# Managing dependencies ## Dependency fields Dependencies of the project are defined in several fields: - [`project.dependencies`](#project-dependencies): Published dependencies. - [`project.optional-dependencies`](#optional-dependencies): Published optional dependencies, or "extras". - [`dependency-groups`](#dependency-groups): Local dependencies for development. - [`tool.uv.sources`](#dependency-sources): Alternative sources for dependencies during development. !!! note The `project.dependencies` and `project.optional-dependencies` fields can be used even if project isn't going to be published. `dependency-groups` are a recently standardized feature and may not be supported by all tools yet. uv supports modifying the project's dependencies with `uv add` and `uv remove`, but dependency metadata can also be updated by editing the `pyproject.toml` directly. ## Adding dependencies To add a dependency: ```console $ uv add httpx ``` An entry will be added in the `project.dependencies` field: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="4" [project] name = "example" version = "0.1.0" dependencies = ["httpx>=0.27.2"] ``` The [`--dev`](#development-dependencies), [`--group`](#dependency-groups), or [`--optional`](#optional-dependencies) flags can be used to add dependencies to an alternative field. The dependency will include a constraint, e.g., `>=0.27.2`, for the most recent, compatible version of the package. The kind of bound can be adjusted with [`--bounds`](../../reference/settings.md#add-bounds), or the constraint can be provided directly: ```console $ uv add "httpx>=0.20" ``` When adding a dependency from a source other than a package registry, uv will add an entry in the sources field. For example, when adding `httpx` from GitHub: ```console $ uv add "httpx @ git+https://github.com/encode/httpx" ``` The `pyproject.toml` will include a [Git source entry](#git): ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="8-9" [project] name = "example" version = "0.1.0" dependencies = [ "httpx", ] [tool.uv.sources] httpx = { git = "https://github.com/encode/httpx" } ``` If a dependency cannot be used, uv will display an error.: ```console $ uv add "httpx>9999" × No solution found when resolving dependencies: ╰─▶ Because only httpx<=1.0.0b0 is available and your project depends on httpx>9999, we can conclude that your project's requirements are unsatisfiable. ``` ### Importing dependencies Dependencies declared in a `requirements.txt` file can be added to the project with the `-r` option: ``` uv add -r requirements.txt ``` ## Removing dependencies To remove a dependency: ```console $ uv remove httpx ``` The `--dev`, `--group`, or `--optional` flags can be used to remove a dependency from a specific table. If a [source](#dependency-sources) is defined for the removed dependency, and there are no other references to the dependency, it will also be removed. ## Changing dependencies To change an existing dependency, e.g., to use a different constraint for `httpx`: ```console $ uv add "httpx>0.1.0" ``` !!! note In this example, we are changing the constraints for the dependency in the `pyproject.toml`. The locked version of the dependency will only change if necessary to satisfy the new constraints. To force the package version to update to the latest within the constraints, use `--upgrade-package `, e.g.: ```console $ uv add "httpx>0.1.0" --upgrade-package httpx ``` See the [lockfile](./sync.md#upgrading-locked-package-versions) documentation for more details on upgrading packages. Requesting a different dependency source will update the `tool.uv.sources` table, e.g., to use `httpx` from a local path during development: ```console $ uv add "httpx @ ../httpx" ``` ## Platform-specific dependencies To ensure that a dependency is only installed on a specific platform or on specific Python versions, use [environment markers](https://peps.python.org/pep-0508/#environment-markers). For example, to install `jax` on Linux, but not on Windows or macOS: ```console $ uv add "jax; sys_platform == 'linux'" ``` The resulting `pyproject.toml` will then include the environment marker in the dependency definition: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="6" [project] name = "project" version = "0.1.0" requires-python = ">=3.11" dependencies = ["jax; sys_platform == 'linux'"] ``` Similarly, to include `numpy` on Python 3.11 and later: ```console $ uv add "numpy; python_version >= '3.11'" ``` See Python's [environment marker](https://peps.python.org/pep-0508/#environment-markers) documentation for a complete enumeration of the available markers and operators. !!! tip Dependency sources can also be [changed per-platform](#platform-specific-sources). ## Project dependencies The `project.dependencies` table represents the dependencies that are used when uploading to PyPI or building a wheel. Individual dependencies are specified using [dependency specifiers](https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/specifications/dependency-specifiers/) syntax, and