So, once again, I make a nice python program which makes my life ever the more easier and saves a lot of time. Ofcourse, this involves a virtualenv, made with the mkvirtualenv function of virtualenvwrapper. The project has a requirements.txt file with a few required libraries (requests too :D) and the program won't run without these libraries.

I am trying to add a bin/run-app executable shell script which would be in my path (symlink actually). Now, inside this script, I need to switch to the virtualenv before I can run this program. So I put this in

#!/bin/bash
# cd into the project directory
workon "$(cat .venv)"
python main.py

A file .venv contains the virtualenv name. But when I run this script, I get workon: command not found error.

Of course, I have the virtualenvwrapper.sh sourced in my bashrc but it doesn't seem to be available in this shell script.

So, how can I access those virtualenvwrapper functions here? Or am I doing this the wrong way? How do you launch your python tools, each of which has its own virtualenv!?

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3 Answers

Just source the virtualenvwrapper.sh script in your script to import the virtualenvwrapper's functions. You should then be able to use the workon function in your script.

And maybe better, you could create a shell script (you could name it venv-run.sh for example) to run any Python script into a given virtualenv, and place it in /usr/bin, /usr/local/bin, or any directory which is in your PATH.

Such a script could look like this:

#!/bin/sh
source /path/to/virtualenvwrapper.sh
workon $1
python $2
deactivate

And could be used simply like venv-run.sh my_virtualenv /path/to/script.py

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This requires hard-coding the virtualenvwrapper.sh scripts's location, which is dependent on the OS, among many other things. – Shrikant Sharat Sep 24 '11 at 14:07
@ShrikantSharat well, as this is meant to be just an easier way for you to run scripts in a virtualenv (so only on your system), it shouldn't really be a problem, is it? If you wanted to distribute your code, i doubt you'd ask users to install virtualenv and create one, you'd simply give him a list of dependencies to install. – MatToufoutu Sep 24 '11 at 20:05
The users would be my techy friends who would also want a virtualenv for this program's dependencies. I don't have to ask them to ;) – Shrikant Sharat Sep 25 '11 at 10:52
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If your Python script requires a particular virtualenv then put/install it in virtualenv's bin directory. If you need access to that script outside of the environment then you could make a symlink.

main.py from virtualenv's bin:

#!/path/to/virtualenv/bin/python
import yourmodule

if __name__=="__main__":
   yourmodule.main()

Symlink in your PATH:

pymain -> /path/to/virtualenv/bin/main.py

In bin/run-app:

#!/bin/sh
# cd into the project directory
pymain arg1 arg2 ...
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This works, but I don't like putting the path to virtualenv's python in the #! line, feels a bit dirty. Also, this extra step of creating the main.py inside the virtualenv makes it less portable. My friends can't just clone and run it from me :) – Shrikant Sharat Sep 24 '11 at 14:06
@Shrikant Sharat: If you write simple setup.py then pip install does for you both shebang and copying to virtualenv/bin. Your friends can just: pip install git+... if they like bleeding edge. Note in this case main.py is copied to their virtualenv and shebang is written to point to their virtualenv/python. – J.F. Sebastian Sep 24 '11 at 17:59
@Sebastian, Never considered that option but it sounds good. Any good doc reading on that you recommend (other than the python docs which I am checking out now), if any. Thanks! – Shrikant Sharat Sep 25 '11 at 10:50
@Shrikant Sharat: e.g., guide.python-distribute.org pip-installer.org – J.F. Sebastian Sep 25 '11 at 19:35
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up vote 0 down vote accepted

Apparently, I was doing this the wrong way. Instead of saving the virtualenv's name in the .venv file, I should be putting the virtualenv's directory path.

(cdvirtualenv && pwd) > .venv

and in the bin/run-app, I put

source "$(cat .venv)/bin/activate"
python main.py

And yay!

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