153

I'm trying to install python3 on RHEL using the following steps:

yum search python3

Which returned No matches found for: python3

Followed by:

yum search python

None of the search results contained python3. What should I try next?

4
  • I suspect RHEL doesn't include Python 3 yet. You may be able to install an RPM built for Fedora: admin.fedoraproject.org/pkgdb/acls/name/python3
    – Thomas K
    Nov 10, 2011 at 23:42
  • You could also always install from source.
    – Danica
    Nov 11, 2011 at 0:47
  • Just noting the EPEL review request for Python 3.4 here: bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1219411 Once that is resolved, I (or someone else) will post a new answer with the EPEL details.
    – ncoghlan
    Jul 1, 2015 at 6:16
  • 3
    Samuel Phan's answer using community yum repos is better than building from source, for exactly the reasons Samuel stated. You should change the accepted answer to his. Mar 9, 2018 at 13:53

19 Answers 19

255

Installing from RPM is generally better, because:

  • you can install and uninstall (properly) python3.
  • the installation time is way faster. If you work in a cloud environment with multiple VMs, compiling python3 on each VMs is not acceptable.

Solution 1: Red Hat & EPEL repositories

Red Hat has added through the EPEL repository:

  • Python 3.4 for CentOS 6
  • Python 3.6 for CentOS 7

[EPEL] How to install Python 3.4 on CentOS 6

sudo yum install -y epel-release
sudo yum install -y python34

# Install pip3
sudo yum install -y python34-setuptools  # install easy_install-3.4
sudo easy_install-3.4 pip

You can create your virtualenv using pyvenv:

pyvenv /tmp/foo

[EPEL] How to install Python 3.6 on CentOS 7

With CentOS7, pip3.6 is provided as a package :)

sudo yum install -y epel-release
sudo yum install -y python36 python36-pip

You can create your virtualenv using pyvenv:

python3.6 -m venv /tmp/foo

If you use the pyvenv script, you'll get a WARNING:

$ pyvenv-3.6 /tmp/foo
WARNING: the pyenv script is deprecated in favour of `python3.6 -m venv`

Solution 2: IUS Community repositories

The IUS Community provides some up-to-date packages for RHEL & CentOS. The guys behind are from Rackspace, so I think that they are quite trustworthy...

https://ius.io/

Check the right repo for you here:

https://ius.io/setup

[IUS] How to install Python 3.6 on CentOS 6

sudo yum install -y https://repo.ius.io/ius-release-el6.rpm
sudo yum install -y python36u python36u-pip

You can create your virtualenv using pyvenv:

python3.6 -m venv /tmp/foo

[IUS] How to install Python 3.6 on CentOS 7

sudo yum install -y https://repo.ius.io/ius-release-el7.rpm
sudo yum install -y python36u python36u-pip

You can create your virtualenv using pyvenv:

python3.6 -m venv /tmp/foo
21
  • 1
    Fixed the IUS release package URL. they have updated the version, that's all. If they update the package again, you can check the link to their RPM from the webpage. Jul 3, 2015 at 14:54
  • 1
    As I said, the link in your answer contains non-printable unicode characters. When I copy/paste your link, here is what I see in VIM: https://dl.iuscommunity.org/pub/ius/stable/CentOS/6/x86_64/iu<200c><200b>s-release-1.0-14.iu‌​s.centos6.noarch.rpm Here is the unicode character: fileformat.info/info/unicode/char/200c/index.htm The URL in my original answer works, I've just tested it. Sep 7, 2015 at 9:01
  • 1
    I've been told that IUS community repository is not as reliable as Software Collections so I would go with Mike Guerette's answer on CentOS 6
    – bformet
    Sep 24, 2015 at 8:18
  • 2
    Using this solution, how would you then install pip for python34 ?
    – Loïc
    Sep 30, 2015 at 13:48
  • 1
    Very good question, I added a comment for that. It's the best I found. If you want to stick to RPM-based installation, you should use IUS repositories for CentOS 7. They provide a python34u-pip. Oct 1, 2015 at 21:11
205

It is easy to install python manually (i.e. build from source):

  1. Download (there may be newer releases on Python.org):

     $ wget https://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.4.3/Python-3.4.3.tar.xz
    
  2. Unzip

     $ tar xf Python-3.* 
     $ cd Python-3.*
    
  3. Prepare compilation

     $ ./configure
    
  4. Build

     $ make
    
  5. Install

     $ make install
    

    OR if you don't want to overwrite the python executable (safer, at least on some distros yum needs python to be 2.x, such as for RHEL6) - you can install python3.* as a concurrent instance to the system default with an altinstall:

     $ make altinstall
    

Now if you want an alternative installation directory, you can pass --prefix to the configurecommand.

