3

I just installed Python 2.7 in our server, they had 2.4 installed before hand.

After I built the new version, my path is still pointing to the old version of python, do you know an easy way to change this.

I do not have sudo permissions nor root access.

1
  • 2
    virtualenv, and not merely because you want to use different versions of python... imagine the need to install new modules after you get your interpreter Nov 21, 2012 at 9:46

3 Answers 3

3

Because you are on the server and don't have root permissions, the best choice for you is to use virtualenv

Build Python 2.7, for example, as following:

$ ./configure --prefix=~/mydir
$ make
$ make install

Download virtualen.py file and run:

$ ~/mydir/bin/python virtualenv.py my_environment

This will create an isolated Python 2.7 environment for you inside my_environment directory.

To activate it run source my_environment/bin/activate and that's it. Now python executable will be your Python 2.7. Additionally you will have pip installed and thus can easily install any additional libraries into your environment.

4
  • Sourcing activate is for the current session only. Other answers mention how to use .profile or similar to make such settings persistent.
    – MvG
    Nov 21, 2012 at 10:26
  • The point here is that you can have multiple environments, so when you login to remote shell, you can choose which one to activate. But I agree that you should also put export PATH=$PATH:/path/to/install/dir/bin into .bashrc or something to easy access Python 2.7 executable outside of virtualenv.
    – Maxim
    Nov 21, 2012 at 11:06
  • Thanks ! It worked for me. To have it work fine I had to do some additional operations : $ export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:~/mydir/lib to enable finding shared library libpython2.7.so.1.0 (as I configured with option --enable-shared). Then added the command above plus source my_environment/bin/activate to my .bashrc to have everything persistent. Finally source ~/.bashrc. May 19, 2013 at 14:44
  • Also, added alias python=python2.7 to the .bashrc, to keep consistency while running a script (as my system was still calling the 2.6.6 when calling python). May 19, 2013 at 14:51
0

First, you should check your ~/.profile and your shells config files (e.g. ~/.bashrc for bash) for any export $PATH= (or PYTHONPATH, depending on what you're referring to exactly) directives containing the offending path. If there are some, change them and relogin. That should fix your problem.

If it doesn't, talk to your admin. If that doesn't help either, you can do the following. In your shell, run (may substitute PATH with PYTHONPATH, depending on what you really need):

echo $PATH

copy the output and modify it according to your needs. Then open another shell and run (remember the substitution):

export PATH="whatever you copied before"

check that everything is fine (i.e. that you can still call all applications you need and that your path is adapted accordingly). If that's the case, add the command to your ~/.profile.

0

This answer assumes your environment is Linux, Unix or something similar.

If your problem is the PATH environment variable not pointing at the correct binary, then modify that PATH: make it include a given directory, e.g. ~/bin, by executing PATH=${HOME}/bin:${PATH} from one of your profile files, e.g. ~/.profile. Make sure to create that directory, and have it contain a symlink named python pointing to the correct version of Python.

This won't help for scripts which have a hardcoded path, e.g. start with #!/usr/bin/python. When you call these directly from the command line, you can simply call the interpreter (i.e. python) instead, passing the name of the script as an argument: python /path/to/script.py. You can even use the python version you want in its place, i.e. python2.7 /path/to/script.py.

You might also turn this whole sequence into a script in your ~/bin directory, e.g. have ~/bin/foo contain the following content:

#!/bin/sh
exec ${HOME}/bin/python2.7 /usr/bin/foo

Don't forget to chmod -x ~/bin/foo the file. You get an executable shell script which on your PATH comes before the default version installed on your system. The script will then call that default version, using a very specific interpreter. So now you can simply type the short name, and have the official script executed by your desired python version.

It might happen that some other script attempt to execute a given python script using its absolute path name. In that case, no modification of the PATH will help. You'll have to modify the first line of the script in question to read e.g. to #!/usr/bin/env python. If you cannot control those scripts, you are in trouble, and will need more advanced hacks to tweak the system into doing something it usually wouldn't do. LD_PRELOAD comes to mind.

2
  • For script with #!/usr/bin/python, simply pass it directly to the interpreter python27 script Nov 21, 2012 at 10:30
  • @Dikei, you're right, that's a good solution if you're directly calling the scripts. Things only become troublesome if scripts call other scripts or similar. Will edit my answer to take this into account.
    – MvG
    Nov 21, 2012 at 10:34

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.