.
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