Example: for 'installing' Python in /opt/local, just add --prefix=/opt/local.

After the make install step: In order to use your new Python installation, it could be, that you still have to add the [prefix]/bin to the $PATH and [prefix]/lib to the $LD_LIBRARY_PATH (depending of the --prefix you passed)

15
  • 11
    You used: bzip2 -cd Python-3.2.2.tar.bz2 | tar xvf - This is also a simpler posiblity: tar jxvf Python-3.2.2.tar.bz2 Jul 9, 2012 at 17:58
  • 2
    And for me, the resultant binary was named python3.5 and lives here: [root@machine python3.5]# which python3.5 /usr/local/bin/python3.5 So you might want to add a symlink to this named python3 for convenience
    – Will
    May 27, 2016 at 14:36
  • 8
    if you get no acceptable C compiler found in $PATH when installing python reffer to http://stackoverflow.com/questions/19816275/no-acceptable-c-compiler-found-in-path-when-installing-python
    – bnu
    Jun 3, 2016 at 13:10
  • 7
    ./configure --with-ensurepip=install to enable pip3, or you won't have pip3 installed after compilation.
    – Searene
    Nov 20, 2016 at 3:44
  • 3
    This is ridiculous in this day and age where IBM/Redhat has repos and an army of engineers that we have to compile and install from source. Why does IBM & Redhat hate Python? This is BS. Feb 11, 2020 at 5:49
33

In addition to gecco's answer I would change step 3 from:

./configure

to:

./configure --prefix=/opt/python3

Then after installation you could also:

# ln -s /opt/python3/bin/python3 /usr/bin/python3

It is to ensure that installation will not conflict with python installed with yum.

See explanation I have found on Internet:

http://www.hosting.com/support/linux/installing-python-3-on-centosredhat-5x-from-source

3
  • 18
    Why /opt? /usr/local specifically exists for this purpose and that's where ./configure with no explicit --prefix will place it.
    – cababunga
    Feb 12, 2013 at 19:45
  • @cababunga As I wrote I have been influenced by reading tutorial from specified site. Nevertheless installing python in above way may be usable - it would be a lot easier to uninstall it (it looks like uninstall target for make is not provided). Also you could easily install various versions of python3 in specified separate directories under /opt and manually set which one to use or test.
    – rsc
    Feb 13, 2013 at 11:27
  • You may also want to set up your PATH to contain the binaries folder. For me it was export PATH=$PATH:/opt/python3/bin
    – Caleb
    Jan 8, 2015 at 21:24
11

Along with Python 2.7 and 3.3, Red Hat Software Collections now includes Python 3.4 - all work on both RHEL 6 and 7.

RHSCL 2.0 docs are at https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Software_Collections/

Plus lot of articles at developerblog.redhat.com.

<opinion> Using the SCL yum repos may be better than other yum repos because the RPMs are developed/tested by Redhat (i.e. first-party RPMs instead of third-party). </opinion>

edit

Follow these instructions to install Python 3.4 on RHEL 6/7 or CentOS 6/7:

# 1. Install the Software Collections tools:
yum install scl-utils

# 2. Download a package with repository for your system.
#  (See the Yum Repositories on external link. For RHEL/CentOS 6:)
wget https://www.softwarecollections.org/en/scls/rhscl/rh-python34/epel-6-x86_64/download/rhscl-rh-python34-epel-6-x86_64.noarch.rpm
#  or for RHEL/CentOS 7
wget https://www.softwarecollections.org/en/scls/rhscl/rh-python34/epel-7-x86_64/download/rhscl-rh-python34-epel-7-x86_64.noarch.rpm

# 3. Install the repo package (on RHEL you will need to enable optional channel first):
yum install rhscl-rh-python34-*.noarch.rpm

# 4. Install the collection:
yum install rh-python34

# 5. Start using software collections:
scl enable rh-python34 bash

UPDATE 2021-08-16:

