checkmyreqs

Check your project requirements for Python version compatibility


License
MIT
Install
pip install checkmyreqs==0.3.1

Documentation

checkmyreqs

checkmyreqs allows you to check the packages in your requirements file against a specified Python version.

https://api.travis-ci.org/dustinmm80/checkmyreqs.png

Usage

This command will check 2 requirements files, to see if their packages are compatible with Python 3.3

checkmyreqs -f requirements.txt,requirements_dev.txt -p 3.3

If you don't pass in a filename, it will use requirements.txt in the directory it is called

checkmyreqs -p 3.2

The output is a list of packages not supported by the given Python version.

For each package, checkmyreqs will tell you if updating them will give you support.

There are 3 parameters

-f, --files   : comma-separated list of files to check (optional, default is requirements.txt)
-p, --python  : Python version to check compatibility, example 2.7 or 3.2 (optional, default is system Python)

You can also use pip freeze to check a Python environment without a requirements file, like so

pip freeze | checkmyreqs -p 3.3

Caveat

checkmyreqs looks at packages on pypi.python.org to see if their author has included a classifier saying which Python versions are supported.

If the package has incorrect or missing classifiers, checkmyreqs will show it as unsupported.

This tool is meant as an addition to other porting tools. 2to3 and six can help you make your code Python 3 ready, and checkmyreqs lets you quickly check if your packages are ready to move as well.

Installation

pip install checkmyreqs

Supports Python 2.7, 3.2, 3.3, 3.4

Python <=2.6, 3.0 and 3.1 are not supported, they don't have argparse

Development

You can install the requirements with

pip install -r requirements.txt
pip install -r requirements_dev.txt

Then, run the tests with

py.test