From the virtualenv documentation:
If you directly run a script or the python interpreter from the
virtualenv’s bin/ directory (e.g. path/to/env/bin/pip or
/path/to/env/bin/python script.py) there’s no need for activation.
So if you just call the python executable in your virtualenv, your virtualenv will be 'active'. So you can create a script like this:
#!/bin/bash
PATH_TO_MY_VENV=/opt/django/ev_scraper/venv/bin
$PATH_TO_MY_VENV/python -c 'import sys; print(sys.version_info)'
python -c 'import sys; print(sys.version_info)'
When I run this script on my system, the two calls to python print what you see below. (Python 3.2.3 is in my virtualenv, and 2.7.3 is my system Python.)
sys.version_info(major=3, minor=2, micro=3, releaselevel='final', serial=0)
sys.version_info(major=2, minor=7, micro=3, releaselevel='final', serial=0)
So any libraries you have installed in your virtualenv will be available when you call $PATH_TO_MY_VENV/python
. Calls to your regular system python
will of course be unaware of whatever is in the virtualenv.
path/to/venv/python path/to/script.py
on the first line,chmod +x
the new script and execute it that way.