  • rhel and centos version 7 are now on python 3.6 by default i believe
  • the SCL yum repo has python version 3.8 as of the date of this writing 2021-08-16 (despite the question still referencing the older python 3.4 version)
5
  • 1
    // , Doesn't this require us to enable a special shell? Combined with virtualenvs, I can see that becoming a pain in the ass. Dec 10, 2015 at 23:53
  • 1
    // , Why does this require scl enable rh-python34 bash? What are the implications for using this later on? Dec 10, 2015 at 23:55
  • Is there a way to install python3.5 on RedHat 6? I tried wget https://www.softwarecollections.org/en/scls/rhscl/rh-python35/epel-6-x86_64/download/rhscl-rh-python35-epel-6-x86_64.noarch.rpm, but it was not found.
    – Searene
    Nov 20, 2016 at 2:53
  • You have to subscribe to get the collections? How much does that cost?
    – Noumenon
    Dec 8, 2017 at 16:00
  • 1
    There is no extra cost. RH Software Collections are part of all RHEL developer subscriptions and most RHEL subscriptions. No-cost RHEL development subscriptions can be obtained from developers.redhat.com/download. These are real RHEL subscriptions - all the same bits as production entitlements - but are for development purposes. Dec 11, 2017 at 13:02
9

Use the SCL repos.

sudo sh -c 'wget -qO- http://people.redhat.com/bkabrda/scl_python33.repo >> /etc/yum.repos.d/scl.repo'
sudo yum install python33
scl enable python27

(This last command will have to be run each time you want to use python27 rather than the system default.)

3
  • 4
    After reading the redhat docs what I needed to do was either; scl enable python33 bash to launch a new shell which will be enabled for python 3 or scl enable python33 'python hello.py' which will run your python file using python 3 in the current shell
    – stratagem
    Sep 24, 2014 at 13:23
  • // , What more generic instructions would also allow the installation of Python 3.4? Aug 24, 2015 at 21:46
  • If you are on RHEL, use Red Hat Software collections: subscription-manager repos --enable rhel-7-server-optional-rpms --enable rhel-server-rhscl-7-rpms. Then you can yum install rh-python36. See How to install Python 3 on RHEL for more info.
    – Rob T.
    Aug 31, 2018 at 15:40
9

Python3 was recently added to EPEL7 as Python34.

There is ongoing (currently) effort to make packaging guidelines about how to package things for Python3 in EPEL7.

See https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1219411
and https://lists.fedoraproject.org/pipermail/python-devel/2015-July/000721.html

1
  • // , What's the hold-up? Pip seems like the simple way to go. Aug 24, 2015 at 21:57
9

You can download a source RPMs and binary RPMs for RHEL6 / CentOS6 from here

This is a backport from the newest Fedora development source rpm to RHEL6 / CentOS6

4
  • That's great. Thanks for your effort, Florian. Maybe running createrepo on those directories would make them even more useful for some people.
    – cababunga
    Feb 12, 2013 at 19:40
  • What a relief. the rpm installed perfectly.
    – lyomi
    Mar 21, 2014 at 15:18
  • // , How do we make a repository from that link? Sep 3, 2015 at 20:45
  • // , I can confirm that this works. Hold on, I just whipped up something quick that used that URL as the baseurl: 0bin.net/paste/… Sep 3, 2015 at 21:07
8

If you are on RHEL and want a Red Hat supported Python, use Red Hat Software collections (RHSCL). The EPEL and IUS packages are not supported by Red Hat. Also many of the answers above point to the CentOS software collections. While you can install those, they aren't the Red Hat supported packages for RHEL.

Also, the top voted answer gives bad advice - On RHEL you do not want to change /usr/bin/python, /usr/bin/python2 because you will likely break yum and other RHEL admin tools. Take a look at /bin/yum, it is a Python script that starts with #!/usr/bin/python. If you compile Python from source, do not do a make install as root. That will overwrite /usr/bin/python. If you break yum it can be difficult to restore your system.

For more info, see How to install Python 3, pip, venv, virtualenv, and pipenv on RHEL on developers.redhat.com. It covers installing and using Python 3 from RHSCL, using Python Virtual Environments, and a number of tips for working with software collections and working with Python on RHEL.

In a nutshell, to install Python 3.6 via Red Hat Software Collections:

$ su -
# subscription-manager repos --enable rhel-7-server-optional-rpms \
   --enable rhel-server-rhscl-7-rpms
# yum -y install @development
# yum -y install rh-python36

# yum -y install rh-python36-numpy \
   rh-python36-scipy \ 
   rh-python36-python-tools \
   rh-python36-python-six

To use a software collection you have to enable it:

scl enable rh-python36 bash

However if you want Python 3 permanently enabled, you can add the following to your ~/.bashrc and then log out and back in again. Now Python 3 is permanently in your path.

