conda
23.3.0
About: Conda is a cross-platform, language-agnostic, system-level binary package manager and ecosystem.
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Conda is a cross-platform, language-agnostic binary package manager. It is the package manager used by Anaconda installations, but it may be used for other systems as well. Conda makes environments first-class citizens, making it easy to create independent environments even for C libraries. Conda is written entirely in Python, and is BSD licensed open source.
Conda is enhanced by organizations, tools, and repositories created and managed by the amazing members of the conda community. Some of them can be found here.
Conda is a part of the Anaconda Distribution. Use Miniconda to bootstrap a minimal installation that only includes conda and its dependencies.
If you install the Anaconda Distribution, you will already have hundreds of packages installed. You can see what packages are installed by running
$ conda list
to see all the packages that are available, use
$ conda search
and to install a package, use
$ conda install <package-name>
The real power of conda comes from its ability to manage environments. In conda, an environment can be thought of as a completely separate installation. Conda installs packages into environments efficiently using hard links by default when it is possible, so environments are space efficient, and take seconds to create.
The default environment, which conda
itself is installed
into is called base
. To create another environment, use the
conda create
command. For instance, to create an
environment with the IPython notebook and NumPy 1.6, which is older than
the version that comes with Anaconda by default, you would run:
$ conda create -n numpy16 ipython-notebook numpy=1.6
This creates an environment called numpy16
with the
latest version of the IPython notebook, NumPy 1.6, and their
dependencies.
We can now activate this environment, use
$ conda activate numpy16
This puts the bin directory of the numpy16
environment
in the front of the PATH
, and sets it as the default
environment for all subsequent conda commands.
To go back to the base environment, use
$ conda deactivate
You can easily build your own packages for conda, and upload them to
anaconda.org, a free service for
hosting packages for conda, as well as other package managers. To build
a package, create a recipe. Package building documentation is available
here.
See AnacondaRecipes for
the recipes that make up the Anaconda Distribution and
defaults
channel. Conda-forge and Bioconda are
community-driven conda-based distributions.
To upload to anaconda.org, create an account. Then, install the anaconda-client and login
$ conda install anaconda-client
$ anaconda login
Then, after you build your recipe
$ conda build <recipe-dir>
you will be prompted to upload to anaconda.org.
To add your anaconda.org channel, or other's channels, to conda so
that conda install
will find and install their packages,
run
$ conda config --add channels https://conda.anaconda.org/username
(replacing username
with the username of the person
whose channel you want to add).
Contributions to conda are welcome. See the contributing documentation for instructions on setting up a development environment.