Private Python Package Index


Keywords
web, wsgi, pyramid, cheeseshop, pypi, packaging
License
BSD-3-Clause
Install
pip install pyshop==1.2.5

Documentation

pyshop

https://travis-ci.org/mardiros/pyshop.png?branch=master

Getting Started

Pyshop is a private repository for python packages.

The aim is to split private projects in distinct private packages and keep a setup.py clean and working, by declaring all dependencies, exactly as public packages on PyPI.

Pyshop also proxies and caches packages from PyPI safely using SSL and checking server certificate.

Pyshop uses clear and simple ACLs to manage privileges:

  • an installer group that can only download release files,
  • a developer group that can download and upload release files and browse the website,
  • an admin group that has developer privileges and accounts management.

Since pyshop is intended to host private packages, every user, including pip, must be authenticated by login and password.

Installation

Using A virtualenv with Python 3

$ cd /srv
$ sudo mkdir pyshop
$ sudo chown $(whoami) pyshop
$ cd pyshop
$ pyvenv .
(pyshop)$ source bin/activate
(pyshop)$ pip install "pyshop[waitress]"
(pyshop)$ cp pyshop.sample.ini pyshop.ini
(pyshop)$ vim pyshop.ini  # change at least the pyshop.cookie_key setting
(pyshop)$ pyshop_setup pyshop.ini  # Create the database
(pyshop)$ pserve pyshop.ini        # start pyshop CTRL+C to stop

Note

If you are using python2 and the pyshop you may not have the pyshop.sample.ini file, you can download it with:

(pyshop)$ curl -o pyshop.ini https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mardiros/pyshop/master/pyshop.sample.ini

You should edit the pyshop.ini file in order to configure the pyshop.cookie_key and the host:port that hosts the service. When the server is running visit the website, http://localhost:8000/ by default, to check everything is fine.

For production usage, you should create accounts with the developer group. Visit http://localhost:8000/pyshop/user with the admin account to create accounts.

You also should also use an https reverse proxy. Python packaging core uses HTTP basic authentication: it sends user/password in clear.

The pythop.sample.ini file use waitress as the default WSGI server, but, if you are familiar with another WSGI server that support paste format, you could use it.

Daemonize with systemd on linux

Pyramid 1.8 has removed deamonized options you have to use a process manager.

Here is a simple way to daemonise it undex linux that use systemd

(pyshop)$ curl -o pyshop.service https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mardiros/pyshop/master/pyshop.sample.service
(pyshop)$ sudo mv pyshop.service /etc/systemd/system/pyshop.service

Note

you may edit the pyshop.service file to adapt path in case you install it

Pyramid 1.8 has removed deamonized options: http://docs.pylonsproject.org/projects/pyramid/en/latest/whatsnew-1.8.html#backwards-incompatibilities

Using Docker

Currently, there is an image of pyshop used for development purpose, it support both MySQL and PostgreSQL. The PostgreSQL integration is fully operation, you can run a new Pyshop install using docker-compose, with the command:

docker-compose up pgpyshop

It will create the database with the default pyshop users:

  • privileged user: login admin, password: changeme
  • unprivileged user: login pip, password changeme

If you want to use a different orchestrator, you have to link the postgresql container to Pyshop container with the name postgresql.localdomain

The MySQL support does not automate the database setup right now.

The official Docker image of Pyshop is available here on the Docker Hub:

https://registry.hub.docker.com/u/mardiros/pyshop/

Configuring your environment

Here are all configuration files you will need to modify for usual python tools to use your newly deployed private repository.

~/.pip/pip.conf

Configuration used by pip. This is a user file, you can set a developer or the generic pip account.

[global]
# when mirroring a package, pyshop retrieves information from PyPI and
# stores it in its database. Be patient, it is not so long.
default-timeout = 120
timeout = 120

[install]
index-url = http://pip:changeme@localhost:8000/simple/

[search]
index = http://pip:changeme@localhost:8000/pypi

Note

If you are using a WSGI server that kills requests if it is too long, like uWSGI or gunicorn, set an appropriate timeout for this service too.

Note

The search funciton is not working with Python 3

setup.cfg and pydistutils.cfg

setup.cfg and pydistutils.cfg are used when running python setup.py develop to install your package or when using easy_install. You should use a generic account with installer privileges only, shared by all developers.

This setting can be set per project or in user $HOME (see setuptools documentation for details)

[easy_install]
index-url = http://pip:changeme@localhost:8000/simple/

This should work now:

python setup.py develop

~/.pypirc

Configuration used by setuptools to upload files. All developers should have this configuration in their $HOME to upload packages.

[distutils]
index-servers =
    pyshop

[pyshop]
username: admin  # or create an account in pyshop admin interface
password: changeme
repository: http://localhost:8000/simple/

This should work now:

python setup.py sdist upload -v -r pyshop

Alternatives