conda repoquery whoneeds
#
Note
The conda repoquery whoneeds
command is provided by the conda-libmamba-solver
.
See https://conda.github.io/conda-libmamba-solver/user-guide/subcommands/ for more information.
usage: conda repoquery whoneeds [-p PLATFORM] [--no-installed] [--pretty] [-a]
[--use-cache-only] [-t] [--recursive] [-h]
[-c CHANNEL] [--use-local]
[--override-channels]
[--repodata-fn REPODATA_FNS]
[--experimental {jlap,lock}] [--no-lock]
[--repodata-use-zst | --no-repodata-use-zst]
[-C] [-k] [--offline] [--json]
[--console CONSOLE] [-v] [-q]
specs [specs ...]
Positional Arguments#
- specs
The target package(s).
Subcommand options#
- -p, --platform
Platform/subdir to search packages for. Defaults to current platform.
- --no-installed
Do not search currently installed packages.
- --pretty
Prettier output with more details.
- -a, --all-channels
Look at all channels (for depends / whoneeds).
- --use-cache-only
Search in pkgs_dirs too
Dependency options#
- -t, --tree
Show dependencies in a tree-like format.
- --recursive
Show dependencies recursively.
Channel Customization#
- -c, --channel
Additional channel to search for packages. These are URLs searched in the order they are given (including local directories using the 'file://' syntax or simply a path like '/home/conda/mychan' or '../mychan'). Then, the defaults or channels from .condarc are searched (unless --override-channels is given). You can use 'defaults' to get the default packages for conda. You can also use any name and the .condarc channel_alias value will be prepended. The default channel_alias is https://conda.anaconda.org/.
- --use-local
Use locally built packages. Identical to '-c local'.
- --override-channels
Do not search default or .condarc channels. Requires --channel.
- --repodata-fn
Specify file name of repodata on the remote server where your channels are configured or within local backups. Conda will try whatever you specify, but will ultimately fall back to repodata.json if your specs are not satisfiable with what you specify here. This is used to employ repodata that is smaller and reduced in time scope. You may pass this flag more than once. Leftmost entries are tried first, and the fallback to repodata.json is added for you automatically. For more information, see conda config --describe repodata_fns.
- --experimental
Possible choices: jlap, lock
jlap: Download incremental package index data from repodata.jlap; implies 'lock'. lock: use locking when reading, updating index (repodata.json) cache. Now enabled.
- --no-lock
Disable locking when reading, updating index (repodata.json) cache.
- --repodata-use-zst, --no-repodata-use-zst
Check for/do not check for repodata.json.zst. Enabled by default.
Networking Options#
- -C, --use-index-cache
Use cache of channel index files, even if it has expired. This is useful if you don't want conda to check whether a new version of the repodata file exists, which will save bandwidth.
- -k, --insecure
Allow conda to perform "insecure" SSL connections and transfers. Equivalent to setting 'ssl_verify' to 'false'.
- --offline
Offline mode. Don't connect to the Internet.
Output, Prompt, and Flow Control Options#
- --json
Report all output as json. Suitable for using conda programmatically.
- --console
Select the backend to use for normal output rendering.
- -v, --verbose
Can be used multiple times. Once for detailed output, twice for INFO logging, thrice for DEBUG logging, four times for TRACE logging.
- -q, --quiet
Do not display progress bar.