HOW TO
The ArcGIS Python API is distributed via Conda - a popular package and environment management system for Python developers. The recommended way to install this API is outlined in the ArcGIS Python API Guide. For customers who want to install the API on non-networked computers or on workstations that are in an isolated network, the install instructions are provided in the Offline install section of the guide.
For advanced users who want to use the API from Miniconda (say, from ArcGIS Pro’s Python command prompt, which is powered by Miniconda) in disconnected environments, the recommended path is to create a local Conda channel in their premises and to install the API from that channel. The local channel would include a finite set of dependencies the API requires. Users may opt to download and host any number of additional Python packages in that channel.
This article describes the steps to create an offline Conda channel for the ArcGIS Python API. Please note that it is necessary to have a computer with an internet connection, Anaconda installed, and a Python 3.5 shell with the requests package installed.
Accompanying this knowledge base article are two files, arcgis_v1_dependencies (a text file listing the dependencies for the ArcGIS Python API) and download_dependencies, a Python script for downloading dependencies from the anaconda channel. Download these Supporting files before beginning the steps below.
Install Anaconda. Run the following commands in your terminal on the root environment to install the required conda-build and requests packages:
$ conda install conda-build $ conda install requests
The new environment is now active and ready.
Download the accompanying Python script and text file to the same location. Then, run the attached download_dependencies.py script as shown below:
$ python download_dependencies.py
The script downloads all the dependencies from anaconda.org online channel and stores it locally. Running the script creates and output similar to the following:
Using environment list file: .\ arcgis_v1_dependencies.txt Getting _nb_ext_conf-0.3.0-py35_0.tar.bz2 Downloaded win-64\_nb_ext_conf-0.3.0-py35_0.tar.bz2 Downloaded win-32\_nb_ext_conf-0.3.0-py35_0.tar.bz2 Downloaded linux-64\_nb_ext_conf-0.3.0-py35_0.tar.bz2 Downloaded linux-32\_nb_ext_conf-0.3.0-py35_0.tar.bz2 Error with download: osx-32 : Downloaded osx-64\_nb_ext_conf-0.3.0-py35_0.tar.bz2 Getting anaconda-client-1.5.5-py35_0.tar.bz2 Downloaded win-64\anaconda-client-1.5.5-py35_0.tar.bz2 Downloaded win-32\anaconda-client-1.5.5-py35_0.tar.bz2 Downloaded linux-64\anaconda-client-1.5.5-py35_0.tar.bz2 Downloaded linux-32\anaconda-client-1.5.5-py35_0.tar.bz2 Error with download: osx-32 : Downloaded osx-64\anaconda-client-1.5.5-py35_0.tar.bz2 ....
As it downloads, it creates folders with the following structure:
\\channel_root\ \linux-64 \linux-32 \osx-64 \osx-32 \win-64 \win-32 \noarch
Once the script finishes, Conda must index this location. Conda builds a manifest file, repodata.json, in each of these folders outlining the packages present. This helps the Conda on your users' computers to treat this location as a local channel and search for and install packages from this location instead of the internet.
Build the index by typing the following commands:
$ conda index \\path\to\channel\win-64 $ conda index \\path\to\channel\win-32 $ conda index \\path\to\channel\linux-64 $ conda index \\path\to\channel\linux-32 $ conda index \\path\to\channel\osx-64 $ conda index \\path\to\channel\osx-32 $ conda index \\path\to\channel\noarch
Running the commands reports an output similar to the following:
$ conda index \\path\to\channel\win-64 updating index in: \\path\to\channel\win-64 updating: pywin32-220-py35_1.tar.bz2 updating: nb_conda_kernels-2.0.0-py35_0.tar.bz2 updating: requests-2.12.1-py35_0.tar.bz2 updating: pyzmq-16.0.2-py35_0.tar.bz2 updating: _nb_ext_conf-0.3.0-py35_0.tar.bz2 updating: ipywidgets-5.2.2-py35_0.tar.bz2 updating: decorator-4.0.10-py35_0.tar.bz2 ....
Once this step is finished, transport the root folder into a networked location or a web server, or use it locally as your local Conda channel.
Install Anaconda or Miniconda on the non-networked computer. Then, search for packages on the local channel to ensure the channel works:
$ conda search --channel file://path/to/channel --override-channels
For example, on a Windows computer, this would look like:
$ conda search --channel D:/code/arcgis_offline_downloads/channel --override-channels
The command returns a result similar to the following:
$ conda search --channel file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel --override-channels Fetching package metadata ..... _nb_ext_conf 0.3.0 py35_0 file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel anaconda-client 1.5.5 py35_0 file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel arcgis 0.9 py35_1 file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel clyent 1.2.2 py35_0 file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel colorama 0.3.7 py35_0 file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel decorator 4.0.10 py35_0 file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel ...
Since ArcGIS and all its dependencies are now searchable, the installation can now proceed. Create a new Conda environment, or on the root environment, install the arcgis package:
conda create --name awesome_arcgis python [this step is optional]
Now install ArcGIS from the Conda channel:
activate awesome_arcgis conda install --channel //offline/arcgis_channel/channel arcgis --offline --override-channels
This prints the following and proceeds with installation after asking for user confirmation:
$ conda install -c //offline/arcgis_channel/channel arcgis --offline --override-channels Fetching package metadata ..... Solving package specifications: .......... Package plan for installation in environment C:\Anaconda3\envs\awesome_arcgis: The following packages will be downloaded: package | build ---------------------------|----------------- colorama-0.3.7 | py35_0 19 KB file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel decorator-4.0.10 | py35_0 12 KB file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel .... Proceed ([y]/n)? y .... Enabling notebook extension arcgis/mapview... - Validating: ok
Ensure that ArcGIS is installed by running a Conda list:
$ conda list # packages in environment at C:\Anaconda3\envs\awesome_arcgis: # arcgis 0.9 py35_1 file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel colorama 0.3.7 py35_0 file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel decorator 4.0.10 py35_0 file://offline/arcgis_channel/channel ...
If the ArcGIS package was installed in an new environment, activate it. Then, from your terminal, run the following command:
jupyter notebook
This starts a new notebook environment in the browser. Start a new notebook and type the following:
from arcgis.gis import GIS() gis = GIS("portal url", "username", "password") #connect to the ArcGIS Enterprise in your local network gis.map()
This should bring up the map widget and load the default basemap.
OS differences
If you want to archive the channel for using later or for storage, this can be done by bundling the root level channel folder and all its sub-folders into a tar file. Use the following commands to do so. If on Windows, use PowerShell as the terminal for running these commands:
$ tar -zcvf arcgis_v1_offline_channel.tar.gz path/to/channel/
Running this prints an output similar to shown below:
a channel a channel/.DS_Store a channel/linux-32 a channel/linux-64 a channel/osx-32 a channel/osx-64 a channel/win-32 a channel/win-64 a channel/win-64/.index.json a channel/win-64/_nb_ext_conf-0.3.0-py35_0.tar.bz2 a channel/win-64/anaconda-client-1.5.5-py35_0.tar.bz2 a channel/win-64/arcgis-1.0-py35_1.tar.bz2 a channel/win-64/clyent-1.2.2-py35_0.tar.bz2 ....
To unpack this archive for later use, run the following command:
$ tar -zxcf arcgis_v1_offline_channel.tar.gz -C ./arcgis_channel
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