# Conda / Anaconda Conda / Anaconda (https://conda.org) is a package manager that can be used to easily create tailored Python environments without having required C/... binaries of some packages installed on the local system. (i.e. conda will take care that required binaries are installed into the environment) ```{warning} Due to certain license restrictions the usage of Anaconda at PSI is not allowed without obtaining a professional license from Anaconda.com! However the usage of the command `conda` and/or of packages from conda-forge is still possible - see below ... ``` This guide explains how to install and configure conda in accordance to the Anaconda.com license terms. ## Installation On a standard Linux system the conda package can be simply installed via a: ``` yum install conda ``` To instruct puppet to install the package you can have following hiera config: ```yaml base::pkg_group::extra: - 'conda' base::package_groups: - 'extra' ``` ## Configuration To overwrite the default configuration of conda (which would violate the license because packages would be installed from anaconda.org by default) following config file needs to be deployed in `/etc/conda/condarc.d/base.yml` (or similar): ```yaml channels: - conda-forge # Show channel URLs when displaying what is going to be downloaded # and in 'conda list'. The default is False. show_channel_urls: True always_copy: true ``` To place the file via Puppet/Hiera you can have following configuration: ```yaml files::files: /etc/conda/condarc.d/base.yml: content: | channels: - conda-forge # Show channel URLs when displaying what is going to be downloaded # and in 'conda list'. The default is False. show_channel_urls: True always_copy: true ``` Afterwards conda environments can be created in a license conformed way as documented at https://docs.conda.io/projects/conda/en/latest/user-guide/tasks/manage-environments.html