Provided by: python3-pip_23.0.1+dfsg-1_all bug

NAME

       pip - A tool for installing and managing Python packages

SYNOPSIS

       pip <command> [options]

       pip3 <command> [options]

DESCRIPTION

       pip  is  a  Python package installer, recommended for installing Python packages which are
       not available in the Debian archive.   It  can  work  with  version  control  repositories
       (currently  only  Git,  Mercurial,  and Bazaar repositories), logs output extensively, and
       prevents partial installs by downloading all requirements before starting installation.

       On Debian, pip is the command to use when installing packages for Python 2, while pip3  is
       the command to use when installing packages for Python 3.

COMMANDS

       The command comes before any options.  The following commands are recognized:

       help   Show help for commands.

       install
              Install packages.

       uninstall
              Uninstall packages.

       freeze Output installed packages in requirements format.

       list   List installed packages.

       show   Show information about installed packages.

       search Search PyPI for packages.

       wheel  Build wheels from your requirements.

GENERAL OPTIONS

       This  list  is  by  no  means  complete,  and  it  only describes options available to all
       commands.  Use pip <command> --help for more details on command specific options.   A  few
       command options are provided below.

       -h, --help
              Show more detailed command help.

       -v, --verbose
              Give more output. Option is additive, and can be used up to 3 times.

       -V, --version
              Show version and exit.

       -q, --quiet
              Give less output.

       --log-file <path>
              Path  to  a verbose non-appending log, that only logs failures.  This log is active
              by default at ~/.pip/pip.log.

       --log <path>
              Path to a verbose appending log.  This log is inactive by default.

       --proxy <proxy>
              Specify a proxy in the form [user:passwd@]proxy.server:port.

       --timeout <sec>
              Set the socket timeout (default 15 seconds).

       --exists-action <action>
              Default action when a path already exists: (s)witch, (i)gnore, (w)ipe, (b)ackup.

       --cert <path>
              Path to alternate CA bundle.

INSTALL OPTIONS

       pip install installs packages from:

          • PyPI (a.k.a. The Cheeseshop) and other indexes, using requirements specifiers.

          • VCS project urls.

          • Local project directories.

          • Local or remote source archives

          • Local  wheel  directories  (python-pip-whl  installs  its   wheels   in   /usr/share/
            python-wheels and they can be locally installed by pip using --find-links)

       -e,--editable <path/url>
              Install  a  project in editable mode (i.e.  setuptools "develop mode") from a local
              project path or a VCS url.

       -r,--requirement <file>
              Install from the given requirements file.  This option can be used multiple times.

       -t,--target <dir>
              Install packages into <dir>.

       -d,--download <dir>
              Download packages into <dir> instead  of  installing  them,  regardless  of  what's
              already installed.

       --download-cache <dir>
              Cache downloaded packages in <dir>.

       --src <dir>
              Directory  to  check  out  editable  projects into.  The default in a virtualenv is
              "<venv path>/src".  The default for global installs is "<current dir>/src".

       -U, --upgrade
              Upgrade all packages to the newest available version.  This  process  is  recursive
              regardless of whether a dependency is already satisfied.

       --force-reinstall
              When upgrading, reinstall all packages even if they are already up-to-date.

       -I, --ignore-installed
              Ignore the installed packages (reinstalling instead).

       --no-deps
              Don't install package dependencies.

       --install-option <options>
              Extra  arguments  to  be  supplied  to  the  setup.py  install  command  (use  like
              --install-option      ="--install-scripts=/usr/local/bin").      Use       multiple
              --install-option  options  to pass multiple options to setup.py install. If you are
              using an option with a directory path, be sure to use absolute path.

       --global-option <options>
              Extra global options to be  supplied  to  the  setup.py  call  before  the  install
              command.

       --user Install using the user scheme.

       --egg  Install  packages  as  eggs, not 'flat', like pip normally does. This option is not
              about installing from eggs. (WARNING: Because this option  overrides  pip's  normal
              install logic, requirements files may not behave as expected.)

       --root <dir>
              Install everything relative to this alternate root directory.

       --compile
              Compile py files to pyc.

       --no-compile
              Do not compile py files to pyc.

       --no-use-wheel
              Do  not  find  and  prefer  wheel  archives  when  searching indexes and find-links
              locations.

       --pre  Include pre-release and development versions. By default,  pip  only  finds  stable
              versions.

       --no-clean
              Don't clean up build directories.

       Package Index Options:

       -i,--index-url <url>
              Base URL of Python Package Index (default https://pypi.python.org/simple/).

       --extra-index-url <url>
              Extra URLs of package indexes to use in addition to --index-url.

       --no-index
              Ignore package index (only looking at --find-links URLs instead).

       -f,--find-links <url>
              If a url or path to an html file, then parse for links to archives. If a local path
              or file:// url that's a directory, then look for archives in the directory listing.

       --allow-external <package>
              Allow the installation of externally hosted files

       --allow-all-external
              Allow the installation of all externally hosted files

       --allow-unverified <package>
              Allow the installation of insecure and unverifiable files

       --process-dependency-links
              Enable the processing of dependency links.

UNINSTALL OPTIONS

       pip is able to uninstall most installed packages. Known exceptions are:

          • Pure distutils packages installed with python setup.py install, which leave behind no
            metadata to determine what files were installed.

          • Script wrappers installed by python setup.py develop.

       -r,--requirement <file>
              Uninstall  all the packages listed in the given requirements file.  This option can
              be used multiple times.

       -y, --yes
              Don't ask for confirmation of uninstall deletions.

AUTHORS

       This manual page was  originally  written  by  Jeff  Licquia  <licquia@debian.org>,  later
       rewritten  by  Carl  Chenet  <chaica@debian.org>.   It  was rewritten again and the source
       converted to reStructuredText by Barry Warsaw <barry@debian.org>.

       Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the  terms  of
       the  GNU  General  Public  License,  version  3 or any later version published by the Free
       Software Foundation.

AUTHOR

       Barry Warsaw <barry@debian.org>