Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by crabbone 1191 days ago
The most important part about venv is that you shouldn't need it. The very fact that it exists is a problem. It is a wrong fix to a problem that was left unfixed because of it.

The problem is fundamental in Python in that its runtime doesn't have a concept of a program or a library or a module (not to be confused with Python's modules, which is a special built-in type) etc. The only thing that exists in Python is a "Python system", i.e. an installation of Python with some packages.

Python systems aren't built to be shared between programs (especially so because it's undefined what a program is in Python), but, by any plausible definition of a program, venv doesn't help to solve the problem. This is also amplified by a bunch of tools that simply ignore venvs existence.

Here are some obvious problems venv doesn't even pretend to solve:

* A Python native module linking with shared objects outside of Python's lib subtree. Most comically, you can accidentally link a python module in one installation of Python with Python from a "wrong" location (and also a wrong version). And then wonder how it works on your computer in your virtual environment, but not on the server.

* venvs provides no compile-time isolation. If you are building native Python modules, you are going to use system-wide installed headers, and pray that your system headers are compatible with the version of Python that's going to load your native modules.

* venv doesn't address PYTHONPATH or any "tricks" various popular libraries (s.a. pytest and setuptools) like to play with the path where Python searches for loadable code. So much so that people using these tools often use them contrary to how they should be used (probably in most cases that's what happens). Ironically, often even the authors of the tools don't understand the adverse effects of how the majority is using their tools in combination with venv.

* It's become a fashion to use venv when distributing Python programs (eg. there are tools that help you build DEB or RPM packages that rely on venv) and of course, a lot of bad things happen because of that. But, really, like I said before: it's not because of venv, it's because venv is the wrong fix for the actual problem. The problem nobody in Python community is bold enough to address.

1 comments

> The most important part about venv is that you shouldn't need it. The very fact that it exists is a problem. It is a wrong fix to a problem that was left unfixed because of it.

What Python needs is a tool that understands your project structure and dependencies so the rest of your tools don't have to.

In other languages, that's called a build tool, which is why people have a hard time understanding that Python needs one.