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I'm using virtualenv and the virtualenvwrapper. I can switch between virtualenv's just fine using the workon command.

me@mymachine:~$ workon env1
(env1)me@mymachine:~$ workon env2
(env2)me@mymachine:~$ workon env1
(env1)me@mymachine:~$ 

How do I exit all virtual environments and work on my system environment again? Right now, the only way I have of getting back to me@mymachine:~$ is to exit the shell and start a new one. That's kind of annoying. Is there a command to work on "nothing", and if so, what is it? If such a command does not exist, how would I go about creating it?

3
  • 8
    There is a command to workon "nothing" - it displays all your available virtual environments, which is pretty nifty. Just type "workon" with no arguments and hit enter. The command to leave is "deactivate", as answered below.
    – Dannid
    Oct 7, 2014 at 20:47
  • Does closing the shell deactivate all the environments used the shell session. Just wanted to get an idea if it modifies the path env variable of the windows and just leaves it like that once the shell is closed ? Apr 26, 2021 at 7:54
  • 1
    @MukeshMahadev Yes, activation is only for the current shell.
    – Apreche
    Apr 26, 2021 at 13:50

16 Answers 16

4116

Usually, activating a virtualenv gives you a shell function named:

$ deactivate

which puts things back to normal.

I have just looked specifically again at the code for virtualenvwrapper, and, yes, it too supports deactivate as the way to escape from all virtualenvs.

If you are trying to leave an Anaconda environment, the command depends upon your version of conda. Recent versions (like 4.6) install a conda function directly in your shell, in which case you run:

conda deactivate

Older conda versions instead implement deactivation using a stand-alone script:

source deactivate
8
  • 213
    The “deactivate” command is not a binary, nor a script that you “source”; it is a shell alias that gets defined dynamically in your current shell by the “activate” script. Feb 6, 2013 at 22:28
  • 7
    @Apreche In the meantime (almost four years later) this appears to have been added to the documentation.
    – gertvdijk
    Mar 14, 2013 at 14:26
  • 8
    Would be much more intuitive if it were called "workoff" or "unworkon". Or if "workon" were called "activate". Thank goodness for alias.
    – kkurian
    Jun 18, 2013 at 17:54
  • 8
    @kkurian — you should suggest that on the issue tracker for virtualenvwrapper and maybe Doug Hellmann would consider it! Note, for those who might read these comments later, that workon is NOT a native virtualenv command (which is what the original question is about) but a virtualenvwrapper command! Jun 29, 2013 at 23:42
  • 29
    Guess what the actual virtualenv command inside of "workon" is called? ...(spoiler warning)... ...(spoiler warning)... ...(spoiler warning)... ...(spoiler warning)... activate!
    – FutureNerd
    Mar 20, 2014 at 5:18
141

Use:

$ deactivate 

If this doesn't work, try

$ source deactivate

Anyone who knows how Bash source works will think that's odd, but some wrappers/workflows around virtualenv implement it as a complement/counterpart to source activate. Your mileage may vary.

8
  • 21
    deactivate is a function that gets created when you source the activate file. Your suggestion to do source deactivate doesn't make sense at all, as there is no file named deactivate
    – Anthon
    Apr 12, 2015 at 8:14
  • 15
    This doesn't deserve the downvotes. See edit of selected response: source deactivate is for the anaconda environment. Nov 13, 2015 at 19:52
  • 5
    It "deserves" downvotes for not meeting the SO answer quality standards. It's more of a comment than an answer. But, because of the 79 reputation of the poster, we should be nice and give good feedback. Mar 17, 2017 at 15:22
  • @Abdul I have demonstrated how you can improve your answer quality in Revision 2 at stackoverflow.com/posts/29586756/revisions Mar 17, 2017 at 15:30
  • this is very unhelpful if you don't have a deactivate command in your shell. I don't really understand why this would help the problem. There is no deactivate script in the virtual env.
    – bgenchel
    Feb 28, 2018 at 6:26
67

I defined an alias, workoff, as the opposite of workon:

alias workoff='deactivate'

It is easy to remember:

[bobstein@host ~]$ workon django_project
(django_project)[bobstein@host ~]$ workoff
[bobstein@host ~]$
4
  • 1
    In which file? .bashrc?
    – seyed
    Jun 8, 2015 at 17:59
  • @seyed yes, see this answer for an example of alias in ~/.bashrc
    – Bob Stein
    Jun 8, 2015 at 19:37
  • 33
    I like this alias. Reminds me of the Karate Kid (waxon; waxoff)
    – C0deH4cker
    Oct 2, 2016 at 1:59
  • @C0deH4cker: I signed into SO and came back to this question just to +1 your comment :p
    – pooley1994
    Nov 15, 2019 at 22:24
42

