Mainly designed for QGIS Server plugins, but it works also for desktop.
Not tested on Windows.
Python 3.7 minimum, you can make a Python venv if needed.
python3 --version
pip3 install qgis-plugin-manager
python3 -m pip install qgis-plugin-manager
QGIS-Plugin-Manager will take care of following variables :
QGIS_PLUGIN_MANAGER_SOURCES_FILE
for storing a path to thesources.list
otherwise, the current folder will be used.QGIS_PLUGIN_MANAGER_CACHE_DIR
for storing all XML files downloaded otherwise, the current folder will be used.cache_qgis_plugin_manager
QGIS_PLUGIN_MANAGER_SKIP_SOURCES_FILE
, boolean when we do not need asources.list
file, for instance to list plugins onlyQGIS_PLUGIN_MANAGER_RESTART_FILE
, path where the file must be created if QGIS server needs to be restarted. Read the documentation.QGIS_PLUGINPATH
for storing plugins, from QGIS Server documentationPYTHONPATH
for importing QGIS libraries
Either you need to go in the directory where you are storing plugins, or you can use the environment variable QGIS_PLUGINPATH
.
You can read the documentation
on QGIS Server about this variable.
cd /path/where/you/have/plugins
# usually on a server
cd /usr/lib/qgis/plugins
# on unix desktop with the default QGIS profile
cd /home/${USER}/.local/share/QGIS/QGIS3/profiles/default/python/plugins
# or
export QGIS_PLUGINPATH=/path/where/you/have/plugins
$ qgis-plugin-manager --help
usage: qgis-plugin-manager [-h] [-v] {init,list,remote,remove,update,upgrade,cache,search,install} ...
options:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-v, --version show program's version number and exit
commands:
qgis-plugin-manager command
{init,list,remote,remove,update,upgrade,cache,search,install}
init Create the `sources.list` with plugins.qgis.org as remote
list List all plugins in the directory
remote List all remote server
remove Remove a plugin by its name
update Update all index files
upgrade Upgrade all plugins installed
cache Look for a plugin in the cache
search Search for plugins
install Install a plugin
To create the first sources.list
in the directory with at least the default repository https://plugins.qgis.org :
$ qgis-plugin-manager init
$ cat sources.list
https://plugins.qgis.org/plugins/plugins.xml?qgis=3.34
You can have one or many servers, one on each line.
List all plugins installed :
$ qgis-plugin-manager list
QGIS server version 3.34.2
List all plugins in /home/etienne/dev/qgis/server_plugin
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
| Name | Version | Flags | QGIS min | QGIS max | Author | Folder owner | Action β |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|Lizmap |master | |3.4 |3.99 |3Liz | root : 0o755 | Unkown version |
|wfsOutputExtension|1.5.3 |Server |3.0 | |3Liz | etienne : 0o755 | |
|QuickOSM |1.14.0 |Processing |3.4 |3.99 |Etienne Trimaille| etienne : 0o755 | Upgrade to 1.16.0|
|cadastre |1.6.2 |Server,Processing|3.0 |3.99 |3liz | www-data : 0o755 | |
|atlasprint |3.2.2 |Server |3.10 | |3Liz | www-data : 0o755 | |
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Important note, install only plugins you need you. On QGIS desktop, plugins can slow down your computer. On QGIS server, plugins are like hooks into QGIS server, they can alter input or output of QGIS server. They can produce unexpected result if you don't know how the plugin works. Please refer to their respective documentation or the application that needs QGIS server plugins (for instance, plugins for Lizmap Web Client)
$ qgis-plugin-manager remote
List of remotes :
https://plugins.qgis.org/plugins/plugins.xml?qgis=3.34
$ cat sources.list
https://plugins.qgis.org/plugins/plugins.xml?qgis=[VERSION]
[VERSION]
is a token in the sources.list
file to be replaced by the QGIS version, for instance 3.34
.
If QGIS is upgraded, the XML file will be updated as well.
You don't have to set the TOKEN for all URL :
https://docs.3liz.org/plugins.xml
is valid.
It's possible to add a login and password in the remote URL, with username
and password
in the query string :
https://docs.3liz.org/private/repo.xml?username=login&password=pass
Every URL is parsed, and if some credentials are found, the URL is cleaned and the request is done using the basic authentication.
To fetch the XML files from each repository :
$ qgis-plugin-manager update
Downloading https://plugins.qgis.org/plugins/plugins.xml?qgis=3.34...
Ok
$ ls .cache_qgis_plugin_manager/
https-plugins-qgis-org-plugins-plugins-xml-qgis-3-34.xml
Check if a plugin is available :
$ qgis-plugin-manager cache atlasprint
Plugin atlasprint : v3.2.2 available
Look for plugins according to tags and title :
$ qgis-plugin-manager search dataviz
Data Plotly
QSoccer
Plugins are case-sensitive and might have spaces in its name :
$ qgis-plugin-manager install dataplotly
Plugin dataplotly latest not found.
Do you mean maybe 'Data Plotly' ?
$ qgis-plugin-manager install 'Data Plotly'
Install the latest version :
$ qgis-plugin-manager install QuickOSM
Installation QuickOSM latest
Ok QuickOSM.1.16.0.zip
or a specific version :
$ qgis-plugin-manager install QuickOSM==1.14.0
Installation QuickOSM 1.14.0
Ok QuickOSM.1.14.0.zip
You can use --force
or -f
to force the installation even if the plugin with the same version is already installed.
On QGIS server, there isn't any setting to enable/disable a plugin.
However, on desktop, you still need to enable a plugin, the equivalent of the checkbox in the QGIS graphical plugin manager.
For instance, with the default profile, usually located in :
/home/${USER}/.local/share/QGIS/QGIS3/profiles/default/QGIS/
you need to edit the QGIS.ini
file with :
[PythonPlugins]
nameOfThePlugin=true
Upgrade all plugins installed :
$ qgis-plugin-manager upgrade
You can use --force
or -f
to force the upgrade for all plugins despite their version.
Note, like APT, update
is needed before to refresh the cache.
Some plugins might be installed by hand, without being installed with a remote. This command will try to upgrade all valid plugins found in the directory. However, the command will fail because the plugin has been installed without a remote.
It's possible to ignore such plugin by adding a file ignorePlugins.list
, in your plugins' folder,
with a list of plugin name on each line. The upgrade
will not try to upgrade them.
It's possible to use rm -rf folder_dir
but you can also remove by the plugin name.
It will take care of the QGIS_PLUGINPATH
environment variable.
$ qgis-plugin-manager remove Quickosm
Plugin name 'Quickosm' not found
Do you mean maybe 'QuickOSM' ?
$ qgis-plugin-manager remove QuickOSM
Plugin QuickOSM removed
Tip : Do not forget to restart QGIS Server to reload plugins π
When a plugin is installed or removed and if the environment variable QGIS_PLUGIN_MANAGER_RESTART_FILE
is set,
an empty file will be created or touched. It can notify you if QGIS Server needs to be restarted for instance.
This is useful for a deployment with Ansible for instance.
Note that you must manually remove this file.
export PYTHONPATH=/home/etienne/dev/app/qgis-master/share/qgis/python/:/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/
cd test
python3 -m unittest
flake8