OS : Ubuntu 16.04
Python 2.7
pip list | grep gev
DEPRECATION: The default format will switch to columns in the future. You can use --format=(legacy|columns) (or define a format=(legacy|columns) in your pip.conf under the [list] section) to disable this warning.
gevent (1.3a2)
Just to make sure, I checked:
pip install --upgrade gevent
Requirement already up-to-date: gevent in /home/user/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages
Requirement already up-to-date: greenlet>=0.4.13; platform_python_implementation == "CPython" in /home/user/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages (from gevent)
However when I actually run my python program it bails out with an error:
import gevent
ImportError: No module named gevent
Please advise.
Stuff I already tried:
pip --version
pip 9.0.1 from /home/user/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages (python 2.7)
python -m pip install --user gevent
Requirement already satisfied: gevent in /home/user/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages
Requirement already satisfied: greenlet>=0.4.13; platform_python_implementation == "CPython" in /home/user/.local/lib/python2.7/site-packages (from gevent)
which -a python
/usr/bin/python
/usr/bin/python
along with things mentioned here:
https://github.com/PokeAlarm/PokeAlarm/issues/22
I also tried uninstalling the pip installation and doing apt-get :
sudo apt-get install python-gevent python-gevent-websocket
mentioned here: https://askubuntu.com/questions/836029/importerror-no-module-named-gevent/1013457#1013457
Working in a Python virtual environment in Ubuntu 16.04 I got the following results:
$ python -m pip install gevent
Requirement already satisfied: gevent in ./lib/python2.7/site-packages
Requirement already satisfied: greenlet>=0.4.10 in ./lib/python2.7/site-packages (from gevent)
import gevent worked successfully in my Python virtual environment, but it did not work outside of my Python virtual environment until I ran the following command:
sudo apt install python-gevent # also works in all currently supported versions of Ubuntu
Description: gevent is a coroutine-based Python networking library. gevent uses greenlet to provide a high-level synchronous API on top of libevent event loop.
You can also install python3-gevent for Python 3.x in all currently supported versions of Ubuntu by running the following command:
sudo apt install python3-gevent
make sure that your pip references the same python that you are using,
on many systems you can have multiple python versions installed.
you can see which to which python your pip belongs by running:
pip --version
enter image description here
goto anaconda navigator and select the environment on which you are working ...then select not installed ,check for gevent and install
Related
I have legacy production servers that are still running Python 2.7.6. We have a local environment built from the docker image for ubuntu 14.04 intended to replicate that environment (things still work there once everything is installed.) The packer build script that creates this environment recently stopped working apparently due to PyPi dropping non-SNI support.
I tried using get-pip.py from the docs to download pip:
wget -c https://bootstrap.pypa.io/pip/2.7/get-pip.py
python2 get-pip.py
This gives me the following warning:
DEPRECATION: Python 2.7 reached the end of its life on January 1st, 2020. Please upgrade your Python as Python 2.7 is no longer maintained. pip 21.0 will drop support for Python 2.7 in January 2021. More details about Python 2 support in pip can be found at https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/development/release-process/#python-2-support pip 21.0 will remove support for this functionality.
/tmp/tmpBb3LJu/pip.zip/pip/_vendor/urllib3/util/ssl_.py:424: SNIMissingWarning: An HTTPS request has been made, but the SNI (Server Name Indication) extension to TLS is not available on this platform. This may cause the server to present an incorrect TLS certificate, which can cause validation failures. You can upgrade to a newer version of Python to solve this. For more information, see https://urllib3.readthedocs.io/en/latest/advanced-usage.html#ssl-warnings
/tmp/tmpBb3LJu/pip.zip/pip/_vendor/urllib3/util/ssl_.py:164: InsecurePlatformWarning: A true SSLContext object is not available. This prevents urllib3 from configuring SSL appropriately and may cause certain SSL connections to fail. You can upgrade to a newer version of Python to solve this. For more information, see https://urllib3.readthedocs.io/en/latest/advanced-usage.html#ssl-warnings
ERROR: Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement pip<21.0 (from versions: none)
ERROR: No matching distribution found for pip<21.0
The proposed solution for that is to use pip to upgrade urllib3
https://serverfault.com/questions/866062/easy-install-and-pip-fail-with-ssl-warnings
I don't have pip so I installed a legacy version using
apt-get install python-pip
This installs pip 1.5.4
When I try to pip install "urllib3[secure]" I get the following:
Requirement already satisfied (use --upgrade to upgrade): urllib3[secure] in /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages
Installing extra requirements: 'secure'
Cleaning up...
