Install Appion Packages Shared » History » Revision 11
Revision 10 (Amber Herold, 04/28/2011 08:59 AM) → Revision 11/15 (Anchi Cheng, 06/03/2013 09:54 AM)
<pre> cd /path/to/myami-VERSION/myami sudo ./pysetup.sh install </pre> That will install each package, and report any failures. To determine the cause of failure, see the generated log file "pysetup.log". h3. alternatively, install a specific package in turn If necessary, you can enter a specific package directory and run the python setup command manually. For example, if sinedon failed to install, you can try again like this: <pre> cd sinedon sudo python setup.py install </pre> h3. python-site-package-path: where the installed python packages went: Python installer put the packages you installed into its site-packages directory. This enables all users on the same computer to access them. The easiest way to discover where your installed package is loaded from by python is to load a module from the package using interactive python command lines like this: Start the python command line from shell: <pre>python</pre> Import a module from the package. Let's try sinedon here. All packages installed through the above setup.py script should go to the same place. At the python prompt (python>) type: <pre>import sinedon</pre> If the module is loaded successfully, call the module attribute __path__ (two underscrolls before "path" and two underscrolls after) will return the location of the module it is loaded from <pre> sinedon.__path__ ['/usr/lib/python2.4/site-packages/sinedon'] </pre> In this case, /usr/lib/python2.4/site-packages/ is your python-site-package-path. If you go to that directory, you will find all the packages you just installed. Save this value as an environment variable for use later, for bash: <pre> export PYTHONSITEPKG='/usr/lib/python2.4/site-packages' </pre> or C shell <pre> setenv PYTHONSITEPKG '/usr/lib/python2.4/site-packages' </pre>