When I originally created the pipenv environment I used the standard
pip requirements.txt that I already had, which captured all the mod-
ules and their exact versions at the time. This makes it hard to se-
parate the project's actual dependencies from the dependencies' dep-
endencies, complicating the Pipfile and making it hard to update mo-
dule versions later.
I've re-created the environment with the following commands:
$ pipenv install gunicorn falcon psycopg2-binary git+https://github.com/alanorth/SolrClient.git@kazoo-2.5.0#egg=SolrClient
$ pipenv install --dev ipython flake8 pytest
Now that I'm only using pipenv locally it shouldn't create problems
for people. They can still just create a vanilla virtualenv and use
pip to install the dependencies.
Uses 'kazoo-2.5.0' branch name for installing SolrClient instead of
the commit hash and adds flake8 as a dev package. This means that I
can track dependencies for production and development and still end
up with a requirements.txt for produciton.
Eventually I'd like to be able to use pipenv instead of plain pip.
For now I'll just keep using pipenv and generating requirements.txt
like this:
$ pipenv run pip freeze > requirements.txt
Then I can kinda have the best of both worlds, where I use pipenv
on my local machine and pip with requirements.txt on the server.