Autoindex lets you create a private index for pip, similar to PyPI but with only the packages you need and additional private packages.
This lets you:
- Mirror the libraries you use (which you should absolutely do since some tend to disappear or become unavailable from time to time),
- Serve your proprietary packages on that index.
Packages are downloaded to a directory, the index is generated using this directory and you only need a web server to serve that directory to the public.
If you need security, just serve that index on SSL + HTTP Basic authentication. Then to use it with pip:
pip install -i https://user:[email protected]
Or, in a requirements.txt
file:
--index-url=https://user:[email protected]
Install it somewhere on your machine:
git clone [email protected]:brutasse/autoindex.git cd autoindex python setup.py install
Then create the autoindex public directory and configure your web server to serve it:
mkdir /var/www/autoindex
Create a /var/www/autoindex/mirror
file that lists the packages you want
to mirror (one per line), for instance:
Django raven
Note that if a package has dependencies, they must be listed as well. Autoindex is that dumb, it won't parse deps for you.
Then setup a cron job to start mirroring:
@daily /path/to/autoindex -d /var/www/autoindex mirror
Run it with the period you want, but don't be rude to PyPI. If you want to hit
another mirror than pypi.python.org
, make it so:
/path/to/autoindex -d /var/www/autoindex -i http://a.pypi.python.org mirror
And finally, if you run this on a linux box (why wouldn't you?) you can run
the watcher to update the index when a file changes. This way making a release
is as simple as scp
'ing a file to the autoindex dir:
/path/to/autoindex -d /var/www/autoindex watch
(Put this on a process supervisor like supervisor or circus in case it crashes.)
If you can't do that for some reason, just periodically regenerate the index:
/path/to/autoindex -d /var/www/autoindex index
If you want to log crashes to Sentry, just install raven
in the same
environment as autoindex
and run the processes with a SENTRY_DSN
environment variable.