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I have a virtualenv created for Python 2.5 and want to "upgrade" it to Python 2.6.

Here is how it was originally set up:

virtualenv --no-site-packages -p python2.5 myenv

I now run virtualenv in the same directory to upgrade:

virtualenv --no-site-packages -p python2.6 myenv
...
Not overwriting existing python script myenv/bin/python (you must use myenv/bin/python2.6)
...
Overwriting myenv/bin/activate with new content

The default python is still 2.5, even though I can also specify 2.6. Is there any way to remove 2.5 entirely and have 'bin/python' point to 2.6 instead?

2
  • 4
    In 2021, I guess the best bet is to just make a new venv and reinstall the dependencies - may other SO answers (including using upgrade) may not be apt
    – Anupam
    Feb 1, 2021 at 9:55
  • Relevant similar question: Upgrade Python in a virtual environment that has useful answers for the case of upgrading between bugfix releases (e.g. 3.6.3 to 3.6.7 or the like) in 3.3 and later (there is no good solution beyond saving off requirements and reinstalling them for feature releases). Oct 17 at 20:31

6 Answers 6

72

You can use the Python 2.6 virtualenv to "revirtual" the existing directory. You will have to reinstall all the modules you installed though. I often have a virtual directory for developing a module, and virtualenv the same directory with many versions of Python, and it works just fine. :)

11
  • 1
    Thanks! I tried your method and see that the 'activate' script is updated, but the old version remains (please see the revised question). Are you able to provide an example? Jan 31, 2010 at 14:13
  • 14
    you can just remove the bin/python executable in the virtualenv before re-running virtualenv with python 2.6.
    – Carl Meyer
    Jan 31, 2010 at 16:42
  • 10
    Well, you can make it work - but why? The big attraction of virtualenv is that it easily and cheaply makes reproducible python environments. Why muck with one and not be certain you've fixed up everything or that you can reproduce it again or that you're disturbing your production environment when you can just make a new clean one?
    – Ned Deily
    Jan 31, 2010 at 20:56
  • 11
    @Ned: Virtualenv doesn't make reproducible environments, it makes isolated environments. To reproduce them you need also to install everything the same way, virtualenv isn't enough for that. zc.buildout is better there. Jan 31, 2010 at 21:28
  • 1
    @Ned: Point taken; this is a development environment I was working in. I wanted to keep it in 2.5 unless I absolutely needed to do 2.6. That need arose, so I was curious if you could upgrade an isolated environment to see the effects on your code, without having to rebuild and copy/paste directories to the new env. Feb 2, 2010 at 1:16
56

In Python 3.3+ venv supports --upgrade flag

  --upgrade             Upgrade the environment directory to use this version
                        of Python, assuming Python has been upgraded in-place.

Usage:

python -m venv --upgrade YOUR_VENV_DIRECTORY

I just upgraded my venv from Python 3.7.x to 3.8 on several projects without any issue.

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  • 6
    "assuming Python has been upgraded in-place" ... this unfortunately seems to mean that if my system python3 points to 3.6, i can't create get python3 to point to 3.7 in my venv
    – joel
    Feb 16, 2020 at 17:33
  • 1
    @joel I've not tried it yet, but would /path/to/user/python -m venv --upgrade work?
    – ospider
    Jun 29, 2021 at 8:25
  • I don't know if this counts as a graceful upgrade, because it doesn't do anything about the packages installed in the old site-package directory. Thus, since you still need to re-install them it isn't much won in comparison with just recreating the whole virtual environment ... May 8, 2022 at 12:32
  • 2
    Wanted to move my venv from 3.9 to 3.11 (django project) . This command didn't generate any error but print(sys.version) in a views.py still shows 3.9.14. Tried with python -m ... python3 -m ... python3.11 -m, with same result. Each time I deactivate + activate my venv. Without success
    – Abpostman1
    Dec 30, 2022 at 8:49
  • Hm... The docs says "Deprecated since version 3.6: pyvenv was the recommended tool..." Jan 10 at 18:19
4

You should create a new virtualenv using python2.6 and then, after activating the new env, use its python2.6 and its easy_install to install new versions of any site packages you need. Beware that the path name to the virtualenv is hardwired into various files within the environment, so, when you are ready to switch over to it, either change your startup scripts et al to refer to the new virualenv path or be very careful about copying it over to the old directory and modifying the path names inside it.

4

You can simply do this by go to your venv file and change the python path and it's version from pyvenv.cfg like this:

enter image description here

2
  • Try not to paste images if its not necessary. The details in the answer should be entered as text
    – moken
    Dec 27, 2022 at 3:58
  • While this link may answer the question, it is better to include the essential parts of the answer here and provide the link for reference. Link-only answers can become invalid if the linked page changes. - From Review
    – コリン
    Dec 28, 2022 at 7:15
2

Install a second Python on CentOS

  1. download python
  2. install to diff local

    configure --prefix=/opt/virtualenv/python 
    make && make install
    
  3. create virtual env using new python

    virtualenv /opt/virtualenv --python=/opt/python276/bin/python
    

    note: if needed it can be done with a different user

    chown pyuser -R /opt/virtualenv
    su - pyuser
    source /opt/virtualenv/bin/activate
    python -v
    
  4. Create virtual env:

    virtualenv /opt/virtualenv
    su - infograficos
    source bin/activate
    
  5. Install pip with python 2.7 (inside virtualenv)

    easy_install pip 
    
0

If you're using OS X, try this if you want to upgrade Python to a minor-increased version (e.g. 2.7.6 to 2.7.8) while keeping third-party libraries work.

It work for me on 5 different virtual environments with Django installed.

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