Install python from source linux

Installing Python 3.5.1 from source

This is an introduction to building and installing software from source on Linux (and other UNIX-like operating systems). The example is Python 3.5.1 but the details apply to the vast majority of open source software. I don’t cover everything — mostly just the happy path of everything working — but if you’ve never installed from source before, I hope this will help guide you through the process.

Speaking of process, here is what we’ll be doing:

  1. Download the source code of an official Python release.
  2. Configure the build appropriately for our machine.
  3. Compile the software.
  4. Test the software to make sure it works properly.
  5. Install the software.
  6. Configure our system to make sure we can use the software easily.

Getting a Python release

Go to the Python source downloads and choose a version to download (I’ll use 3.5.1 throughout this document but the process should be similar for any other version). Download the “Gzipped source tarball” to your server. You can do this by copying the URL in your web browser and using the wget command like so:

This will download the release and save it in a file based on the URL. In our case it’ll be called Python-3.5.1.tgz . If you don’t have wget installed (maybe you get a command not found error) you can install it using your OS package manager:

Once the file is downloaded you can unpack it using the tar command. Originally tar was used with magnetic tape drives (the name stands for tape archive) but it also works for archives stored in plain old files on disc and it’s still the standard archive format in UNIX environments. tar is often used together with gzip compression to reduce the size of file but all modern tar commands can handle compression and decompression transparently for you. tar archives usually have the .tar file extension and often have another extension for the compression format like .gz , .bz2 , or .xz (for GZipk, BZip2, or XZ respectively). These extensions can be piled on top of each other like .tar.gz or squashed together into a single extension like .tgz . You can extract a tar archive file using the following command:

tar ’s argument handling is ancient and unlike almost all other UNIX programs so you probably needn’t bother learning how the work; just remember tar xf means “extract from a file”. Like most UNIX programs, tar will not produce any output unless it encounters an error or you specifically ask it to. If you’d like it to give you some feedback as it works use tar xvf instead (“extract verbosely from a file”).

You should now have a directory called Python-3.5.1/ which contains the release files. From now on I’ll assume we’re working inside this new directory:

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Building Python

Most UNIX software uses a very similar build process:

  • first you configure the build with the install location, where to find any libraries it needs, etc.
  • then you compile the software
  • then you test the software
  • then you install the software

Each step is usually a single command and the whole process usually looks a little like this:

./configure make make test sudo make install

The ./configure command runs the configure script which is included in most software packages. This is usually an enormous, automatically generated shell script which figures out how to call your compiler, where to find the libraries the software needs, where the new software should be installed, etc. If ./configure cannot find a compiler, a required library, etc. then it will report an error. You can usually tell which command or library is missing from the error message but it can be tricky to tell what to do to fix the problem. Usually it’s a missing library or header file and you can install the, e.g., foo and foo-devel packages and try to run ./configure again. When I’m feeling too lazy to read the requirements for a package it’s not unusual to go through this cycle a few times.

One of the things ./configure produces is another large, automatically generated script called Makefile (often there will be several of these scattered throughout the subdirectories of the software). The Makefile contains instructions on how to achive various tasks like “build” or “make the executable called python ” or “run the test suite”. The Makefile script is executed with the make command. You can run make to execute the default task (i.e. the first one in the file) or, e.g., make test to run the “test” task.

The default task for Python, like most packages, is to compile the software so running:

should kick off the build process. For a widely used, well tested package like Python you should expect make to succeed whenever ./configure does.

Once the build is finished you should run the test suite to make sure that it all works as expected:

Again, official Python releases are exceptionally reliable and the tests can take a long time to run so you might like to give this a miss.

Installing

Once it’s built you should install the software into some permanent location. Almost all packages that follow the ./configure , make , make install convention will install under the /usr/local/ directory by default: they’ll put their executables in /usr/local/bin/ , data files in /usr/local/share/ , etc. The /usr/local/ directory is properly considered part of the operating system (as opposed to part of your user account) so you should require root privileges to create files and folders there. This is why make install us usually run under sudo :

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This will create the directories and copy the compiled files into place as the root user.

