580

I know the obvious answer is to use virtualenv and virtualenvwrapper, but for various reasons I can't/don't want to do that.

So how do I modify the command

pip install package_name

to make pip install the package somewhere other than the default site-packages?

8
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    Now question number two: when you're already installing into a custom directory, how to make pip NOT try to remove and older version from a non-custom directory. For example - a system-wide one, where you have no write permissions. So far I only pulled this off with easy_install... Dec 11, 2014 at 15:41
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    @TomaszGandor I think using --ignore-installed option should prevent pip from trying to uninstall already installed packages. Aug 18, 2016 at 8:30
  • 1
    sorry I am new with pip, but is your question the same as asking "as how to have pi install to a different version of python"? I have python 3.4 and 3.5 but i want my pip installations to go to python 3.5. Feb 8, 2017 at 17:30
  • @Charlie Nope, different question. I don't know enough about your installation/intentions, but generally I would probably use virtualenvwrapper and create a virtual environment with something like mkvirtualenv --python=/usr/bin/python3.5 env_name Feb 8, 2017 at 22:06

19 Answers 19

780

The --target switch is the thing you're looking for:

pip install --target=d:\somewhere\other\than\the\default package_name

But you still need to add d:\somewhere\other\than\the\default to PYTHONPATH to actually use them from that location.

-t, --target <dir>
Install packages into <dir>. By default this will not replace existing files/folders in <dir>.
Use --upgrade to replace existing packages in <dir> with new versions.


Upgrade pip if target switch is not available:

On Linux or OS X:

pip install -U pip

On Windows (this works around an issue):

python -m pip install -U pip
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    @DanH run pip install --upgrade pip!
    – r3m0t
    Mar 19, 2014 at 16:51
  • 21
    This is the true answer, it's just the option was added quite a bit after the accepted answer.
    – bukzor
    Apr 6, 2014 at 17:57
  • 8
    What's the difference between --install-option="--prefix=$PREFIX_PATH" mentioned by @Ian Bicking and the --target=$PATH option?
    – Hibou57
    Aug 15, 2014 at 15:49
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    target is a pip option, and everything you put in install-option will be passed on to the setup.py install command. Basically target is custom site-packages location. Aug 18, 2014 at 9:19
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    Using --target may result in a partial installation, since it will not install any including scripts/data files in the specified prefix. It seems like passing --prefix with --install-option is the only proper way to have full control over the used installations prefix. Jan 26, 2015 at 11:11
367

Use:

pip install --install-option="--prefix=$PREFIX_PATH" package_name

You might also want to use --ignore-installed to force all dependencies to be reinstalled using this new prefix. You can use --install-option to multiple times to add any of the options you can use with python setup.py install (--prefix is probably what you want, but there are a bunch more options you could use).

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    if you do this, is there a way to get pip freeze to see the alternate directory?
    – Russ
    Jul 22, 2011 at 6:54
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    pip freeze looks on the path, so if you something like PYTHONPATH=$PREFIX_PATH/lib/python2.6/site-packages pip freeze it should see them. Aug 3, 2011 at 20:53
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    Using --prefix=$PREFIX_PATH doesn't seem to allow to have full control of installation directory as there's system specific suffix being appended to it (\Lib\site-packages on Windows for example). Is there a way to specify specific directory? Jun 2, 2012 at 22:04
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    @Piotr: yes there is see my answer. Using '--prefix' is a bit coarse, but works nice if you want your pure python to go under /usr/lib/pythonX.Y/site-packages instead of /usr/local/lib/pythonX.Y/site-packages.
    – Anthon
    Jun 13, 2012 at 14:39
  • 122
    Not a bad answer 4 years ago, but the --target option exists now.
    – Tritium21
    Sep 28, 2014 at 18:20
105

Instead of the --target or --install-options options, I have found that setting the PYTHONUSERBASE environment variable works well (from discussion on a bug regarding this very thing):

PYTHONUSERBASE=/path/to/install/to pip install --user

(Or set the PYTHONUSERBASE directory in your environment before running the command, using export PYTHONUSERBASE=/path/to/install/to)

This uses the very useful --user option but tells it to make the bin, lib, share and other directories you'd expect under a custom prefix rather than $HOME/.local.

Then you can add this to your PATH, PYTHONPATH and other variables as you would a normal installation directory.

Note that you may also need to specify the --upgrade and --ignore-installed options if any packages upon which this depends require newer versions to be installed in the PYTHONUSERBASE directory, to override the system-provided versions.