# Add RHSCL Python 3 to my login environment
source scl_source enable rh-python36

Note: once you do that, typing python now gives you Python 3.6 instead of Python 2.7.

See the above article for all of this and a lot more detail.

7

I see all the answers as either asking to compile python3 from code or installing the binary RPM package. Here is another answer to enable EPEL (Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux) and then install python using yum. Steps for RHEL 7.5 (Maipo)

yum install wget –y
wget https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/7/x86_64/Packages/e/epel-release-7-XX.noarch.rpm # Verify actual RPM name by browsing dir over browser
rpm –ivh epel-*.rpm
yum install python36

Also see link

3
  • Works well, especially if official way through SCL doesn't work. Complement pip3 install then: sudo yum install python34-setuptools
    – OSP
    Jan 8, 2019 at 9:26
  • Link is now 404
    – f01
    Aug 28, 2020 at 11:43
  • 1
    @f01, link works OK but you need to replace XX with the actual number. Just browse https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/7/x86_64/Packages/e/ and search for "epel-release-7-". As of today (2021-07-09) the version is 13 (epel-release-7-13.noarch.rpm)
    – Fer B.
    Jul 9, 2021 at 9:23
5

I was having the same issue using the python 2.7. Follow the below steps to upgrade successfully to 3.6. You can also try this one-

  1. See before upgrading version is 2.x

    python --version
    Python 2.7.5
    
  2. Use below command to upgrade your python to 3.x version-

    yum install python3x

    replace x with the version number you want.

    i.e. for installing python 3.6 execute

    yum install python36
    
  3. After that if you want to set this python for your default version then in bashrc file add

    vi ~/.bashrc

    alias python='python3.6'
    
  4. execute bash command to apply the settings

    bash 
    
  5. Now you can see the version below

    python --version
    Python 3.6.3
    
1
  • This answer won't work without adding one of the 3rd party repos either EPEL or IUS. There is no python36 package in RHEL. The RHSCL package is rh-python36.
    – Rob T.
    Aug 31, 2018 at 15:53
4

Here are the steps i followed to install Python3:

yum install wget
wget https://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.6.0/Python-3.6.0.tar.xz  
sudo tar xvf Python-3.*   
cd Python-3.* 
sudo ./configure --prefix=/opt/python3    
sudo make   
sudo make install   
sudo ln -s /opt/python3/bin/python3 /usr/bin/python3

$ /usr/bin/python3    
Python 3.6.0
1
  • 2
    If you build from source without installing a number of -devel dependencies (SSL, bzip, etc) you'll be missing a number of modules that depend on shared objects. Installing one of the rpm based distributions (RHSCL, EPEL, or IUS) is a better idea
    – Rob T.
    Aug 31, 2018 at 15:58
4

Three steps using Python 3.5 by Software Collections:

sudo yum install centos-release-scl
sudo yum install rh-python35
scl enable rh-python35 bash

Note that sudo is not needed for the last command. Now we can see that python 3 is the default for the current shell:

python --version
Python 3.5.1

Simply skip the last command if you'd rather have Python 2 as the default for the current shell.

Now let's say that your Python 3 scripts give you an error like /usr/bin/env: python3: No such file or directory. That's because the installation is usually done to an unusual path:

/opt/rh/rh-python35/root/bin/python3

The above would normally be a symlink. If you want python3 to be automatically added to the $PATH for all users on startup, one way to do this is adding a file like:

sudo vim /etc/profile.d/rh-python35.sh

Which would have something like:

#!/bin/bash

PATH=$PATH:/opt/rh/rh-python35/root/bin/

And now after a reboot, if we do

python3 --version

It should just work. One exception would be an auto-generated user like "jenkins" in a Jenkins server which doesn't have a shell. In that case, manually adding the path to $PATH in scripts would be one way to go.

Finally, if you're using sudo pip3 to install packages, but it tells you that pip3 cannot be found, it could be that you have a secure_path in /etc/sudoers. Checking with sudo visudo should confirm that. To temporarily use the standard PATH when running commands you can do, for example:

sudo env "PATH=$PATH" pip3 --version

See this question for more details.

