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Grimp

Python versions CI Status Codspeed BSD license

Builds a queryable graph of the imports within one or more Python packages.

Quick start

Install grimp:

pip install grimp

Install the Python package you wish to analyse:

pip install somepackage

In Python, build the import graph for the package:

>>> import grimp
>>> graph = grimp.build_graph('somepackage')

You may now use the graph object to analyse the package. Some examples:

>>> graph.find_children('somepackage.foo')
{
    'somepackage.foo.one',
    'somepackage.foo.two',
}

>>> graph.find_descendants('somepackage.foo')
{
    'somepackage.foo.one',
    'somepackage.foo.two',
    'somepackage.foo.two.blue',
    'somepackage.foo.two.green',
}

>>> graph.find_modules_directly_imported_by('somepackage.foo')
{
    'somepackage.bar.one',
}

>>> graph.find_upstream_modules('somepackage.foo')
{
    'somepackage.bar.one',
    'somepackage.baz',
    'somepackage.foobar',
}

>>> graph.find_shortest_chain(importer='somepackage.foobar', imported='somepackage.foo')
(
    'somepackage.foobar',
    'somepackage.baz',
    'somepackage.foo',
)

>>> graph.get_import_details(importer='somepackage.foobar', imported='somepackage.baz'))
[
    {
        'importer': 'somepackage.foobar',
        'imported': 'somepackage.baz',
        'line_number': 5,
        'line_contents': 'from . import baz',
    },
]

External packages

By default, external dependencies will not be included. This can be overridden like so:

>>> graph = grimp.build_graph('somepackage', include_external_packages=True)
>>> graph.find_modules_directly_imported_by('somepackage.foo')
{
    'somepackage.bar.one',
    'os',
    'decimal',
    'sqlalchemy',
}

Multiple packages

You may analyse multiple root packages. To do this, pass each package name as a positional argument:

>>> graph = grimp.build_graph('somepackage', 'anotherpackage')
>>> graph.find_modules_directly_imported_by('somepackage.foo')
{
    'somepackage.bar.one',
    'anotherpackage.baz',
}

Namespace packages

Graphs can be built either from namespace packages or from their portions.

What's a namespace package?

Namespace packages are a Python feature allows subpackages to be distributed independently, while still importable under a shared namespace.

This is used by the Python client for Google's Cloud Logging API, for example. When installed, it is importable in Python as google.cloud.logging. The parent packages google and google.cloud are both namespace packages, while google.cloud.logging is known as the 'portion'. Other portions in the same namespace can be installed separately, for example google.cloud.secretmanager.

Examples:

# In this one, the portion is supplied. Neither "google" nor "google.cloud"
# will appear in the graph.
>>> graph = grimp.build_graph("google.cloud.logging")

# In this one, a namespace is supplied.
# Neither "google" nor "google.cloud" will appear in the graph,
# as will other installed packages under the "google" namespace such
# as "google.auth".
>>> graph = grimp.build_graph("google")

# This one supplies a subnamespace of "google" - it will include
# "google.cloud.logging" and "google.cloud.secretmanager" but not "google.auth".
>>> graph = grimp.build_graph("google.cloud")

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Builds a graph of a Python project's internal dependencies.

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