A full example

PYTHONUSERBASE=/opt/mysterypackage-1.0/python-deps pip install --user --upgrade numpy scipy

..to install the scipy and numpy package most recent versions into a directory which you can then include in your PYTHONPATH like so (using bash and for python 2.6 on CentOS 6 for this example):

export PYTHONPATH=/opt/mysterypackage-1.0/python-deps/lib64/python2.6/site-packages:$PYTHONPATH
export PATH=/opt/mysterypackage-1.0/python-deps/bin:$PATH

Using virtualenv is still a better and neater solution!

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    This worked with Travis CI running on Docker containers whereas the --install-option="--prefix=$PREFIX_PATH" solution did not.
    – 32bits
    Aug 9, 2015 at 21:34
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    Noobie question, how important is the /bin folder pip creates, --user creates it as does --PREFIX whereas --target does not.
    – Jonathan
    Sep 27, 2016 at 14:13
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    If package is installed in global Python, --ignore-installed is needed. Jan 17, 2017 at 11:35
  • 1
    This option is also compatible with --editable and local installs.
    – mdh
    Feb 27, 2017 at 13:57
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    This option comes handy for installing packages as superuser for another non-root user without having to su around (which may be problematic in containers, for example).
    – mdh
    Feb 27, 2017 at 14:05
51

To pip install a library exactly where I wanted it, I navigated to the location I wanted the directory with the terminal then used

pip install mylibraryName -t . 

the logic of which I took from this page: https://cloud.google.com/appengine/docs/python/googlecloudstorageclient/download

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    -t is shorthand for --target
    – Jonathan
    Sep 27, 2016 at 14:11
  • This was the only solution which worked for me. (Windows 7)
    – Coliban
    Jul 30, 2019 at 11:59
46

Installing a Python package often only includes some pure Python files. If the package includes data, scripts and or executables, these are installed in different directories from the pure Python files.

Assuming your package has no data/scripts/executables, and that you want your Python files to go into /python/packages/package_name (and not some subdirectory a few levels below /python/packages as when using --prefix), you can use the one time command:

pip install --install-option="--install-purelib=/python/packages" package_name

If you want all (or most) of your packages to go there, you can edit your ~/.pip/pip.conf to include:

[install]
install-option=--install-purelib=/python/packages

That way you can't forget about having to specify it again and again.

Any excecutables/data/scripts included in the package will still go to their default places unless you specify addition install options (--prefix/--install-data/--install-scripts, etc., for details look at the custom installation options).

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    A big plus for the config file. I personally specify the --prefix there, because I have a "local" directory on a shared server in the home directory, and it was used as the prefix by easy_install before I moved to pip. System $PATH and $PYTHONPATH were configured before. Instead of install-option=--install-purelib=/blah there is this newer target=/blah option/switch. It is also nice, but sometimes you need just a replacement for --prefix, that you'd use with setup.py or easy_install. Dec 13, 2013 at 10:10
  • ERROR: Location-changing options found in --install-option: ['--install-purelib'] from command line. This is unsupported, use pip-level options like --user, --prefix, --root, and --target instead., with pip 22.0.4
    – user7610
    Apr 29, 2022 at 11:25
31

Tested these options with python3.5 and pip 9.0.3:

pip install --target /myfolder [packages]

Installs ALL packages including dependencies under /myfolder. Does not take into account that dependent packages are already installed elsewhere in Python. You will find packages from /myfolder/[package_name]. In case you have multiple Python versions, this doesn't take that into account (no Python version in package folder name).

pip install --prefix /myfolder [packages]

Checks if dependencies are already installed. Will install packages into /myfolder/lib/python3.5/site-packages/[packages]

pip install --root /myfolder [packages]

Checks dependencies like --prefix but install location will be /myfolder/usr/local/lib/python3.5/site-packages/[package_name].

pip install --user [packages]

Will install packages into $HOME: /home/[USER]/.local/lib/python3.5/site-packages Python searches automatically from this .local path so you don't need to put it to your PYTHONPATH.

=> In most of the cases --user is the best option to use. In case home folder can't be used because of some reason then --prefix.

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    Running under python 2.7.16, --target (or --prefix) installs Jinja2-2.10.1.dist-info/ for example, whereas install --install-option="--prefix installs Jinja2-2.10.1-py2.7.egg-info/, which is what I actually wanted Aug 7, 2019 at 17:52
  • Doesn't always work via environment variables.
    – x-yuri
    Aug 15, 2020 at 17:38
  • You can also set the directory where --user installs the packages in $PYTHONUSERBASE. Is there any difference betseen using --user and setting $PYTHONUSERBASE vs using --prefix and setting $PYTHONPATH? Dec 22, 2022 at 13:23
25
pip3 install "package_name" -t "target_dir"

source - https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/reference/pip_install/

-t switch = target

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    @merv it's different because it's not the same. isn't it?
    – Alex M.M.
    Nov 6, 2020 at 14:44
21

Nobody seems to have mentioned the -t option but that the easiest:

pip install -t <direct directory> <package>
1
16
pip install packageName -t pathOfDirectory

or

pip install packageName --target pathOfDirectorty
1
14

Just add one point to @Ian Bicking's answer:

Using the --user option to specify the installed directory also work if one wants to install some Python package into one's home directory (without sudo user right) on remote server.

