15 KiB
title | next | menu | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Install spaCy | /usage/models |
|
spaCy is compatible with 64-bit CPython 3.6+ and runs on Unix/Linux, macOS/OS X and Windows. The latest spaCy releases are available over pip and conda.
📖 Looking for the old docs?
To help you make the transition from v2.x to v3.0, we've uploaded the old website to v2.spacy.io. To see what's changed and how to migrate, see the guide on v3.0 guide.
Quickstart
import QuickstartInstall from 'widgets/quickstart-install.js'
Installation instructions
pip
Using pip, spaCy releases are available as source packages and binary wheels.
$ pip install -U spacy
Download models
After installation you need to download a language model. For more info and available models, see the docs on models.
$ python -m spacy download en_core_web_sm >>> import spacy >>> nlp = spacy.load("en_core_web_sm")
To install additional data tables for lemmatization you can run
pip install spacy[lookups]
or install
spacy-lookups-data
separately. The lookups package is needed to create blank models with
lemmatization data, and to lemmatize in languages that don't yet come with
pretrained models and aren't powered by third-party libraries.
When using pip it is generally recommended to install packages in a virtual environment to avoid modifying system state:
python -m venv .env
source .env/bin/activate
pip install spacy
conda
Thanks to our great community, we've been able to re-add conda support. You can
also install spaCy via conda-forge
:
$ conda install -c conda-forge spacy
For the feedstock including the build recipe and configuration, check out this repository. Improvements and pull requests to the recipe and setup are always appreciated.
Upgrading spaCy
Upgrading from v2 to v3
Although we've tried to keep breaking changes to a minimum, upgrading from spaCy v2.x to v3.x may still require some changes to your code base. For details see the sections on backwards incompatibilities and migrating. Also remember to download the new models, and retrain your own models.
When updating to a newer version of spaCy, it's generally recommended to start with a clean virtual environment. If you're upgrading to a new major version, make sure you have the latest compatible models installed, and that there are no old and incompatible model packages left over in your environment, as this can often lead to unexpected results and errors. If you've trained your own models, keep in mind that your train and runtime inputs must match. This means you'll have to retrain your models with the new version.
spaCy also provides a validate
command, which lets you
verify that all installed models are compatible with your spaCy version. If
incompatible models are found, tips and installation instructions are printed.
The command is also useful to detect out-of-sync model links resulting from
links created in different virtual environments. It's recommended to run the
command with python -m
to make sure you're executing the correct version of
spaCy.
pip install -U spacy
python -m spacy validate
Run spaCy with GPU
As of v2.0, spaCy comes with neural network models that are implemented in our machine learning library, Thinc. For GPU support, we've been grateful to use the work of Chainer's CuPy module, which provides a numpy-compatible interface for GPU arrays.
spaCy can be installed on GPU by specifying spacy[cuda]
, spacy[cuda90]
,
spacy[cuda91]
, spacy[cuda92]
, spacy[cuda100]
, spacy[cuda101]
or
spacy[cuda102]
. If you know your cuda version, using the more explicit
specifier allows cupy to be installed via wheel, saving some compilation time.
The specifiers should install cupy
.
$ pip install -U spacy[cuda92]
Once you have a GPU-enabled installation, the best way to activate it is to call
spacy.prefer_gpu
or
spacy.require_gpu()
somewhere in your
script before any models have been loaded. require_gpu
will raise an error if
no GPU is available.
import spacy
spacy.prefer_gpu()
nlp = spacy.load("en_core_web_sm")
Compile from source
The other way to install spaCy is to clone its GitHub repository and build it from source. That is the common way if you want to make changes to the code base. You'll need to make sure that you have a development environment consisting of a Python distribution including header files, a compiler, pip, virtualenv and git installed. The compiler part is the trickiest. How to do that depends on your system. See notes on Ubuntu, macOS / OS X and Windows for details.
python -m pip install -U pip # update pip
git clone https://github.com/explosion/spaCy # clone spaCy
cd spaCy # navigate into directory
python -m venv .env # create environment in .env
source .env/bin/activate # activate virtual environment
\export PYTHONPATH=`pwd` # set Python path to spaCy directory
pip install -r requirements.txt # install all requirements
python setup.py build_ext --inplace # compile spaCy
Compared to regular install via pip, the
requirements.txt
additionally installs developer dependencies such as Cython. See the the
quickstart widget to get the right commands for your platform and
Python version.
Ubuntu
Install system-level dependencies via apt-get
:
$ sudo apt-get install build-essential python-dev git
macOS / OS X
Install a recent version of XCode, including the so-called "Command Line Tools". macOS and OS X ship with Python and git preinstalled.
Windows
Install a version of the Visual C++ Build Tools or Visual Studio Express that matches the version that was used to compile your Python interpreter.
Run tests
spaCy comes with an
extensive test suite.
In order to run the tests, you'll usually want to clone the
repository and
build spaCy from source. This will also install the required
development dependencies and test utilities defined in the requirements.txt
.
