PyPI caching proxy
- Host a proxy PyPI mirror server with caching
- Cache the index (project list and projects' file list)
- Cache the project files
- Proxy multiple package indices
- Provide and consume both JSON and HTML APIs
- Set index cache times-to-live (individually for each index)
- Set files cache max-size on disk
- Manually invalidate index cache
See Alternatives.
Choose between running inside Docker container if you want to run in a known-working environment, or outside via a Python app (instructions here are for the Flask development server) if you want more control over the environment.
Uses a Gunicorn WSGI server
docker run -p 5000:5000 epicwink/proxpi
Without arguments, runs with 2 threads. If passing arguments, make sure to bind to an
exported address (or all with 0.0.0.0
) on port 5000 (ie --bind 0.0.0.0:5000
).
Alternatively, use Docker Compose
docker compose up
pip install proxpi
Install proxpi[pretty]
instead to get coloured logging and tracebacks (disable by
setting environment variable NO_COLOR=1
).
FLASK_APP=proxpi.server flask run
See flask run --help
for more information on address and port binding, and certificate
specification to use HTTPS. Alternatively, bring your own WSGI server.
Use PIP's index-URL flag to install packages via the proxy
pip install --index-url http://127.0.0.1:5000/index/ simplejson
Either head to http://127.0.0.1:5000/ in the browser, or run:
curl -X DELETE http://127.0.0.1:5000/cache/simplejson
curl -X DELETE http://127.0.0.1:5000/cache/list
If you need to invalidate a locally cached file, restart the server: files should never change in a package index.
PROXPI_INDEX_URL
: index URL, default: https://pypi.org/simple/PROXPI_INDEX_TTL
: index cache time-to-live in seconds, default: 30 minutes. Disable index-cache by setting this to 0PROXPI_EXTRA_INDEX_URLS
: extra index URLs (comma-separated)PROXPI_EXTRA_INDEX_TTLS
: corresponding extra index cache times-to-live in seconds (comma-separated), default: 3 minutes, cache disabled when 0PROXPI_CACHE_SIZE
: size of downloaded project files cache (bytes), default 5GB. Disable files-cache by setting this to 0PROXPI_CACHE_DIR
: downloaded project files cache directory path, default: a new temporary directoryPROXPI_BINARY_FILE_MIME_TYPE=1
: force file-response content-type to"application/octet-stream"
instead of letting Flask guess it. This may be needed if your package installer (eg Poetry) mishandles responses with declared encoding.PROXPI_DISABLE_INDEX_SSL_VERIFICATION=1
: don't verify any index SSL certificatesPROXPI_DOWNLOAD_TIMEOUT
: time (in seconds) beforeproxpi
will redirect to the proxied index server for file downloads instead of waiting for the download, default: 0.9PROXPI_CONNECT_TIMEOUT
: time (in seconds)proxpi
will wait for a socket to connect to the index server beforerequests
raises aConnectTimeout
error to prevent indefinite blocking, default: none, or 3.1 if read-timeout providedPROXPI_READ_TIMEOUT
: time (in seconds)proxpi
will wait for chunks of data from the index server beforerequests
raises aReadTimeout
error to prevent indefinite blocking, default: none, or 20 if connect-timeout provided
proxpi
was designed with three goals (particularly for continuous integration (CI)):
- to reduce load on PyPI package serving
- to reduce
pip install
times - not require modification to the current workflow
Specifically, proxpi
was designed to run for CI services such as
Travis,
Jenkins,
GitLab CI,
Azure Pipelines
and GitHub Actions.
proxpi
works by caching index requests (ie which versions, wheel-types, etc are
available for a given project, the index cache) and the project files themselves (to a
local directory, the package cache). This means they will cache identical requests after
the first request, and will be useless for just one pip install
.
As a basic end-user of these services, for at least most of these services you won't be
able to keep a proxpi
server running between multiple invocations of your project(s)
CI pipeline: CI invocations are designed to be independent. This means the best that you
can do is start the cache for just the current job.
A more advanced user of these CI services can bring their own runner (personally, my
needs are for running GitLab CI). This means you can run proxpi
on a fully-controlled
server (eg EC2 instance), and proxy PyPI requests (during
a pip
command) through the local cache. See the instructions
below.
Hopefully, in the future these CI services will all implement their own transparent
caching for PyPI. For example, Azure already has
Azure Artifacts which
provides much more functionality than proxpi
, but won't reduce pip install
times for
CI services not using Azure.
This implementation leverages the index URL configurable of pip
and Docker networks.
This is to be run on a server you have console access to.
-
Create a Docker bridge network
docker network create gitlab-runner-network
-
Start a GitLab CI Docker runner using their documentation
-
Run the
proxpi
Docker containerdocker run \ --detach \ --network gitlab-runner-network \ --volume proxpi-cache:/var/cache/proxpi \ --env PROXPI_CACHE_DIR=/var/cache/proxpi \ --name proxpi epicwink/proxpi:latest
You don't need to expose a port (the
-p
flag) as we'll be using an internal Docker network. -
Set
pip
's index URL to theproxpi
server by setting it in the runner environment. Setrunners[0].docker.network_mode
togitlab-runner-network
. AddPIP_INDEX_URL=http://proxpi:5000/index/
andPIP_TRUSTED_HOST=proxpi
torunners.environment
in the GitLab CI runner configuration TOML. For example, you may end up with the following configuration:[[runners]] name = "awesome-ci-01" url = "https://gitlab.com/" token = "SECRET" executor = "docker" environment = [ "DOCKER_TLS_CERTDIR=/certs", "PIP_INDEX_URL=http://proxpi:5000/index/", "PIP_TRUSTED_HOST=proxpi", ] [[runners.docker]] network_mode = "gitlab-runner-network" ...
This is designed to not require any changes to the GitLab CI project configuration (ie
gitlab-ci.yml
), unless it already sets the index URL for some reason (if that's the
case, you're probably already using a cache).
Another option is to set up a proxy, but that's more effort than the above method.
-
simpleindex: routes URLs to multiple indices (including PyPI), supports local (or S3 with a plygin) directory of packages, no caching without custom plugins
-
bandersnatch: mirrors one index (eg PyPI), storing packages locally, or on S3 with a plugin. Manual update, no proxy
-
devpi: heavyweight, runs a full index (or multiple) in addition to mirroring (in place of proxying), supports proxying (with inheritance), supports package upload, server replication and fail-over
-
pypiserver: serves local directory of packages, proxy to PyPI when not-found, supports package upload, no caching
-
PyPI Cloud: serves local or cloud-storage directory of packages, with redirecting/cached proxying to indexes, authentication and authorisation.
-
pypiprivate
: serves local (or S3-hosted) directory of packages, no proxy to package indices (including PyPI) -
Pulp: generic content repository, can host multiple ecosystems' packages. Python package index plugin supports local/S3 mirrors, package upload, proxying to multiple indices, no caching
-
pip2pi
: manual syncing of specific packages, no proxy -
nginx_pypi_cache
: caching proxy using nginx, single index -
Flask-Pypi-Proxy: unmaintained, no cache size limit, no caching index pages
-
http.server
: standard-library, hosts directory exactly as laid out, no proxy to package indices (eg PyPI) -
Apache with
mod_rewrite
: I'm not familiar with Apache, but it likely has the capability to proxy and cache (with egmod_cache_disk
) -
Gemfury: hosted, managed. Private index is not free, documentation doesn't say anything about proxying