the table follows the [PEP 621](https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/specifications/pyproject-toml/) standard. `project.dependencies` defines the list of packages that are required for the project, along with the version constraints that should be used when installing them. Each entry includes a dependency name and version. An entry may include extras or environment markers for platform-specific packages. For example: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [project] name = "albatross" version = "0.1.0" dependencies = [ # Any version in this range "tqdm >=4.66.2,<5", # Exactly this version of torch "torch ==2.2.2", # Install transformers with the torch extra "transformers[torch] >=4.39.3,<5", # Only install this package on older python versions # See "Environment Markers" for more information "importlib_metadata >=7.1.0,<8; python_version < '3.10'", "mollymawk ==0.1.0" ] ``` ## Dependency sources The `tool.uv.sources` table extends the standard dependency tables with alternative dependency sources, which are used during development. Dependency sources add support for common patterns that are not supported by the `project.dependencies` standard, like editable installations and relative paths. For example, to install `foo` from a directory relative to the project root: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="7" [project] name = "example" version = "0.1.0" dependencies = ["foo"] [tool.uv.sources] foo = { path = "./packages/foo" } ``` The following dependency sources are supported by uv: - [Index](#index): A package resolved from a specific package index. - [Git](#git): A Git repository. - [URL](#url): A remote wheel or source distribution. - [Path](#path): A local wheel, source distribution, or project directory. - [Workspace](#workspace-member): A member of the current workspace. !!! important Sources are only respected by uv. If another tool is used, only the definitions in the standard project tables will be used. If another tool is being used for development, any metadata provided in the source table will need to be re-specified in the other tool's format. ### Index To add Python package from a specific index, use the `--index` option: ```console $ uv add torch --index pytorch=https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu ``` uv will store the index in `[[tool.uv.index]]` and add a `[tool.uv.sources]` entry: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [project] dependencies = ["torch"] [tool.uv.sources] torch = { index = "pytorch" } [[tool.uv.index]] name = "pytorch" url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu" ``` !!! tip The above example will only work on x86-64 Linux, due to the specifics of the PyTorch index. See the [PyTorch guide](../../guides/integration/pytorch.md) for more information about setting up PyTorch. Using an `index` source _pins_ a package to the given index — it will not be downloaded from other indexes. When defining an index, an `explicit` flag can be included to indicate that the index should _only_ be used for packages that explicitly specify it in `tool.uv.sources`. If `explicit` is not set, other packages may be resolved from the index, if not found elsewhere. ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="4" [[tool.uv.index]] name = "pytorch" url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu" explicit = true ``` ### Git To add a Git dependency source, prefix a Git-compatible URL with `git+`. For example: ```console $ # Install over HTTP(S). $ uv add git+https://github.com/encode/httpx $ # Install over SSH. $ uv add git+ssh://git@github.com/encode/httpx ``` ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="5" [project] dependencies = ["httpx"] [tool.uv.sources] httpx = { git = "https://github.com/encode/httpx" } ``` Specific Git references can be requested, e.g., a tag: ```console $ uv add git+https://github.com/encode/httpx --tag 0.27.0 ``` ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="7" [project] dependencies = ["httpx"] [tool.uv.sources] httpx = { git = "https://github.com/encode/httpx", tag = "0.27.0" } ``` Or, a branch: ```console $ uv add git+https://github.com/encode/httpx --branch main ``` ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="7" [project] dependencies = ["httpx"] [tool.uv.sources] httpx = { git = "https://github.com/encode/httpx", branch = "main" } ``` Or, a revision (commit): ```console $ uv add git+https://github.com/encode/httpx --rev 326b9431c761e1ef1e00b9f760d1f654c8db48c6 ``` ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="7" [project] dependencies = ["httpx"] [tool.uv.sources] httpx = { git = "https://github.com/encode/httpx", rev = "326b9431c761e1ef1e00b9f760d1f654c8db48c6" } ``` A `subdirectory` may be specified if the package isn't in the repository root: ```console $ uv add git+https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain#subdirectory=libs/langchain ``` ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [project] dependencies = ["langchain"] [tool.uv.sources] langchain = { git = "https://github.com/langchain-ai/langchain", subdirectory = "libs/langchain" } ``` ### URL To add a URL source, provide a `https://` URL to either a wheel (ending in `.whl`) or a source distribution (typically ending in `.tar.gz` or `.zip`; see [here](../../concepts/resolution.md#source-distribution) for all supported formats). For example: ```console $ uv add "https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/5c/2d/3da5bdf4408b8b2800061c339f240c1802f2e82d55e50bd39c5a881f47f0/httpx-0.27.0.tar.gz" ``` Will result in a `pyproject.toml` with: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="5" [project] dependencies = ["httpx"] [tool.uv.sources] httpx = { url = "https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/5c/2d/3da5bdf4408b8b2800061c339f240c1802f2e82d55e50bd39c5a881f47f0/httpx-0.27.0.tar.gz" } ``` URL dependencies can also be manually added or edited in the `pyproject.toml` with the `{ url = }` syntax. A `subdirectory` may be specified if the source distribution isn't in the archive root. ### Path To add a path source, provide the path of a wheel (ending in `.whl`), a source distribution (typically ending in `.tar.gz` or `.zip`; see [here](../../concepts/resolution.md#source-distribution) for all supported formats), or a directory containing a `pyproject.toml`. For example: ```console $ uv add /example/foo-0.1.0-py3-none-any.whl ``` Will result in a `pyproject.toml` with: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [project] dependencies = ["foo"] [tool.uv.sources] foo = { path = "/example/foo-0.1.0-py3-none-any.whl" } ``` The path may also be a relative path: ```console $ uv add ./foo-0.1.0-py3-none-any.whl ``` Or, a path to a project directory: ```console $ uv add ~/projects/bar/ ``` !!! important An [editable installation](#editable-dependencies) is not used for path dependencies by default. An editable installation may be requested for project directories: ```console $ uv add --editable ../projects/bar/ ``` Which will result in a `pyproject.toml` with: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [project] dependencies = ["bar"] [tool.uv.sources] bar = { path = "../projects/bar", editable = true } ``` Similarly, if a project is marked as a [non-package](./config.md#build-systems), but you'd like to install it in the environment as a package, set `package = true` on the source: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [project] dependencies = ["bar"] [tool.uv.sources] bar = { path = "../projects/bar", package = true } ``` For multiple packages in the same repository, [_workspaces_](./workspaces.md) may be a better fit. ### Workspace member To declare a dependency on a workspace member, add the member name with `{ workspace = true }`. All workspace members must be explicitly stated. Workspace members are always [editable](#editable-dependencies) . See the [workspace](./workspaces.md) documentation for more details on workspaces. ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [project] dependencies = ["foo==0.1.0"] [tool.uv.sources] foo = { workspace = true } [tool.uv.workspace] members = [ "packages/foo" ] ``` ### Platform-specific sources You can limit a source to a given platform or Python version by providing [dependency specifiers](https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/specifications/dependency-specifiers/)-compatible environment markers for the source. For example, to pull `httpx` from GitHub, but only on macOS, use the following: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="8" [project] dependencies = ["httpx"] [tool.uv.sources] httpx = { git = "https://github.com/encode/httpx", tag = "0.27.2", marker = "sys_platform == 'darwin'" } ``` By specifying the marker on the source, uv will still include `httpx` on all platforms, but will download the source from GitHub on macOS, and fall back to PyPI on all other platforms. ### Multiple sources You can specify multiple sources for a single dependency by providing a list of sources, disambiguated by [PEP 508](https://peps.python.org/pep-0508/#environment-markers)-compatible environment markers. For example, to pull in different `httpx` tags on macOS vs. Linux: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="6-7" [project] dependencies = ["httpx"] [tool.uv.sources] httpx = [ { git = "https://github.com/encode/httpx", tag = "0.27.2", marker = "sys_platform == 'darwin'" }, { git = "https://github.com/encode/httpx", tag = "0.24.1", marker = "sys_platform == 'linux'" }, ] ``` This strategy extends to using different indexes based on environment markers. For example, to install `torch` from different PyTorch indexes based on the platform: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" hl_lines="6-7" [project] dependencies = ["torch"] [tool.uv.sources] torch = [ { index = "torch-cpu", marker = "platform_system == 'Darwin'"}, { index = "torch-gpu", marker = "platform_system == 'Linux'"}, ] [[tool.uv.index]] name = "torch-cpu" url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu" explicit = true [[tool.uv.index]] name = "torch-gpu" url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu124" explicit = true ``` ### Disabling sources To instruct uv to ignore the `tool.uv.sources` table (e.g., to simulate resolving with the package's published metadata), use the `--no-sources` flag: ```console $ uv lock --no-sources ``` The use of `--no-sources` will also prevent uv from discovering any [workspace members](#workspace-member) that could satisfy a given dependency. ## Optional dependencies It is common for projects that are published as libraries to make some features optional to reduce the default dependency tree. For example, Pandas has an [`excel` extra](https://pandas.pydata.org/docs/getting_started/install.html#excel-files) and a [`plot` extra](https://pandas.pydata.org/docs/getting_started/install.html#visualization) to avoid installation of Excel parsers and `matplotlib` unless someone explicitly requires them. Extras are requested with the `package[]` syntax, e.g., `pandas[plot, excel]`. Optional dependencies are specified in `[project.optional-dependencies]`, a TOML table that maps from extra name to its dependencies, following [dependency specifiers](#dependency-specifiers-pep-508) syntax. Optional dependencies can have entries in `tool.uv.sources` the same as normal dependencies. ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [project] name = "pandas" version = "1.0.0" [project.optional-dependencies] plot = [ "matplotlib>=3.6.3" ] excel = [ "odfpy>=1.4.1", "openpyxl>=3.1.0", "python-calamine>=0.1.7", "pyxlsb>=1.0.10", "xlrd>=2.0.1", "xlsxwriter>=3.0.5" ] ``` To add an optional dependency, use the `--optional ` option: ```console $ uv add httpx --optional network ``` !!! note If you have optional dependencies that conflict with one another, resolution will fail unless you explicitly [declare them as conflicting](./config.md#conflicting-dependencies). Sources can also be declared as applying only to a specific optional dependency. For example, to pull `torch` from different PyTorch indexes based on an optional `cpu` or `gpu` extra: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [project] dependencies = [] [project.optional-dependencies] cpu = [ "torch", ] gpu = [ "torch", ] [tool.uv.sources] torch = [ { index = "torch-cpu", extra = "cpu" }, { index = "torch-gpu", extra = "gpu" }, ] [[tool.uv.index]] name = "torch-cpu" url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cpu" [[tool.uv.index]] name = "torch-gpu" url = "https://download.pytorch.org/whl/cu124" ``` ## Development dependencies Unlike optional dependencies, development dependencies are local-only and will _not_ be included in the project requirements when published to PyPI or other indexes. As such, development dependencies are not included in the `[project]` table. Development dependencies can have entries in `tool.uv.sources` the same as normal dependencies. To add a development dependency, use the `--dev` flag: ```console $ uv add --dev pytest ``` uv uses the `[dependency-groups]` table (as defined in [PEP 735](https://peps.python.org/pep-0735/)) for declaration of development dependencies. The above command will create a `dev` group: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [dependency-groups] dev = [ "pytest >=8.1.1,<9" ] ``` The `dev` group is special-cased; there are `--dev`, `--only-dev`, and `--no-dev` flags to toggle inclusion or exclusion of its dependencies. See `--no-default-groups` to disable all default groups instead. Additionally, the `dev` group is [synced by default](#default-groups). ### Dependency groups Development dependencies can be divided into multiple groups, using the `--group` flag. For example, to add a development dependency in the `lint` group: ```console $ uv add --group lint ruff ``` Which results in the following `[dependency-groups]` definition: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [dependency-groups] dev = [ "pytest" ] lint = [ "ruff" ] ``` Once groups are defined, the `--all-groups`, `--no-default-groups`, `--group`, `--only-group`, and `--no-group` options can be used to include or exclude their dependencies. !!! tip The `--dev`, `--only-dev`, and `--no-dev` flags are equivalent to `--group dev`, `--only-group dev`, and `--no-group dev` respectively. uv requires that all dependency groups are compatible with each other and resolves all groups together when creating the lockfile. If dependencies declared in one group are not compatible with those in another group, uv will fail to resolve the requirements of the project with an error. !!! note If you have dependency groups that conflict with one another, resolution will fail unless you explicitly [declare them as conflicting](./config.md#conflicting-dependencies). ### Default groups By default, uv includes the `dev` dependency group in the environment (e.g., during `uv run` or `uv sync`). The default groups to include can be changed using the `tool.uv.default-groups` setting. ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [tool.uv] default-groups = ["dev", "foo"] ``` To enable all dependencies groups by default, use `"all"` instead of listing group names: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [tool.uv] default-groups = "all" ``` !!! tip To disable this behaviour during `uv run` or `uv sync`, use `--no-default-groups`. To exclude a specific default group, use `--no-group `. ### Legacy `dev-dependencies` Before `[dependency-groups]` was standardized, uv used the `tool.uv.dev-dependencies` field to specify development dependencies, e.g.: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [tool.uv] dev-dependencies = [ "pytest" ] ``` Dependencies declared in this section will be combined with the contents in the `dependency-groups.dev`. Eventually, the `dev-dependencies` field will be deprecated and removed. !!! note If a `tool.uv.dev-dependencies` field exists, `uv add --dev` will use the existing section instead of adding a new `dependency-groups.dev` section. ## Build dependencies If a project is structured as [Python package](./config.md#build-systems), it may declare dependencies that are required to build the project, but not required to run it. These dependencies are specified in the `[build-system]` table under `build-system.requires`, following [PEP 518](https://peps.python.org/pep-0518/). For example, if a project uses `setuptools` as its build backend, it should declare `setuptools` as a build dependency: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [project] name = "pandas" version = "0.1.0" [build-system] requires = ["setuptools>=42"] build-backend = "setuptools.build_meta" ``` By default, uv will respect `tool.uv.sources` when resolving build dependencies. For example, to use a local version of `setuptools` for building, add the source to `tool.uv.sources`: ```toml title="pyproject.toml" [project] name = "pandas" version = "0.1.0" [build-system] requires = ["setuptools>=42"] build-backend = "setuptools.build_meta" [tool.uv.sources] setuptools = { path = "./packages/setuptools" } ``` When publishing a package, we recommend running `uv build --no-sources` to ensure that the package builds correctly when `tool.uv.sources` is disabled, as is the case when using other build tools, like [`pypa/build`](https://github.com/pypa/build). ## Editable dependencies A regular installation of a directory with a Python package first builds a wheel and then installs that wheel into your virtual environment, copying all source files. When the package source files are edited, the virtual environment will contain outdated versions. Editable installations solve this problem by adding a link to the project within the virtual environment (a `.pth` file), which instructs the interpreter to include the source files directly. There are some limitations to editables (mainly: the build backend needs to support them, and native modules aren't recompiled before import), but they are useful for development, as the virtual environment will always use the latest changes to the package. uv uses editable installation for workspace packages by default. To add an editable dependency, use the `--editable` flag: ```console $ uv add --editable ./path/foo ``` Or, to opt-out of using an editable dependency in a workspace: ```console $ uv add --no-editable ./path/foo ``` ## Dependency specifiers (PEP 508) uv uses [dependency specifiers](https://packaging.python.org/en/latest/specifications/dependency-specifiers/), previously known as [PEP 508](https://peps.python.org/pep-0508/). A dependency specifier is composed of, in order: - The dependency name - The extras you want (optional) - The version specifier - An environment marker (optional) The version specifiers are comma separated and added together, e.g., `foo >=1.2.3,<2,!=1.4.0` is interpreted as "a version of `foo` that's at least 1.2.3, but less than 2, and not 1.4.0". Specifiers are padded with trailing zeros if required, so `foo ==2` matches foo 2.0.0, too. A star can be used for the last digit with equals, e.g., `foo ==2.1.*` will accept any release from the 2.1 series. Similarly, `~=` matches where the last digit is equal or higher, e.g., `foo ~=1.2` is equal to `foo >=1.2,<2`, and `foo ~=1.2.3` is equal to `foo >=1.2.3,<1.3`. Extras are comma-separated in square bracket between name and version, e.g., `pandas[excel,plot] ==2.2`. Whitespace between extra names is ignored. Some dependencies are only required in specific environments, e.g., a specific Python version or operating system. For example to install the `importlib-metadata` backport for the `importlib.metadata` module, use `importlib-metadata >=7.1.0,<8; python_version < '3.10'`. To install `colorama` on Windows (but omit it on other platforms), use `colorama >=0.4.6,<5; platform_system == "Windows"`. Markers are combined with `and`, `or`, and parentheses, e.g., `aiohttp >=3.7.4,<4; (sys_platform != 'win32' or implementation_name != 'pypy') and python_version >= '3.10'`. Note that versions within markers must be quoted, while versions _outside_ of markers must _not_ be quoted.