fades - Online in the Cloud

This is the command fades that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator

PROGRAM:

NAME


fades - A system that automatically handles the virtualenvs in the cases normally found
when writing scripts and simple programs, and even helps to administer big projects.

SYNOPSYS


fades [-h][--help] [-V][--version] [-v][--verbose] [-q][--quiet] [-i][--ipython]
[-d][--dependency] [-r][--requirement] [-x][--exec] [-p version][--python=version]
[--rm=uuid] [--system-site-packages] [--virtualenv-options=options] [--pip-
options=options] [--check-updates] [child_program [child_options]]

fades can be used to execute directly your script, or put it with a #! at your script's
beginning.

DESCRIPTION


fades will automagically create a new virtualenv (or reuse a previous created one),
installing the necessary dependencies, and execute your script inside that virtualenv,
with the only requirement of executing the script with fades and also marking the required
dependencies.

The first non-option parameter (if any) would be then the child program to execute, and
any other parameters after that are passed as is to that child script.

fades can also be executed without passing a child script to execute: in this mode it will
open a Python interactive interpreter inside the created/reused virtualenv (taking
dependencies from --dependency or --requirement options).

OPTIONS


-h, --help
Show help about all the parameters and options, and quit.

-V, --version
Show the program version and info about the system, and quit.

-v, --verbose
Send all internal debugging lines to stderr, which may be very useful if any
problem arises.

-q, --quiet
Don't show anything (unless it has a real problem), so the original script stderr
is not polluted at all.

-i, --ipython
Runs IPython shell instead of python ones.

-d, --dependency
Specify dependencies through command line. This option can be specified multiple
times (once per dependency), and each time the format is repository::dependency.
The dependency may have versions specifications, and the repository is optional
(defaults to 'pypi'). Examples:

requests
pypi::requests > 2.3
requests<=3

See more examples below for real command line usage explanations.

-r, --requirement
Read the dependencies from a file. Format in each line is the same than
dependencies specified with --dependency.

-p version, --python=version
Select which Python version to be used; the argument can be just the number (2.7),
the whole name (python2.7) or the whole path (/usr/bin/python2.7). Of course, the
corresponding version of Python needs to be installed in your system.

The dependencies can be indicated in multiple places (in the Python source file,
with a comment besides the import, in a requirementsfile, and/or through command
line. In case of multiple definitions of the same dependency, command line
overrides everything else, and requirements file overrides what is specified in the
source code.

-x, --exec
Execute the child_program inside the virtualenv.

The child_program must be found in the virtualenv's bin directory.

--rm uuid
Remove a virtualenv by uuid.

--system-site-packages
Give the virtual environment access to thesystem site-packages dir

--virtualenv-options=VIRTUALENV_OPTION
Extra options to be supplied to virtualenv. (this option can beused multiple times)

--pip-options=PIP_OPTION
Extra options to be supplied to pip. (this option can beused multiple times)

--check-updates
Will check for updates in PyPI to verify if there are new versions for the
requested dependencies. If a new version is available for a dependency, it will use
it (if the dependency was requested without version) or just inform which new
version is available (if the dependency was requested with a specific version).

EXAMPLES


fades foo.py --bar

Executes foo.py under fades, passing the --bar parameter to the child program, in a
virtualenv with the dependencies indicated in the source code.

fades -v foo.py

Executes foo.py under fades, showing all the fades messages (verbose mode).

fades -d dependency1 -d dependency2>3.2 foo.py --bar

Executes foo.py under fades (passing the --bar parameter to it), in a virtualenv
with the dependencies indicated in the source code and also dependency1 and
dependency2 (any version > 3.2).

fades -d dependency1

Executes the Python interactive interpreter in a virtualenv with dependency1
installed.

fades -r requirements.txt

Executes the Python interactive interpreter in a virtualenv after installing there
all dependencies taken from the requirements.txt file.

USING CONFIGURATION FILES


You can also configure fades using .ini config files. fades will search config files in
/etc/fades/fades.ini, the path indicated by xdg for your system (for example
~/config/fades/fades.ini) and .fades.ini. So you can have different settings at system,
user and project level.

The config files are in .ini format. (configparser) and fades will search for a [fades]
section. You have to use the same configurations that in the CLI. The only difference is
with the config options with a dash, it has to be replaced with a underscore.

Check http://fades.readthedocs.org/en/latest/readme.html#setting-options-using-config-
files for full examples.

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