Pyinfra
๐ง pyinfra turns Python code into shell commands and runs them on your servers. Execute ad-hoc commands and write declarative operations. Target SSH servers, local machine and Docker containers. Fast and scales from one server to thousands.
pyinfra turns Python code into shell commands and runs them on your servers. Execute ad-hoc commands and write declarative operations. Target SSH servers, local machine and Docker containers. Fast and scales from one server to thousands. Think ansible but Python instead of YAML, and a lot faster. The project is written primarily in Python, distributed under the MIT License license, first published in 2014. It has gained significant community traction with 5,698 stars and 504 forks on GitHub. Key topics include: cloud-management, configuration-management, high-performance, infrastructure, pyinfra.
<h3> <a href="https://docs.pyinfra.com/page/getting-started.html"><strong>Getting Started</strong></a> • <a href="https://github.com/pyinfra-dev/pyinfra-examples"><strong>Examples Repo</strong></a> • <a href="https://matrix.to/#/#pyinfra:matrix.org"><strong>Chat on Matrix</strong></a> </h3> <p> <a href="https://docs.pyinfra.com"><strong>Documentation</strong></a> • <a href="https://docs.pyinfra.com/page/support.html"><strong>Help & Support</strong></a> • <a href="https://docs.pyinfra.com/page/contributing.html"><strong>Contributing</strong></a> </p>
Why pyinfra? Design features include:
- ๐ Super fast execution over thousands of hosts with predictable performance.
- ๐จ Instant debugging with realtime stdin/stdout/stderr output (
-vvv). - ๐ Idempotent operations that enable diffs and dry runs before making changes.
- ๐ฆ Extendable with the entire Python package ecosystem.
- ๐ป Agentless execution against anything with shell access.
- ๐ Integrated with connectors for Docker, Terraform, Vagrant and more.
Quickstart
Install pyinfra with uv:
uv tool install pyinfra
Now you can execute commands on hosts via SSH:
shpyinfra my-server.net exec -- echo "hello world"
Or target Docker containers, the local machine, and other connectors:
shpyinfra @docker/ubuntu exec -- echo "Hello world" pyinfra @local exec -- echo "Hello world"
As well as executing commands you can define state using operations:
sh# Install iftop apt package if not present pyinfra @docker/ubuntu apt.packages iftop update=true _sudo=true
Which can then be saved as a Python file like deploy.py:
pyfrom pyinfra.operations import apt apt.packages( name="Ensure iftop is installed", packages=['iftop'], update=True, _sudo=True, )
The hosts can also be saved in a file, for example inventory.py:
pytargets = ["@docker/ubuntu", "my-test-server.net"]
And executed together:
shpyinfra inventory.py deploy.py
Now you know the building blocks of pyinfra! By combining inventory, operations and Python code you can deploy anything.
See the more detailed getting started or using operations guides. See how to use inventory & data, global arguments and the CLI or check out the documented examples.
<p align="center"> <a href="https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pyinfra"><img alt="PyPI version" src="https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/pyinfra?color=blue"></a> <a href="https://pepy.tech/project/pyinfra"><img alt="PyPi downloads" src="https://pepy.tech/badge/pyinfra"></a> <a href="https://docs.pyinfra.com"><img alt="Docs status" src="https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/Fizzadar/pyinfra/docs.yml?branch=2.x"></a> <a href="https://github.com/Fizzadar/pyinfra/actions?query=workflow%3A%22Execute+tests%22"><img alt="Execute tests status" src="https://img.shields.io/github/actions/workflow/status/Fizzadar/pyinfra/test.yml?branch=2.x"></a> <a href="https://codecov.io/github/Fizzadar/pyinfra"><img alt="Codecov Coverage" src="https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/gh/Fizzadar/pyinfra"></a> <a href="https://github.com/Fizzadar/pyinfra/blob/2.x/LICENSE.md"><img alt="MIT Licensed" src="https://img.shields.io/pypi/l/pyinfra"></a> </p>
Contributors
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