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I was trying to install Python packages a system I recently gained access to. I was trying to take advantage of Python's relatively new per user site-packages directory, and the new option --user. (The option is currently undocumented, however it exists for Python 2.6+; you can see the help by running python setup.py install --help.)

When I tried running

python setup.py install --user

on any package I downloaded, I always got the following error:

error: can't combine user with with prefix/exec_prefix/home or install_(plat)base

The error was extremely perplexing because, as you can see, I wasn't providing the --prefix, --exec-prefix, --install-base, or --install-platbase flags as command line options. I wasted a lot of time trying to figure out what the problem was. I document my answer below, in hopes to spare some other poor soul a few hours of yak shaving.

4
  • 2
    I got the same error trying to install python 3.6 from source with ./configure --prefix=${HOME} while having "user=1" in ~/.pydistutils.cfg. In that case, I need to temporary comment "user=1" so that the installation process can complete.
    – bli
    Jan 25, 2017 at 17:11
  • bli gave a good hint. I was wondering where the --user option is coming from even I did not use that option. pip install --prefix /home/myhomedir. I don't have the ~/.pydistutils.cfg file, still looking for where --user option is set.
    – Kemin Zhou
    Dec 6, 2019 at 22:49
  • Figure out the source of the problem. This is Debian-specific. After adding --system option to pip the problem went away.
    – Kemin Zhou
    Dec 6, 2019 at 23:16
  • @KeminZhou This --system option fixed so many pip install issues for me. Thank you! Oct 4, 2022 at 17:37

6 Answers 6

173

One time workaround:

pip install --user --install-option="--prefix=" <package_name>

or

python setup.py install --user --prefix=

Note that there is no text (not even whitespace) after the =.

Do not forget the --user flag.

Installing multiple packages:

Create ~/.pydistutils.cfg (or equivalent for your OS/platform) with the following contents:

[install]
prefix=

Note that there is no text (not even whitespace) after the =.

Then run the necessary pip install --user or python setup.py install --user commands. Do not forget the --user flag.

Finally, remove or rename this file. Leaving this file present will cause issues when installing Python packages system-wide (i.e., without --user) as this user with this ~/.pydistutils.cfg.

The cause of this issue

This appears to be an issue with both OpenSUSE and RedHat, which has lead to a bug in virtualenv on these platforms.

The error stems from a system-level distutils configuration file (in my case /usr/lib64/python2.6/distutils/distutils.cfg) where there was this

[install]
prefix=/usr/local

Basically, this is equivalent to always running the install command as install --prefix=/usr/local. You have to override this specification using one of the techniques above.

10
  • 1
    Thank you very much. The empty prefix fixed my problem: pip 1.1 openSuSE 11.4.
    – guettli
    Apr 19, 2012 at 9:30
  • 7
    You could also pass a empty --prefix= to setup.py in the command line to override the value in the system-wide distutils.cfg
    – Tuxdude
    Jul 8, 2012 at 21:06
  • 2
    Wow! This worked for me too. I received the same error when trying to install Powerline. powerline.readthedocs.org/en/latest/installation/…
    – A-Dubb
    Jul 3, 2013 at 7:17
  • 4
    On second thought, doing this will cause MAJOR problems. DO NOT keep this file around. See brew doctor for more info (assuming you're using homebrew on Mac OS X).
    – A-Dubb
    Jul 7, 2013 at 21:03
  • 1
    Note that keeping this file like this will make Python think that / is your root python library directory, leading to confusing issues if you try to install other new packages. Feb 11, 2014 at 20:45
7

Posting to save others time, as no available answers worked for me...

In some environments, using the --target (-t) switch will still hit the same error. In my testing on two flavors of linux, I encountered the same issue when using the --prefix= parameter.

Code:

PYTHONUSERBASE=/tmp/ pip install --user --force-reinstall $PACKAGE

Explanation: My workaround, which seems to work across many environments (MacOS, Amazon Linux, Debian) is to set the PYTHONUSERBASE environment variable to a temp location. --force-reinstall is used to trigger the local installation even when the package is already installed.

This will result in the module being compiled/installed (depending on the OS and Python version) to: /tmp/lib/python2.7/site-packages/*

6

As has been noted in the comments, the accepted answer (by @gotgenes, who, presumably, has genes) can lead to unexpected consequences.

@rogeleaderr says, "Note that keeping this file like this will make Python think that / is your root python library directory, leading to confusing issues if you try to install other new packages."

Rather than write a new config file, as @gotgenes recommends, a better option is to add --prefix= (with no text to the right of the equals sign) as an option on the command line, as in

$ python setup.py install --user --prefix=
2

You can simply run pip install --user . , no prefix args required.

This is better anyway because it will default to python3 if your pip is configured to use Python 3. (I forgot to enter python3 setup.py and it installed a 3-only package under 2.7)

(credit https://stackoverflow.com/a/1550235/4364036)

1

I had have the same problem. It was hidden inside the ~/.config/pip/pip.conf with:

[global]
target=/foo/bar

Such a config was created by a third-party script without my knowledge.

I suggest checking the pip configuration files and removing the target=/foo/bar options.

0

The following didn't work for me:

pip install --user --install-option="--prefix=" <package_name>

However, when using it with sudo, it works:

sudo pip install --user --install-option="--prefix=" <package_name>

Thanks to gotgenes for the answer

1
  • Of course using sudo it will work. It will also polute/break the OS package management. Jun 18, 2023 at 5:58

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