psycopg2/doc/src/install.rst

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.. _installation:
Installation
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============
.. sectionauthor:: Daniele Varrazzo <daniele.varrazzo@gmail.com>
Psycopg is a PostgreSQL_ adapter for the Python_ programming language. It is a
wrapper for the libpq_, the official PostgreSQL client library.
The `psycopg2` package is the current mature implementation of the adapter: it
is a C extension and as such it is only compatible with CPython_. If you want
to use Psycopg on a different Python implementation (PyPy, Jython, IronPython)
there is an experimental `porting of Psycopg for Ctypes`__, but it is not as
mature as the C implementation yet.
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.. _PostgreSQL: https://www.postgresql.org/
.. _Python: https://www.python.org/
.. _libpq: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq.html
.. _CPython: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPython
.. _Ctypes: https://docs.python.org/library/ctypes.html
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.. __: https://github.com/mvantellingen/psycopg2-ctypes
.. index::
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single: Prerequisites
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Prerequisites
-------------
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The current `!psycopg2` implementation supports:
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..
NOTE: keep consistent with setup.py and the /features/ page.
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- Python version 2.7
- Python 3 versions from 3.4 to 3.7
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- PostgreSQL server versions from 7.4 to 11
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- PostgreSQL client library version from 9.1
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.. _build-prerequisites:
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Build prerequisites
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The build prerequisites are to be met in order to install Psycopg from source
code, from a source distribution package, GitHub_ or from PyPI.
.. _GitHub: https://github.com/psycopg/psycopg2
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Psycopg is a C wrapper around the libpq_ PostgreSQL client library. To install
it from sources you will need:
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- A C compiler.
- The Python header files. They are usually installed in a package such as
**python-dev**. A message such as *error: Python.h: No such file or
directory* is an indication that the Python headers are missing.
- The libpq header files. They are usually installed in a package such as
**libpq-dev**. If you get an *error: libpq-fe.h: No such file or directory*
you are missing them.
- The :program:`pg_config` program: it is usually installed by the
**libpq-dev** package but sometimes it is not in a :envvar:`PATH` directory.
Having it in the :envvar:`PATH` greatly streamlines the installation, so try
running ``pg_config --version``: if it returns an error or an unexpected
version number then locate the directory containing the :program:`pg_config`
shipped with the right libpq version (usually
``/usr/lib/postgresql/X.Y/bin/``) and add it to the :envvar:`PATH`:
.. code-block:: console
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$ export PATH=/usr/lib/postgresql/X.Y/bin/:$PATH
You only need :program:`pg_config` to compile `!psycopg2`, not for its
regular usage.
Once everything is in place it's just a matter of running the standard:
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.. code-block:: console
$ pip install psycopg2
or, from the directory containing the source code:
.. code-block:: console
$ python setup.py build
$ python setup.py install
Runtime requirements
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Unless you compile `!psycopg2` as a static library, or you install it from a
self-contained wheel package, it will need the libpq_ library at runtime
(usually distributed in a ``libpq.so`` or ``libpq.dll`` file). `!psycopg2`
relies on the host OS to find the library if the library is installed in a
standard location there is usually no problem; if the library is in a
non-standard location you will have to tell somehow Psycopg how to find it,
which is OS-dependent (for instance setting a suitable
:envvar:`LD_LIBRARY_PATH` on Linux).
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.. note::
The libpq header files used to compile `!psycopg2` should match the
version of the library linked at runtime. If you get errors about missing
or mismatching libraries when importing `!psycopg2` check (e.g. using
:program:`ldd`) if the module ``psycopg2/_psycopg.so`` is linked to the
right ``libpq.so``.
.. note::
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Whatever version of libpq `!psycopg2` is compiled with, it will be
possible to connect to PostgreSQL servers of any supported version: just
install the most recent libpq version or the most practical, without
trying to match it to the version of the PostgreSQL server you will have
to connect to.
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.. index::
single: Install; from PyPI
single: Install; wheel
single: Wheel
.. _binary-packages:
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Binary install from PyPI
------------------------
`!psycopg2` is also `available on PyPI`__ in the form of wheel_ packages for
the most common platform (Linux, OSX, Windows): this should make you able to
install a binary version of the module, not requiring the above build or
runtime prerequisites.
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.. note::
The ``psycopg2-binary`` package is meant for beginners to start playing
with Python and PostgreSQL without the need to meet the build
requirements.
If you are the maintainer of a publish package depending on `!psycopg2`
**you shouldn't use 'psycopg2-binary' as a module dependency**. For
production use you are advised to use the source distribution.