E.g.,

pip install --user python-memcached

The command will install the package into one of the directories that listed in your PYTHONPATH.

13

Newer versions of pip (8 or later) can directly use the --prefix option:

pip install --prefix=$PREFIX_PATH package_name

where $PREFIX_PATH is the installation prefix where lib, bin and other top-level folders are placed.

4

To add to the already good advice, as I had an issue installing IPython when I didn't have write permissions to /usr/local.

pip uses distutils to do its install and this thread discusses how that can cause a problem as it relies on the sys.prefix setting.

My issue happened when the IPython install tried to write to '/usr/local/share/man/man1' with Permission denied. As the install failed it didn't seem to write the IPython files in the bin directory.

Using "--user" worked and the files were written to ~/.local. Adding ~/.local/bin to the $PATH meant I could use "ipython" from there.

However I'm trying to install this for a number of users and had been given write permission to the /usr/local/lib/python2.7 directory. I created a "bin" directory under there and set directives for distutils:

vim ~/.pydistutils.cfg

[install]
install-data=/usr/local/lib/python2.7
install-scripts=/usr/local/lib/python2.7/bin

then (-I is used to force the install despite previous failures/.local install):

pip install -I ipython

Then I added /usr/local/lib/python2.7/bin to $PATH.

I thought I'd include this in case anyone else has similar issues on a machine they don't have sudo access to.

2

If you are using brew with python, unfortunately, pip/pip3 ships with very limited options. You do not have --install-option, --target, --user options as mentioned above.

Note on pip install --user
The normal pip install --user is disabled for brewed Python. This is because of a bug in distutils, because Homebrew writes a distutils.cfg which sets the package prefix. A possible workaround (which puts executable scripts in ~/Library/Python/./bin) is: python -m pip install --user --install-option="--prefix=" <package-name>

You might find this line very cumbersome. I suggest use pyenv for management. If you are using

brew upgrade python python3

Ironically you are actually downgrade pip functionality.

(I post this answer, simply because pip in my mac osx does not have --target option, and I have spent hours fixing it)

1
  • This answer with an explicit prefix, and ignore-installed due to previous efforts, worked for me: python -m pip install --user --install-option="--prefix='/myFunkyApp/lib'" --ignore-installed <package-name> Aug 28, 2019 at 16:00
0

With pip v1.5.6 on Python v2.7.3 (GNU/Linux), option --root allows to specify a global installation prefix, (apparently) irrespective of specific package's options. Try f.i.,

$ pip install --root=/alternative/prefix/path package_name
0

I suggest to follow the documentation and create ~/.pip/pip.conf file. Note in the documentation there are missing specified header directory, which leads to following error:

error: install-base or install-platbase supplied, but installation scheme is incomplete

The full working content of conf file is:

[install]
install-base=$HOME
install-purelib=python/lib
install-platlib=python/lib.$PLAT
install-scripts=python/scripts
install-headers=python/include
install-data=python/data

Unfortunatelly I can install, but when try to uninstall pip tells me there is no such package for uninstallation process.... so something is still wrong but the package goes to its predefined location.

0

pip install /path/to/package/

is now possible.

The difference with this and using the -e or --editable flag is that -e links to where the package is saved (i.e. your downloads folder), rather than installing it into your python path.

This means if you delete/move the package to another folder, you won't be able to use it.

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    this doesn't answer the question
    – Clintm
    Dec 4, 2019 at 4:19
  • This lets you install a "local" package at the path you put it in.
    – A H
    Jun 8, 2021 at 11:02
0

system` option, that will install pip package-bins to /usr/local/bin thats accessible to all users. Installing without this option may not work for all users as things go to user specific dir like $HOME/.local/bin and then it is user specific install which has to be repeated for all users, also there can be path issues if not set for users, then bins won't work. So if you are looking for all users - yu need to have sudo access:

sudo su - 
python3 -m pip install --system <module>
logout
log back in 
which <module-bin> --> it should be installed on /usr/local/bin/
0

Sometimes it works only works with Cache argument

-m pip install -U pip --target=C:\xxx\python\lib\site-packages Pillow --cache-dir C:\tmp
-1

use default venv, third party vitrualenv or virtualenvwrapper will be pain in future

1
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    The OP says: "I know the obvious answer is to use virtualenv and virtualenvwrapper, but for various reasons I can't/don't want to do that." May 8 at 23:37

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