Alternatively, you can find out where spaCy is installed and run pytest
on
that directory. Don't forget to also install the test utilities via spaCy's
requirements.txt
:
python -c "import os; import spacy; print(os.path.dirname(spacy.__file__))"
pip install -r path/to/requirements.txt
python -m pytest [spacy directory]
Calling pytest
on the spaCy directory will run only the basic tests. The flag
--slow
is optional and enables additional tests that take longer.
# make sure you are using recent pytest version
python -m pip install -U pytest
python -m pytest [spacy directory] # basic tests
python -m pytest [spacy directory] --slow # basic and slow tests
Troubleshooting guide
This section collects some of the most common errors you may come across when installing, loading and using spaCy, as well as their solutions.
Help us improve this guide
Did you come across a problem like the ones listed here and want to share the solution? You can find the "Suggest edits" button at the bottom of this page that points you to the source. We always appreciate pull requests!
No compatible model found for [lang] (spaCy vX.X.X).
This usually means that the model you're trying to download does not exist, or
isn't available for your version of spaCy. Check the
compatibility table
to see which models are available for your spaCy version. If you're using an old
version, consider upgrading to the latest release. Note that while spaCy
supports tokenization for a variety of languages, not
all of them come with statistical models. To only use the tokenizer, import the
language's Language
class instead, for example
from spacy.lang.fr import French
.
no such option: --no-cache-dir
The download
command uses pip to install the models and sets the
--no-cache-dir
flag to prevent it from requiring too much memory.
This setting
requires pip v6.0 or newer. Run pip install -U pip
to upgrade to the latest
version of pip. To see which version you have installed, run pip --version
.
sre_constants.error: bad character range
In v2.1, spaCy changed its implementation of regular expressions for tokenization to make it up to 2-3 times faster. But this also means that it's very important now that you run spaCy with a wide unicode build of Python. This means that the build has 1114111 unicode characters available, instead of only 65535 in a narrow unicode build. You can check this by running the following command:
python -c "import sys; print(sys.maxunicode)"
If you're running a narrow unicode build, reinstall Python and use a wide
unicode build instead. You can also rebuild Python and set the
--enable-unicode=ucs4
flag.
ValueError: unknown locale: UTF-8
This error can sometimes occur on OSX and is likely related to a still
unresolved Python bug. However, it's easy
to fix: just add the following to your ~/.bash_profile
or ~/.zshrc
and then
run source ~/.bash_profile
or source ~/.zshrc
. Make sure to add both
lines for LC_ALL
and LANG
.
\export LC_ALL=en_US.UTF-8
\export LANG=en_US.UTF-8
Import Error: No module named spacy
This error means that the spaCy module can't be located on your system, or in
your environment. Make sure you have spaCy installed. If you're using a virtual
environment, make sure it's activated and check that spaCy is installed in that
environment – otherwise, you're trying to load a system installation. You can
also run which python
to find out where your Python executable is located.
ImportError: No module named 'en_core_web_sm'
As of spaCy v1.7, all models can be installed as Python packages. This means
that they'll become importable modules of your application. If this fails, it's
usually a sign that the package is not installed in the current environment. Run
pip list
or pip freeze
to check which model packages you have installed, and
install the correct models if necessary. If you're importing a model
manually at the top of a file, make sure to use the name of the package, not the
shortcut link you've created.
command not found: spacy
This error may occur when running the spacy
command from the command line.
spaCy does not currently add an entry to your PATH
environment variable, as
this can lead to unexpected results, especially when using a virtual
environment. Instead, spaCy adds an auto-alias that maps spacy
to
python -m spacy]
. If this is not working as expected, run the command with
python -m
, yourself – for example python -m spacy download en_core_web_sm
.
For more info on this, see the download
command.
AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'load'
While this could technically have many causes, including spaCy being broken, the
most likely one is that your script's file or directory name is "shadowing" the
module – e.g. your file is called spacy.py
, or a directory you're importing
from is called spacy
. So, when using spaCy, never call anything else spacy
.
If your training data only contained new entities and you didn't mix in any examples the model previously recognized, it can cause the model to "forget" what it had previously learned. This is also referred to as the "catastrophic forgetting problem". A solution is to pre-label some text, and mix it with the new text in your updates. You can also do this by running spaCy over some text, extracting a bunch of entities the model previously recognized correctly, and adding them to your training examples.
TypeError: unhashable type: 'list'
If you're training models, writing them to disk, and versioning them with git,
you might encounter this error when trying to load them in a Windows
environment. This happens because a default install of Git for Windows is
configured to automatically convert Unix-style end-of-line characters (LF) to
Windows-style ones (CRLF) during file checkout (and the reverse when
committing). While that's mostly fine for text files, a trained model written to
disk has some binary files that should not go through this conversion. When they
do, you get the error above. You can fix it by either changing your
core.autocrlf
setting to "false"
, or by committing a
.gitattributes
file] to your
repository to tell git on which files or folders it shouldn't do LF-to-CRLF
conversion, with an entry like path/to/spacy/model/** -text
. After you've done
either of these, clone your repository again.
Changelog
import Changelog from 'widgets/changelog.js'