mirror of https://github.com/django/django.git
Fixed #25376 -- Required virtualenv in installation instructions.
Thanks Anjul Tyagi for some of the draft text.
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@ -119,9 +119,9 @@ database queries, Django will need permission to create a test database.
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.. _MySQL: http://www.mysql.com/
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.. _psycopg2: http://initd.org/psycopg/
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.. _SQLite: http://www.sqlite.org/
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.. _pysqlite: http://trac.edgewall.org/wiki/PySqlite
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.. _cx_Oracle: http://cx-oracle.sourceforge.net/
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.. _Oracle: http://www.oracle.com/
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.. _removing-old-versions-of-django:
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Remove any old versions of Django
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@ -144,7 +144,6 @@ following at your shell prompt (not the interactive Python prompt):
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$ python -c "import django; print(django.__path__)"
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.. _install-django-code:
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Install the Django code
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@ -168,58 +167,20 @@ This is the recommended way to install Django.
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it's outdated. (If it's outdated, you'll know because installation won't
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work.)
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2. (optional) Take a look at virtualenv_ and virtualenvwrapper_. These tools
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provide isolated Python environments, which are more practical than
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installing packages systemwide. They also allow installing packages
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without administrator privileges. It's up to you to decide if you want to
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learn and use them.
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2. Take a look at virtualenv_ and virtualenvwrapper_. These tools provide
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isolated Python environments, which are more practical than installing
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packages systemwide. They also allow installing packages without
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administrator privileges. The :doc:`contributing tutorial
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</intro/contributing>` walks through how to create a virtualenv on Python 3.
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3. If you're using Linux, Mac OS X or some other flavor of Unix, enter the
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command ``sudo pip install Django`` at the shell prompt. If you're using
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Windows, start a command shell with administrator privileges and run
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the command ``pip install Django``. This will install Django in your Python
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installation's ``site-packages`` directory.
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If you're using a virtualenv, you don't need ``sudo`` or administrator
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privileges, and this will install Django in the virtualenv's
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``site-packages`` directory.
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3. After you've created and activated a virtual environment, enter the command
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``pip install Django`` at the shell prompt.
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.. _pip: https://pip.pypa.io/
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.. _virtualenv: http://www.virtualenv.org/
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.. _virtualenvwrapper: http://virtualenvwrapper.readthedocs.org/en/latest/
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.. _standalone pip installer: https://pip.pypa.io/en/latest/installing.html#install-pip
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Installing an official release manually
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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1. Download the latest release from our `download page`_.
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2. Untar the downloaded file (e.g. ``tar xzvf Django-X.Y.tar.gz``,
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where ``X.Y`` is the version number of the latest release).
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If you're using Windows, you can download the command-line tool
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bsdtar_ to do this, or you can use a GUI-based tool such as 7-zip_.
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3. Change into the directory created in step 2 (e.g. ``cd Django-X.Y``).
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4. If you're using Linux, Mac OS X or some other flavor of Unix, enter the
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command ``sudo python setup.py install`` at the shell prompt. If you're
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using Windows, start a command shell with administrator privileges and
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run the command ``python setup.py install``. This will install Django in
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your Python installation's ``site-packages`` directory.
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.. admonition:: Removing an old version
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If you use this installation technique, it is particularly important
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that you :ref:`remove any existing
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installations<removing-old-versions-of-django>` of Django
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first. Otherwise, you can end up with a broken installation that
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includes files from previous versions that have since been removed from
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Django.
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.. _download page: https://www.djangoproject.com/download/
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.. _bsdtar: http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/packages/bsdtar.htm
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.. _7-zip: http://www.7-zip.org/
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Installing a distribution-specific package
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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@ -253,101 +214,31 @@ latest bug fixes and improvements, follow these instructions:
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1. Make sure that you have Git_ installed and that you can run its commands
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from a shell. (Enter ``git help`` at a shell prompt to test this.)
