Files
edx-platform/requirements
Michael Roytman 95e5a1651d chore: update edx-proctoring version
This version of the edx-proctoring library includes changes to the onboarding status panel that is displayed in a learner's course outline. If all onboarding exams are past due, the button to go to the onboarding exam will be grayed out and will contain the text "Onboarding Past Due". If there are any available onboarding exams, the panel will work as before. If there are any onboarding exams that will be released in the future, they will be prioritized over the past due onboarding exams.
2021-05-24 14:58:48 -04:00
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2021-05-24 14:58:48 -04:00
2018-04-13 14:10:40 -04:00

Requirements/dependencies
=========================

These directories specify the Python (and system) dependencies for the LMS and Studio.

- ``edx`` contains the normal Python requirements files
- ``edx-sandbox`` contains the requirements files for Codejail
- ``constraints.txt`` is shared between the two

(In a normal `OEP-18`_-compliant repository, the ``*.in`` and ``*.txt`` files would be
directly in the requirements directory.)

.. _OEP-18: https://github.com/edx/open-edx-proposals/blob/master/oeps/oep-0018-bp-python-dependencies.rst

Upgrading/downgrading just one dependency
-----------------------------------------

Want to upgrade just *one* dependency without pulling in other upgrades? Here's how:

1. Change your dependency to a minimum-version constraint, e.g. ``my-dep>=1.2.3`` (or update the constraint if it already exists)
2. Run ``make compile-requirements`` to recompute dependencies with this new constraint

If you instead need to surgically *downgrade* a dependency, perhaps in order to revert a change which broke things:

1. Add an exact-match or max-version constraint to ``constraints.txt`` with a comment explaining why (and ideally a ticket or issue link)
2. Lower the minimum-version constraint, if it exists

    - Not sure if there is one? Try going on to the next step and seeing if it complains!

3. Run ``make compile-requirements``

This is considerably safer than trying to manually edit the ``*.txt`` files, which can easily result in incompatible dependency versions.