How can I install Django for Python 3.x?
I would strongly suggest avoiding pip3
to install things in the system site-packages. I've made these arguments before but I'll give you the notes:
- System updates break everything
- Installing apt packages can overwrite pip-installed things
- Version conflicts
- Distribution upgrades are unpredictable chaos. Seriously. I've lost hair to these.
I would strongly advocate using virtualenv
. It's a massive pain in the wherever to get going but once you've got it set up you have a complete Python environment under your complete control. This does mean more work (you'll have to check things for updates and pip
doesn't really help there yet) but you don't have to worry about what Ubuntu's doing.
I have an environment for each site (just sitting in a subdirectory called venv
). Some people —including me, once upon a time— prefer to share their environments between multiple sites. I found this easier to maintain in terms of issuing updates but some sites can be fragile or require old versions and that holds the whole environment back. YMMV.
In terms of installing this, and just to slap me in the face, virtualenv
isn't packaged for Python 3 yet so we have to use pip3
:
$ sudo pip3 install virtualenv
...
$ virtualenv-3.3 myenv
Using base prefix '/usr'
New python executable in myenv/bin/python3
Also creating executable in myenv/bin/python
Installing setuptools, pip...done.
$ source myenv/bin/activate # This is important!
Your bash PS1 should now be preneded with (myenv)
to let you know you're in a different environment. We can test the environment to check we're on the right versions of things (not using the system versions for starters):
$ python --version
Python 3.3.2+
$ which python pip
/home/oli/Desktop/myenv/bin/python
/home/oli/Desktop/myenv/bin/pip
And then you can just carry on as if you were master of the universe. You don't need root to use pip
anymore and you don't need to specify pip3
. It's just a lot more friendly.
$ pip install django umemcache
...
If you're using something like uwsgi
to host this (you should) use its -H flag (or home config argument) to tell it where the Python environment lives.
As for making development easier, you can automatically "mount" your virtualenv
environment. There are many scripts out there but this one is mine (this lives at the bottom of my ~/.bashrc
:
export VENVDIR="/web"
export VENVDIR_VENV="$VENVDIR/venv"
venvcd() {
wd=$(pwd)
[[ $wd == $VENVDIR/* || $wd == $VENVDIR ]] && wasin=true || unset wasin
builtin cd "$@"
wd=$(pwd)
if [[ $wd == $VENVDIR/* || $wd == $VENVDIR ]]; then
source $VENVDIR_VENV/bin/activate
else
[ $wasin ] && deactivate
fi
}
alias cd="venvcd"
cd .
Whenever I cd
into /web
(where all my development websites are stored), it mounts the virtualenv for me. Note that I only have one environment for all my sites so this will only suite you if you do something similar. There are many other ways of doing similar things.
I figured out how to do this with pip
. Turns out I needed pip3
:
sudo pip3 install Django
did the trick.
You might need to get pip3 by:
sudo apt-get install python3-pip
Django for Python3 has now been added recently. So simply type in a terminal:
apt-get install python3-django