On 2023-10-05 15:00:13 +0200, Lasse Schlör wrote: > Hello, > > I am in the process of setting up a replicable environment (OS & software versions) for a research project using Guix. This includes an installation of the Python package PsychoPy. > > As far as I understand, the ideal way to do this is to use a `manifest.scm` file that includes a `python-psychopy` package together with a `channels.scm` to pin/freeze the exact software versions. > > Currently, no PsychoPy package exists for Guix, and so I attempted to write my own Guix packages for PsychoPy and those of its dependencies that don't exist as Guix packages either. > > However, while I was able to successfully wrap a few Python packages as Guix packages, the number of build and test dependencies turns out to be quite large, and I am not sure I have the knowledge and time to write Guix packages for all of them. You could try to use output of `guix import'[0] as a base. 0: https://guix.gnu.org/manual/en/manual/devel/en/html_node/Invoking-guix-import.html > > As a workaround, I have instead written a manifest file that provides a fixed version of Python, Pip, and some of PsychoPy's dependencies. I can use this to start a container with `guix time-machine […] -- shell --container --share=path/to/persistent/.local=/home/username/.local […]`, which has a persistent `~/.local` directory, into which the correct version of PsychoPy can be installed via `python3 -m pip install -r path/to/requirements.txt`. Making `~/.local` persistent allows to start new instances of this container without having to re-install PsychoPy every time. > > Of course, this doesn't feel as elegant as the purely functional Guix way of doing things. I am sure others before me have had similar situations. Thus, my question is: Is there a known/preferred/elegant way of creating replicable Guix environments with fixed versions of Python packages when these packages do not exist as Guix packages? Maybe someone will correct me and provide a better way, but I am afraid the correct approach here is to indeed create the packages in the manifest file. Hm, maybe there is an ugly solution, which however might work. You could do the pip install and then archive and package the resulting directory. That will be messy, but it might work. However, I would recommend just trying to make the packages, possibly using guix import. > > I'd appreciate any insight on this. > > Thanks and best regards, > Lasse Schlör > > W. -- There are only two hard things in Computer Science: cache invalidation, naming things and off-by-one errors.