If I try pip install "urllib3[secure]" --upgrade or pip install --index-url https://pypi.python.org/simple/ --upgrade pip I get:
Cannot fetch index base URL https://pypi.python.org/simple/
Could not find any downloads that satisfy the requirement urllib3[secure] in /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages
Downloading/unpacking urllib3[secure]
Cleaning up...
No distributions at all found for urllib3[secure] in /usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages
Storing debug log for failure in /root/.pip/pip.log
(the pip message reflects pip, not urllib3[secure])
When I try to use pip 1.5 to install uWSGI
pip install uWSGI
I get the following:
Downloading/unpacking uWSGI
Cannot fetch index base URL https://pypi.python.org/simple/
Could not find any downloads that satisfy the requirement uWSGI
Cleaning up...
No distributions at all found for uWSGI
Storing debug log for failure in /root/.pip/pip.log
Upgrading pip doesn't work here either
Downloading/unpacking uWSGI==2.0.18 (from -r /root/requirements.txt (line 1))
Cannot fetch index base URL https://pypi.python.org/simple/
Could not find any downloads that satisfy the requirement uWSGI==2.0.18 (from -r /root/requirements.txt (line 1))
Cleaning up...
No distributions at all found for uWSGI==2.0.18 (from -r /root/requirements.txt (line 1))
Storing debug log for failure in /root/.pip/pip.log
Reinstalling pip doesn't work:
python -m pip install -U --force-reinstall pip
Gives me:
Downloading/unpacking pip
Cannot fetch index base URL https://pypi.python.org/simple/
Could not find any downloads that satisfy the requirement pip
Cleaning up...
No distributions at all found for pip
Storing debug log for failure in /root/.pip/pip.log
If I open /root/.pip/pip.log I see the following:
Downloading/unpacking pip
Getting page https://pypi.python.org/simple/pip/
Could not fetch URL https://pypi.python.org/simple/pip/: 403 Client Error: [[[!!! BREAKING CHANGE !!!]]] Support for clients that do not support Server Name Indication is temporarily disabled and will be permanently deprecated soon. See https://status.python.org/incidents/hzmjhqsdjqgb and https://github.com/pypa/pypi-support/issues/978 [[[!!! END BREAKING CHANGE !!!]]]
The link says that SNI support was dropped:
For users of Python 2.7.{0...8}
Upgrading to the last Python 2.7 release is an option.
However, note that Python 2.7 series itself is now End of Life and support in pip was dropped with version 21.0.
For users of Python 2.6.x and lower:
Neither the Python core developers, or pip maintainers support Python 2.6 and below.
If someone is aware of a work around for this issue (SNI support specifically) they are welcome to share it here for others.
There is no recommended solution from the PyPI team.
How can I get a local environment set up for new developers to work on our legacy application? I've created a new Python 3 dev server and local environment but it will be some time before I can roll out the staging and live environments, get everything moved over, and test it.
As the message says, PyPi has discontinued support for Python <2.7.9 as of May 6th 2021. If you're running a version < 2.7.9 and you cannot upgrade to a newer version of Python then your only option is to manually download the wheels from PyPi.
These are the modification I needed to make to my build script to make it work:
I needed to install software-properties-common and gcc
apt-get install -y software-properties-common gcc
Then I downloaded (setuptools](https://pypi.org/project/setuptools/44.1.1/#files) and unzipped and installed it:
python ./setuptools-44.1.1/setup.py install
Next, I downloaded pip and added it to a folder called wheels. Then I could use the whl file to run pip to get pip
python ./wheels/pip-20.3.4-py2.py3-none-any.whl/pip install --no-index --find-links ./wheels/ pip --ignore-installed
It was suggested to build a Docker container using Ubuntu 16.04 with Python 2.7.17 and use that to download the packages.
pip download -r requirements.txt
But the versions of the packages were wrong, so I ended up going through the requirements.txt and downloading each package manually from PyPi and adding it to the wheels folder. A running instance is useful so you can run pip freeze or look at a requirements.txt file to grab the version numbers of all the packages you need.
Now that I could use pip, I can install my other packages:
python pip install --no-index --find-links ./wheels/ -r /root/requirements.txt
This uncovered some dependencies that I hadn't downloaded packages for yet so I had to go through and download those and added them to the wheels folder. There were a few other things I found needed different versions than I had originally downloaded and a few packages relied on pbr and many more wanted wheel:
pip install --no-index --find-links ./wheels/ pbr==5.5.1 wheel==0.36.2
I also needed to download cMake and add it to the wheels folder
After that I could install my requirements.txt:
pip install --no-index --find-links ./wheels/ -r /root/requirements.txt --ignore-installed
May be late to the party but something similar happened to me while trying to make an HTTPS request with Python 2.7.6 (lack of SNI support). This was causing a lot of issues on a remote web server I work on.