To activate a Python virtual environment:

$cd ~/python-venv/
$./bin/activate

To deactivate:

$deactivate
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  • 3
    In terminal on OS X10.11.1, I seem to have to use: $source activate Dec 5, 2015 at 19:15
  • 1
    I didn't need source. I did $cd /to/dir/i/want/my/virtualenv/installed then $virtualenv name_i_want_for_it then $. name_i_want_for_it/bin/activate virtualenv still seems a bit off to me. Needs to be improved...
    – uchuugaka
    Dec 28, 2015 at 8:32
  • 4
    "source" is the same as the "." command.. either can be used to source a file Jan 10, 2017 at 18:12
32

Running deactivate [name of your environment] is able to exit/deactivate from your python environment.

Example with python3.6 Windows 10 in PowerShell:

PS C:\Users\kyrlon\Desktop> py -m venv env1
PS C:\Users\kyrlon\Desktop> .\env1\Scripts\activate
(env1) PS C:\Users\kyrlon\Desktop> deactivate env1
PS C:\Users\kyrlon\Desktop> py -m venv env1

Example with python3.9 on Linux Ubuntu 20.04 LTS Desktop:

kyrlon@pc1:~$ python3 -m venv venv1
kyrlon@pc1:~$ source venv1/bin/activate
(venv1) kyrlon@pc1:~$ deactivate venv1
kyrlon@pc1:~$
1
  • 1
    I had a curious situation where I couldn't deactivate, so solution wise I just closed the terminal in that situation. However, thanks for mentioning that explicitly naming the python venv also works. I don't if it would have worked, since I can't reproduce the original issue, but I just tested that this works on its own on Python 3.11 as well Aug 29, 2023 at 11:54
25

In MacOs ventura -

to activate -

 sudo chmod -R 755  ./venv/bin
 source venv/bin/activate    

to deactivate -

deactivate
13

I found that when within a Miniconda3 environment I had to run:

conda deactivate

Neither deactivate nor source deactivate worked for me.

1
  • 2
    deactivate was for virtualenv, and source deactivate is for old conda on Linux. conda deactivate is a good cross-platform way for conda envs (not virtualenvs) Feb 13, 2020 at 14:10
11

For my particular case, I go to to the working directory

CD /myworkingdirectory

Then I activate my env like this:

my-env/scripts/activate

From this same working folder (/myworkingdirectory) to deactivate, I tried this but it does nothing:

my-env/scripts/deactivate

This does work:

deactivate
10

You can use virtualenvwrapper in order to ease the way you work with virtualenv.

Installing virtualenvwrapper:

pip install virtualenvwrapper

If you are using a standard shell, open your ~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc if you use Oh My Zsh. Add these two lines:

export WORKON_HOME=$HOME/.virtualenvs
source /usr/local/bin/virtualenvwrapper.sh

To activate an existing virtualenv, use command workon:

$ workon myenv
(myenv)$

In order to deactivate your virtualenv:

(myenv)$ deactivate

Here is my tutorial, step by step on how to install virtualenv and virtualenvwrapper.

4
  • 2
    I see little difference compared to built-in virtualenv
    – Nam G VU
    Sep 8, 2016 at 11:35
  • 1
    @NamGVU Notice the workon command, it works from any directory. Sep 28, 2016 at 7:44
  • 1
    As mentioned in another post's comment (and Stackoverflow doesn't have a practical way to point to it) you cannot use deactivate in a shell script without first sourcing the script that defines this function (in that case you will have that command not found... error) Feb 25, 2019 at 14:33
  • @levi I think it is "deactivate myenv" instead (not simple "deactivate")
    – ppuschmann
    Oct 14, 2022 at 10:42
10

Using the deactivate feature provided by the venv's activate script requires you to trust the deactivation function to be properly coded to cleanly reset all environment variables back to how they were before— taking into account not only the original activation, but also any switches, configuration, or other work you may have done in the meantime.

It's probably fine, but it does introduce a new, non-zero risk of leaving your environment modified afterwards.

However, it's not technically possible for a process to directly alter the environment variables of its parent, so we can use a separate sub-shell to be absolutely sure our venvs don't leave any residual changes behind:


To activate:

$ bash --init-file PythonVenv/bin/activate

  • This starts a new shell around the venv. Your original bash shell remains unmodified.