You might like to install it somewhere else. Perhaps you don’t have root access or you’d like to install multiple versions side-by-side? In this case you’ll need to change the ./configure command you run at the start to have a —prefix argument:

If you’ve already used ./configure and/or make with the default settings you can use make clean to wipe out any work it did and start again. For example, let’s install into the py-351 directory under your account home directory you could run the following command:

make clean ./configure --prefix=$HOME/py-351 make make test make install

Note that you don’t need (and shouldn’t use) sudo to run make install this time because you already own your $HOME directory. If you run ls $HOME/py-351 you should see all the installed files.

Using the installed software

Now that the software is installed there are a few ways you can use it; in order of difficulty:

  • Specifying the full path
  • Changing your $PATH temporarily
  • Changing your $PATH permanently

You can always run a command simply by specifying the full path to the executable to run. Following on from the $HOME/py-351 example above:

should run the newly installed Python interpreter and output the version message.

If you want to use the new install in just this shell session you can change your $PATH temporarily:

The $PATH variable contains a : separated list of directories to search for an executable when you run a command in the shell. The first executable file with the right name is the one that will be executed. The which command can do this search and tell you which file will be executed or even give a list of all the options:

Notice that we are set PATH to be our installation directory followed by the current value of $PATH ? If we leave the :$PATH off the end we’ll replace our existing $PATH and the shell will be able to find only our newly installed Python commands!

If you want your new $PATH setting to be used by all programs that get started by you shell session (i.e. not just the commands you manually type in but ones that they start in turn) you’ll need to export the variable:

For the rest of your current shell session every mention of python3 in the commands you type in or the commands that programs you run execute for you mean $HOME/py-351/bin/python3 (if that file exists).

To make this change permanent you need to change your shell configuration files. The name of these configuration files and whether or not they already exist can change from system to system but they are always in your $HOME directory and are called one or more of the following:

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If any of those files already exist in your $HOME directory (files beginning with a . are considered “hidden” by most UNIX tools, you’ll need to use ls -a instead of ls to see them) then you should edit that file. If not, .profile is probably a safe bet.

Create or open the chosen file in a text editor (I’ll describe using vi or vim ) and add the lines you used above to the end of the file:

To edit a file with vim (or vi , for our purposes they are identical) just pass it the name of the file as an argument:

Unlike most other editors vim has modes. The most important modes are command mode (where you give the editor commands like “save” or “open a new file” or “quite”) and insert mode (where you insert text into the file). By default vim starts in command mode but you can enter insert mode by pressing the i key. When you are in insert more you should see an — INSERT — on the bottom line of your terminal. While you are in insert mode you can use the keyboard arrow keys to navigate and any characters you type should be inserted into the file. Scroll to the bottom of the file and enter the two new lines as before. To leave insert more press the escape key on your keyboard; the — INSERT — should go away. There are plenty of keyboard shortcuts you can use in command mode but the easiest way to enter a command is with the command line which appears when you type a : . When you do you should notice the cursor jump to the bottom line of your terminal after a : character. The command to write your changes to disc and quit vim is wq (just like the shell you end a command by pressing the enter key).

You should now be able to restart your shell and, if all goes well, run the python3 command without specifying the full path $HOME/py-351/bin/python3 . If it does not work after starting a new shell (e.g. starting a new terminal or logging in again) try looking at the output of echo $PATH . If it does not have new value at the start your shell is probably using one of the other files I listed above. Try making the same changes to each of them until it does work.

In this section I used the $HOME/py-351 prefix but all of these steps will work for the /usr/local prefix too and, on many systems, you will need to do them.

This post was published on December 30, 2015 and last modified on November 4, 2022. It is tagged with: howto, linux, software, install, source, python.

Copyright © Thomas Sutton 2004—2021

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