Looking for answers I tried installing urllib3[secure] and entered a loophole since pip was complaining about a lack of SNI support to install this and other packages as well.
I found out this StackOverflow answer which helped me install the required dependencies to make Python 2.7.6 and pip itself support SNI as well as install urllib[secure].
You need to create a folder containing the required wheels (download them from PyPi using wget for instance):
pip, asn1crypto, enum34, idna, six, ipaddress, pyOpenSSL, cffi,
cryptography wheels; and also pycparser (a non-wheel, it will be a
tar.gz)
Make sure the wheels you download support Python 2.7 and that you install pip before the rest of them.
In the original answer, its stated you can use python -m OpenSSL.debug to verify everything worked correctly (a ModuleNotFoundError would mean the pyOpenSSL package was not installed). You can also use pip -Vto check that the new pip version was installed correctly as well.
After updating pip and installing these dependencies I was able to install urllib3[secure] and get SNI support from python as well as pip.
Good luck!
I am sharing this answer as an update to Jonathan Rys's answer that contains the steps required as of the date of this answer. I tried to keep this concise.
As the message says, PyPi has discontinued support for Python <2.7.9 as of May 6th 2021. If you're running a version < 2.7.9 and you cannot upgrade to a newer version of Python then your only option is to manually download the wheels from PyPi.
For Ubuntu 20.04, I have installed build-essential sudo apt-get install build-essential
I installed Python 2 from source, downloading tar bundle and built and installed this. Note, I removed the python command, to avoid that old confusion, so we have python2 and python2.7 and also python3 (for example).
tar xf Python-2.7.18.tgz
cd Python-2.7.18
./configure && make && sudo make install
(cd /usr/local/bin;sudo rm python python-config)
cd ..
Now to get pip installed. Download setuptools zip archive. Then install it:
unzip setuptools-44.1.1.zip
cd setuptools-44.1.1
python2 bootstrap.py
sudo python2 setup.py install
cd ..
Next, I downloaded pip .tar.gz archive. Then unpack and install it. Note, I took extra steps to preserve and restore the original python3 pip in /usr/local/bin. Pip for Python2 are still available as pip2 and pip2.7 in the same directory.
tar xf pip-20.3.4.tar.gz
cd pip-20.3.4
(cd /usr/local/bin;sudo mv pip pip-save)
sudo python2 setup.py install
(cd /usr/local/bin;sudo mv pip-save pip)
Now that I could use pip, I can install the most important package any Python user should install, ipython. Note that I do a user install for this and also preserve my "ipython" command to run python3 and have ipython2 to run python2:
pip2.7 install ipython
(cd ~/.local/bin;rm ipython;ln -s ipython3 ipython)
and it works!
$ ipython2
Python 2.7.18 (default, Jun 22 2022, 09:38:45)
Type "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
IPython 5.10.0 -- An enhanced Interactive Python.
I am using macOS Sierra 10.12 and after I upgraded my OS I can no longer install packages for python 3 using pip. Before I used to use pip for python2 and pip3 for python 3 as I have both versions of Python. But now I can no longer use pip to install libraries for python2.
Can anyone help me how can I change my default pip installer to python2? So that I can just use pip install in order to install for python 2.
For your information - when I only type python on terminal it says my default is python 2.7.
on running
which pip
I got /usr/local/bin/pip
Which meant it was pointing to pip2
To change default pip to pip3, run
sudo ln -s /usr/local/bin/pip3 /usr/local/bin/pip
install pip for Python2.7 with easy_install:
sudo easy_install-2.7 pip
now you can use pip for the same specific version of Python:
sudo pip2.7 install BeautifulSoup
So I tried to install pip using the get-pip.py file, and when I ran the file, terminal told me I already had pip installed on 2.7. However, when I try to find the version of my pip, terminal tells me pip doesn't exist and points to a version of 3.5 I have installed. Clearly my issue is that I have pip installed on v2.7 but the pip command is linked to v3.5. Any clues on how to fix?
Here's a picture of my terminal output:
To install a package in a particular version of python, use the following commands always:
For python 2.x:
sudo python -m pip install [package]
For python 3.x:
sudo python3 -m pip install [package]
This should resolve the doubt of which python version is the given package getting installed for.
Note: This is assuming you have not created aliases for the python command
I'm fairly new to python. I'm using Ubuntu 14.04 and have both python 2.7.6 and python 3.4.0 installed. I was trying to install BeautifulSoup but couldn't because I get an error saying
The program 'pip' is currently not installed.
I found that it comes bundles with python 3.4. I tried to install pip using sudo easy_install pip as mentioned in another question on stackoverflow. But this gives an error sudo: easy_install: command not found.