To deactivate:

$ exit OR [CTRL]+[D]

  • This exits the entire shell the venv is in, and drops you back to the original shell from before the activation script made any changes to the environment.

Example:

[user@computer ~]$ echo $VIRTUAL_ENV
No virtualenv!

[user@computer ~]$ bash --init-file PythonVenv/bin/activate

(PythonVenv) [user@computer ~]$ echo $VIRTUAL_ENV
/home/user/PythonVenv

(PythonVenv) [user@computer ~]$ exit
exit

[user@computer ~]$ echo $VIRTUAL_ENV
No virtualenv!
7

$ conda deactivate
or
$ source deactivate
would work.

If it doesn't work, try deactivate [name of your environment] instead.

1
5

Since the deactivate function created by sourcing ~/bin/activate cannot be discovered by the usual means of looking for such a command in ~/bin, you may wish to create one that just executes the function deactivate.

The problem is that a script named deactivate containing a single command deactivate will cause an endless loop if accidentally executed while not in the venv. A common mistake.

This can be avoided by only executing deactivate if the function exists (i.e. has been created by sourcing activate).

#!/bin/bash

declare -Ff deactivate  && deactivate
3

I use zsh-autoenv which is based off autoenv.

zsh-autoenv automatically sources (known/whitelisted) .autoenv.zsh files, typically used in project root directories. It handles "enter" and leave" events, nesting, and stashing of variables (overwriting and restoring).

Here is an example:

; cd dtree 
Switching to virtual environment: Development tree utiles
;dtree(feature/task24|✓); cat .autoenv.zsh       
# Autoenv.
echo -n "Switching to virtual environment: "
printf "\e[38;5;93m%s\e[0m\n" "Development tree utiles"
workon dtree
# eof
dtree(feature/task24|✓); cat .autoenv_leave.zsh 
deactivate

So when I leave the dtree directory, the virtual environment is automatically exited.

"Development tree utiles" is just a name… No hidden mean linking to the Illuminati in here.

0
3

I my case, I was able to activate virtual environment using env-name\scripts\activate and deactivate it using deactivate. However, after running update on my windows PC deactivate was no longer recognized as an internal or external command. What I used from that moment onward is env-name\scripts\deactivate and that solved the problem.

0

I had the same problem while working on an installer script. I took a look at what the bin/activate_this.py did and reversed it.

Example:

#! /usr/bin/python
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import os
import sys

# Path to virtualenv
venv_path = os.path.join('/home', 'sixdays', '.virtualenvs', 'test32')

# Save old values
old_os_path = os.environ['PATH']
old_sys_path = list(sys.path)
old_sys_prefix = sys.prefix


def deactivate():
    # Change back by setting values to starting values
    os.environ['PATH'] = old_os_path
    sys.prefix = old_sys_prefix
    sys.path[:0] = old_sys_path


# Activate the virtualenvironment
activate_this = os.path.join(venv_path, 'bin/activate_this.py')
execfile(activate_this, dict(__file__=activate_this))


# Print list of pip packages for virtualenv for example purpose
import pip
print str(pip.get_installed_distributions())

# Unload pip module
del pip

# Deactivate/switch back to initial interpreter
deactivate()

# Print list of initial environment pip packages for example purpose
import pip
print str(pip.get_installed_distributions())

I am not 100% sure if it works as intended. I may have missed something completely.

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    if deactivate resets value of environment path, system path, default prompt then your deactivate function is good approach. I like your script. Already given +1.
    – Ramkumar D
    Jun 6, 2016 at 8:00
0

If you don't know how to exit some python environment I would just run

bash --norc

as there is a risk you missed deleting that code for entering to some python environment, which something such as conda/mamba already installed into your .bashrc The conda/mamba enters environments the same way you can run bash inside bash. Default installation forces base environment to be activated by default, which drives me crazy as it might break lot of things, to exit it you just type

mamba deactivate

But you can configure conda in a way that you activate it only when you use it. Then if you e.g. type

mamba activate env
(env)mamba activate base
(base)mamba activate base
(base)mamba activate xy

You will actually be in nested environment (xy) and (xy) -deactivate-> (base) -deactivate-> (base) -deactivate-> (env) -deactivate-> no conda/mamba.

So if you are in some environment, do not know how much nested it is and you want to get base environment, you can also use

mamba activate base

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