How can I host my own private conda repository?

You can use a conda custom channel as your private repo. The essential steps are to use “conda build” to create a conda package, then copy that package into your custom channel (a directory), and now run conda index on that directory. You can then install packages from this channel by using the “conda install -c “.

An example, in more detail, let’s assume linux-64:

  • Create the channel:
    mkdir -p /tmp/my-conda-channel/linux-64
  • Now assuming you have some project named “abc” with a meta.yaml and build.sh with some version X. Now you build it:

    conda build abc

  • This will build a tar.bz2 file in your conda-bld directory. For example: ~/miniconda3/conda-bld/linux-64/abc-X-py35_0.tar.bz2. Copy that file to your channel:

    cp ~/miniconda3/conda-bld/linux-64/abc-X-py35_0.tar.bz2 /tmp/my-conda-channel/linux-64/

  • Now index it:

    conda index /tmp/my-conda-channel/linux-64/

You’ve now uploaded that package to your custom channel. You can install it in any of your conda environments by doing:

conda install -c file://tmp/my-conda-channel/ abc=X

Where, recall, the X is the version so, once you’ve placed more versions in your channel, you can install specific versions.

If you have a project that depends on the X version of “abc” then we simply add it to that projects meta.yaml. Example:

package:
  name: some-other-project
  version: 0.1
requirements:
  build:
   - abc X
...

Once you have created this channel it’s probably a good idea to add it to your .condarc file so that it will get automatically searched. For example:

channels:
- file://tmp/my-conda-channel/   
- defaults

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