NOTE: There is a newer Python 3.6 by Software Collections, but I wouldn't recommend it at this time, because I had major headaches trying to install Pycurl. For Python 3.5 that isn't an issue because I just did sudo yum install sclo-python35-python-pycurl which worked out of the box.

2
  • No package centos-release-scl available.
    – Joe
    Mar 5, 2019 at 10:13
  • It's available in CentOS repository.
    – Nagev
    Mar 6, 2019 at 14:47
3

If you want official RHEL packages you can use RHSCL (Red Hat Software Collections)

More details:

You have to have access to Red Hat Customer Portal to read full articles.

2
  • // , Just upvoted. Would you be willing to make a summary of what one does to use the RHSCL for this? This is a question and answer site, after all. Aug 24, 2015 at 21:55
  • 1
    The article How to install Python 3 on RHEL has up-to-date steps for Python 3.6 via software collections and many tips for working with RHSCLs, Python, and virtual environments.
    – Rob T.
    Aug 31, 2018 at 15:55
1

yum install python34.x86_64 works if you have epel-release installed, which this answer explains how to, and I confirmed it worked on RHEL 7.3

$ cat /etc/*-release
NAME="Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server"
VERSION="7.3 (Maipo)

$ type python3
python3 is hashed (/usr/bin/python3)
1

For RHEL on Amazon Linux, using python3 I had to do :

sudo yum install python34-devel

1
  • 2
    No package python34-devel available.
    – Joe
    Mar 5, 2019 at 10:16
1

Full working 36 when SCL is not available (based on Joys input)

yum install wget –y
wget https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/7/x86_64/Packages/e/epel-release-7-11.noarch.rpm
rpm –ivh epel-*.rpm
yum install python36

sudo yum install python34-setuptools
sudo mkdir /usr/local/lib/python3.6
sudo mkdir /usr/local/lib/python3.6/site-packages

sudo easy_install-3.6 pip

Finally activate the environment...

pyvenv-3.6 py3
source py3/bin/activate

Then python3

0

You can install miniconda (https://conda.io/miniconda.html). That's a bit more than just python 3.7 but the installation is very straightforward and simple.

curl https://repo.anaconda.com/miniconda/Miniconda3-latest-Linux-x86_64.sh -O
sudo yum install bzip2
bash Miniconda3-latest-Linux-x86_64.sh

You'll have to accept the license agreement and choose some options in interactive mode (accept the defaults). I believe it can be also installed silently somehow.

1
  • Couldn't find actual python command afterwards, is it wrapped?
    – Mugen
    Mar 17, 2020 at 15:23
0

For those working on AWS EC2 RHEL 7.5, (use sudo) enable required repos

yum-config-manager --enable rhui-REGION-rhel-server-optional
yum-config-manager --enable rhui-REGION-rhel-server-rhscl

Install Python 3.6

yum install rh-python36

Install other dependencies

yum install rh-python36-numpy  rh-python36-scipy  rh-python36-python-tools  rh-python36-python-six
0

As of RHEL 8, you can install python3 directly from the official repositories:

$ podman run --rm -ti ubi8 bash
[root@453fc5c55104 /]# yum install python3                                                                                                                                                    
Updating Subscription Management repositories.                                                                                                                                                
Unable to read consumer identity                                                                                                                                                              
Subscription Manager is operating in container mode.                                                                                                                                          
This system is not registered to Red Hat Subscription Management. You can use subscription-manager to register.  

...

Installed:
  platform-python-pip-9.0.3-16.el8.noarch
  python3-pip-9.0.3-16.el8.noarch
  python3-setuptools-39.2.0-5.el8.noarch
  python36-3.6.8-2.module+el8.1.0+3334+5cb623d7.x86_64      

Complete!

You can even get python 3.8:

[root@453fc5c55104 /]# yum install python38
Installed:
  python38-3.8.0-6.module+el8.2.0+5978+503155c0.x86_64
  python38-libs-3.8.0-6.module+el8.2.0+5978+503155c0.x86_64                                       
  python38-pip-19.2.3-5.module+el8.2.0+5979+f9f0b1d2.noarch                                  
  python38-pip-wheel-19.2.3-5.module+el8.2.0+5979+f9f0b1d2.noarch                                 
  python38-setuptools-41.6.0-4.module+el8.2.0+5978+503155c0.noarch                           
  python38-setuptools-wheel-41.6.0-4.module+el8.2.0+5978+503155c0.noarch                          

Complete!

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