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libyear

A simple measure of software dependency freshness. It is a single number telling you how up-to-date your dependencies are.

https://libyear.com/

Demo Image

How to install

pip install libyear

Usage

A single requirement file libyear -r requirements.txt

A folder with requirement files libyear -r requirements/

Example output

libyear -r requirements.txt 
+-------------------------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+
|         Library         | Current Version | Latest Version | Libyears behind |
+-------------------------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+
|           pytz          |      2015.2     |     2019.3     |       4.54      |
|         urllib3         |      1.15.1     |     1.25.7     |       3.58      |
|         astroid         |      1.5.3      |     2.3.3      |       2.43      |
|          django         |     1.11.23     |      3.0       |       0.34      |
|      django-celery      |      3.2.1      |     3.3.1      |       2.54      |
|        httpretty        |      0.8.3      |     0.9.7      |       5.31      |
|         Pygments        |       1.6       |     2.5.2      |       6.81      |
|          flake8         |      3.6.0      |     3.7.9      |       1.01      |
|      django-waffle      |      0.14.0     |     0.18.0     |       1.66      |
|    requests_oauthlib    |      0.8.0      |     1.3.0      |       2.72      |
|   django-debug-toolbar  |       1.8       |      2.1       |       2.52      |
|         libsass         |      0.13.3     |     0.19.4     |       2.06      |
|     django-storages     |      1.6.6      |      1.8       |       1.65      |
|      edx-i18n-tools     |      0.4.2      |     0.5.0      |       2.02      |
|           six           |      1.10.0     |     1.13.0     |       4.08      |
|   djangorestframework   |      3.6.3      |     3.11.0     |       2.58      |
|          isort          |      4.2.15     |     4.3.21     |       2.05      |
|         futures         |      2.1.6      |     3.3.0      |       5.5       |
|          Pillow         |      2.7.0      |     6.2.1      |       4.8       |
| edx-django-release-util |      0.3.1      |     0.3.2      |       2.44      |
|      beautifulsoup4     |      4.6.0      |     4.8.1      |       2.42      |
|       mysqlclient       |   1.4.2.post1   |     1.4.6      |       0.77      |
|         newrelic        |    4.14.0.115   |   5.4.0.132    |       0.78      |
|          redis          |      2.10.6     |     3.3.11     |       2.16      |
|         oauthlib        |      2.1.0      |     3.1.0      |       1.21      |
|        django-ses       |      0.7.1      |     0.8.13     |       3.65      |
|           mock          |      1.3.0      |     3.0.5      |       3.79      |
|      django-hamlpy      |      1.1.1      |      1.2       |       1.52      |
|          bottle         |      0.12.9     |    0.12.18     |       4.1       |
|      pylint-django      |      0.7.2      |     2.0.13     |       3.44      |
|       user-agents       |      1.1.0      |      2.0       |       2.13      |
|          jsmin          |      2.2.1      |     2.2.2      |       1.15      |
|         Markdown        |       2.4       |     3.1.1      |       5.26      |
|         gunicorn        |      0.17.4     |     20.0.4     |       6.59      |
|         requests        |      2.18.4     |     2.22.0     |       1.75      |
|          pylint         |      1.7.2      |     2.4.4      |       2.39      |
+-------------------------+-----------------+----------------+-----------------+
Your system is 103.78 libyears behind

Example 1

For example, a rails 5.0.0 dependency (released June 30, 2016) is roughly 1 libyear behind the 5.1.2 version (released June 26, 2017).

Simpler is Better

There are obviously more nuanced ways to calculate dependency freshness. The advantage of this approach is its simplicity. You will be able to explain this calculation to your colleagues in about 30s.

Example 2

If your system has two dependencies, the first one year old, the second three, then your system is four libyears out-of-date.

A Healthy App

Apps below 10 libyears are considered to be healthy apps. We regularly rescue projects that are over 100 libyears behind.

Etymology

"lib" is short for "library", the most common form of dependency.

References

J. Cox, E. Bouwers, M. van Eekelen and J. Visser, Measuring Dependency Freshness in Software Systems. In Proceedings of the 37th International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE 2015), May 2015 https://ericbouwers.github.io/papers/icse15.pdf