What is the problem?
pip appears to have turned into python -m pip (in your case, python3 -m pip, as Ubuntu's keeping the 2.x line available as python) in Python 3.4.
easy_install for Python 2.7 comes as part of the python-setuptools package. Once installed, running easy_install pip would install pip for your Python 2.7 installation's use.
How aboutapt-get install python-pip? At least, Debian official repository has python-pip even from wheezy.
Unfortunately, effective as of April 2018, python-setuptools no longer ships with easy_install, as per Matthias's update:
https://ubuntu.pkgs.org/18.04/ubuntu-main-i386/python-setuptools_39.0.1-2_all.deb.html
However, you can still compile from the source code yourself, and it does work. I just tried it with sudo easy_install shodan, and it ran successfully.
git clone https://github.com/pypa/setuptools.git
cd ./setuptools
python3 bootstrap.py
sudo python3 setup.py install
Hope this helps.
I've just learned how to use virtualenv and I installed Django 1.4.5. I'm assuming that the virtualenv created a clean slate for me to work on so with the Django 1.4.5 installed, I copied all my previous files into the virtualenv environment.
I tried to run the server but I get an error saying "no module named MySQLdb". I think this means that I forgot to install MySQL-python. I tried to install it via
pip install MySQL-python
But I get this error
Downloading/unpacking MySQL-python
Running setup.py egg_info for package MySQL-python
The required version of distribute (>=0.6.28) is not available,
and can't be installed while this script is running. Please
install a more recent version first, using
'easy_install -U distribute'.
(Currently using distribute 0.6.24 (/home/bradford/Development/Django/django_1.4.5/lib/python2.7/site-packages/distribute-0.6.24-py2.7.egg))
Complete output from command python setup.py egg_info:
The required version of distribute (>=0.6.28) is not available,
and can't be installed while this script is running. Please
install a more recent version first, using
'easy_install -U distribute'.
(Currently using distribute 0.6.24 (/home/bradford/Development/Django/django_1.4.5/lib/python2.7/site-packages/distribute-0.6.24-py2.7.egg))
----------------------------------------
Command python setup.py egg_info failed with error code 2 in /home/bradford/Development/Django/django_1.4.5/build/MySQL-python
Not quite sure how to go about fixing this problem =/ any help much appreciated!
I recently had exactly this issue (just not in relation to Django). In my case I am developing on Ubuntu 12.04 using the default pip and distribute versions, which are basically a little out of date for MySQL-python.
Because you are working in an isolated virtualenv, you can safely follow the suggested instruction without affecting your Python installation.
So you can...
workon your_virtualenv #activate your virtualenv, you do use virtualenvwrapper, right?
easy_install -U distribute #update distribute on your virtualenv
pip install MySQL-python #install your package
If for some reason upgrading distribute is not an option, you could try installing an older version of MySQL-python as follows (you'd have to check this version is compatible with your version of Django):
pip install MySQL-python==x.y.z #where x.y.z is the version you want
Spent an hour looking through stackoverflow. Evntually found answer in the other question. This is what saved me:
sudo apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev
mysql_config goes with the package.
When doing in a virtualenv :
pip install MySQL-python
I got
EnvironmentError: mysql_config not found
To install mysql_config, as Artem Fedosov said, first install
sudo apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev
then everything works fine in virtualenv
MySQL driver for Python (mysql-python) needs libmysqlclient-dev. You can get it with:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev
If python-dev is not installed, you may have to install it too:
sudo apt-get install python-dev
Now you can install MySQL driver:
pip install mysql-python
Here is a more detailed documentation for MySQL in Django:
http://codex.themedelta.com/how-to-install-django-with-mysql-in-a-virtualenv-on-linux/
I had to do this:
pip install mysql-python
inside the virtualenv
The commands are always run in ubuntu:
easy_install -U distribute
later
sudo apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev
and finally
pip install MySQL-python
The suggested solutions didn't work out for me, because I still got compilation errors after running
`$ sudo apt-get install libmysqlclient-dev`
so I had to run
apt-get install python-dev
Then everything worked fine for me with
apt-get install python-dev
Try this:
Version Python 2.7
MySQL-python package, you should use either MySQL_python‑1.2.5‑cp27‑none‑win32.whl or
MySQL_python‑1.2.5‑cp27‑none‑win_amd64.whl depending on whether you have installed 32-bit or 64-bit Python.
pip install MySQL_python‑1.2.5‑cp27‑none‑win32.whl
if you are using mysqlclient package, then use
mysqlclient‑1.4.6‑cp27‑cp27m‑win32.whl or
mysqlclient‑1.4.6‑cp27‑cp27m‑win_amd64.whl
pip install mysqlclient‑1.4.6‑cp27‑cp27m‑win32.whl
https://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/#mysqlclient