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Make sure to use an up-to-date version of :program:`pip` (you can upgrade it
using something like ``pip install -U pip``), then you can run:
.. code-block:: console
$ pip install psycopg2-binary
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.. __: PyPI-binary_
.. _PyPI-binary: https://pypi.org/project/psycopg2-binary/
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.. _wheel: https://pythonwheels.com/
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.. note::
The binary packages come with their own versions of a few C libraries,
among which ``libpq`` and ``libssl``, which will be used regardless of other
libraries available on the client: upgrading the system libraries will not
upgrade the libraries used by `!psycopg2`. Please build `!psycopg2` from
source if you want to maintain binary upgradeability.
.. warning::
The `!psycopg2` wheel package comes packaged, among the others, with its
own ``libssl`` binary. This may create conflicts with other extension
modules binding with ``libssl`` as well, for instance with the Python
`ssl` module: in some cases, under concurrency, the interaction between
the two libraries may result in a segfault. In case of doubts you are
advised to use a package built from source.
.. index::
single: Install; disable wheel
single: Wheel; disable
.. _disable-wheel:
Change in binary packages between Psycopg 2.7 and 2.8
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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In version 2.7.x, :command:`pip install psycopg2` would have tried to install
automatically the binary package of Psycopg. Because of concurrency problems
binary packages have displayed, ``psycopg2-binary`` has become a separate
package, and from 2.8 it has become the only way to install the binary
package.
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If you are using Psycopg 2.7 and you want to disable the use of wheel binary
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packages, relying on the system libraries available on your client, you
can use the :command:`pip` |--no-binary option|__, e.g.:
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.. code-block:: console
$ pip install --no-binary :all: psycopg2
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.. |--no-binary option| replace:: ``--no-binary`` option
.. __: https://pip.pypa.io/en/stable/reference/pip_install/#install-no-binary
which can be specified in your :file:`requirements.txt` files too, e.g. use:
.. code-block:: none
psycopg2>=2.7,<2.8 --no-binary psycopg2
to use the last bugfix release of the `!psycopg2` 2.7 package, specifying to
always compile it from source. Of course in this case you will have to meet
the :ref:`build prerequisites <build-prerequisites>`.
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.. index::
single: setup.py
single: setup.cfg
Non-standard builds
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-------------------
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If you have less standard requirements such as:
- creating a :ref:`debug build <debug-build>`,
- using :program:`pg_config` not in the :envvar:`PATH`,
- supporting ``mx.DateTime``,
then take a look at the ``setup.cfg`` file.
Some of the options available in ``setup.cfg`` are also available as command
line arguments of the ``build_ext`` sub-command. For instance you can specify
an alternate :program:`pg_config` location using:
.. code-block:: console
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$ python setup.py build_ext --pg-config /path/to/pg_config build
Use ``python setup.py build_ext --help`` to get a list of the options
supported.
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.. index::
single: debug
single: PSYCOPG_DEBUG
.. _debug-build:
Creating a debug build
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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In case of problems, Psycopg can be configured to emit detailed debug
messages, which can be very useful for diagnostics and to report a bug. In
order to create a debug package:
- `Download`__ and unpack the Psycopg source package.
- Edit the ``setup.cfg`` file adding the ``PSYCOPG_DEBUG`` flag to the
``define`` option.
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- :ref:`Compile and install <build-prerequisites>` the package.
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- Set the :envvar:`PSYCOPG_DEBUG` environment variable:
.. code-block:: console
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$ export PSYCOPG_DEBUG=1
- Run your program (making sure that the `!psycopg2` package imported is the
one you just compiled and not e.g. the system one): you will have a copious
stream of informations printed on stderr.
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.. __: http://initd.org/psycopg/download/
.. index::
single: tests
.. _test-suite:
Running the test suite
----------------------
Once `!psycopg2` is installed you can run the test suite to verify it is
working correctly. From the source directory, you can run:
.. code-block:: console
$ python -c "import tests; tests.unittest.main(defaultTest='tests.test_suite')" --verbose
The tests run against a database called ``psycopg2_test`` on UNIX socket and
the standard port. You can configure a different database to run the test by
setting the environment variables:
- :envvar:`PSYCOPG2_TESTDB`
- :envvar:`PSYCOPG2_TESTDB_HOST`
- :envvar:`PSYCOPG2_TESTDB_PORT`
- :envvar:`PSYCOPG2_TESTDB_USER`
The database should already exist before running the tests.
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.. _other-problems:
If you still have problems
--------------------------
Try the following. *In order:*
- Read again the :ref:`build-prerequisites`.
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- Read the :ref:`FAQ <faq-compile>`.
- Google for `!psycopg2` *your error message*. Especially useful the week
after the release of a new OS X version.
- Write to the `Mailing List`_.
- If you think that you have discovered a bug, test failure or missing feature
please raise a ticket in the `bug tracker`_.
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- Complain on your blog or on Twitter that `!psycopg2` is the worst package
ever and about the quality time you have wasted figuring out the correct
:envvar:`ARCHFLAGS`. Especially useful from the Starbucks near you.
.. _mailing list: https://www.postgresql.org/list/psycopg/
.. _bug tracker: https://github.com/psycopg/psycopg2/issues