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2. Check out Django's main development branch (the 'trunk' or 'master') like
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so:
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2. Check out Django's main development branch like so:
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.. code-block:: console
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$ git clone git://github.com/django/django.git django-trunk
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$ git clone git://github.com/django/django.git
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This will create a directory ``django-trunk`` in your current directory.
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This will create a directory ``django`` in your current directory.
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3. Make sure that the Python interpreter can load Django's code. The most
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convenient way to do this is via pip_. Run the following command:
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convenient way to do this is to use virtualenv_, virtualenvwrapper_, and
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pip_. The :doc:`contributing tutorial </intro/contributing>` walks through
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how to create a virtualenv on Python 3.
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4. After setting up and activating the virtualenv, run the following command:
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.. code-block:: console
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$ sudo pip install -e django-trunk/
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(If using a virtualenv_ you can omit ``sudo``.)
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$ pip install -e django/
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This will make Django's code importable, and will also make the
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``django-admin`` utility command available. In other words, you're all
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set!
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If you don't have pip_ available, see the alternative instructions for
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`installing the development version without pip`_.
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.. warning::
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Don't run ``sudo python setup.py install``, because you've already
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carried out the equivalent actions in step 3.
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When you want to update your copy of the Django source code, just run the
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command ``git pull`` from within the ``django-trunk`` directory. When you do
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this, Git will automatically download any changes.
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command ``git pull`` from within the ``django`` directory. When you do this,
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Git will automatically download any changes.
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.. _Git: http://git-scm.com/
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.. _`modify Python's search path`: https://docs.python.org/install/index.html#modifying-python-s-search-path
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.. _installing-the-development-version-without-pip:
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Installing the development version without pip
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----------------------------------------------
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If you don't have pip_, you can instead manually `modify Python's search
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path`_.
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First follow steps 1 and 2 above, so that you have a ``django-trunk`` directory
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with a checkout of Django's latest code in it. Then add a ``.pth`` file
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containing the full path to the ``django-trunk`` directory to your system's
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``site-packages`` directory. For example, on a Unix-like system:
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.. code-block:: console
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$ echo WORKING-DIR/django-trunk > SITE-PACKAGES-DIR/django.pth
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In the above line, change ``WORKING-DIR/django-trunk`` to match the full path
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to your new ``django-trunk`` directory, and change ``SITE-PACKAGES-DIR`` to
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match the location of your system's ``site-packages`` directory.
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The location of the ``site-packages`` directory depends on the operating
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system, and the location in which Python was installed. To find your system's
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``site-packages`` location, execute the following:
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.. code-block:: console
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$ python -c "from distutils.sysconfig import get_python_lib; print(get_python_lib())"
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(Note that this should be run from a shell prompt, not a Python interactive
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prompt.)
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Some Debian-based Linux distributions have separate ``site-packages``
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directories for user-installed packages, such as when installing Django from
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a downloaded tarball. The command listed above will give you the system's
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``site-packages``, the user's directory can be found in ``/usr/local/lib/``
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instead of ``/usr/lib/``.
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Next you need to make the ``django-admin.py`` utility available in your
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shell PATH.
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On Unix-like systems, create a symbolic link to the file
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``django-trunk/django/bin/django-admin`` in a directory on your system
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path, such as ``/usr/local/bin``. For example:
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.. code-block:: console
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$ ln -s WORKING-DIR/django-trunk/django/bin/django-admin.py /usr/local/bin/
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(In the above line, change WORKING-DIR to match the full path to your new
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``django-trunk`` directory.)
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This simply lets you type ``django-admin.py`` from within any directory,
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rather than having to qualify the command with the full path to the file.
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On Windows systems, the same result can be achieved by copying the file
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``django-trunk/django/bin/django-admin.py`` to somewhere on your system
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path, for example ``C:\Python27\Scripts``.
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Note that the rest of the documentation assumes this utility is installed
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as ``django-admin``. You'll have to substitute ``django-admin.py`` if you use
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this method.
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