psycopg2/doc/src/install.rst
2017-06-15 22:46:53 +01:00

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Introduction
============
.. 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.
The current `!psycopg2` implementation supports:
..
NOTE: keep consistent with setup.py and the /features/ page.
- Python 2 versions from 2.6 to 2.7
- Python 3 versions from 3.2 to 3.6
- PostgreSQL server versions from 7.4 to 9.6
- PostgreSQL client library version from 9.1
.. _PostgreSQL: http://www.postgresql.org/
.. _Python: http://www.python.org/
.. _libpq: http://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/static/libpq.html
.. _CPython: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPython
.. _Ctypes: http://docs.python.org/library/ctypes.html
.. __: https://github.com/mvantellingen/psycopg2-ctypes
.. index::
single: Install; from PyPI
Binary install from PyPI
------------------------
`!psycopg2` is `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 including all the dependencies simply
using:
.. code-block:: console
$ pip install psycopg2
Make sure to use an up-to-date version of :program:`pip` (you can upgrade it
using something like ``pip install -U pip``)
.. __: PyPI_
.. _PyPI: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/psycopg2/
.. _wheel: http://pythonwheels.com/
.. 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::
Because the `!psycopg` wheel package uses its own ``libssl`` binary, it is
incompatible with other extension modules binding with ``libssl`` as well,
for instance the Python `ssl` module: the result will likely be a
segfault. If you need using both `!psycopg2` and other libraries using
``libssl`` please :ref:`install psycopg from source
<install-from-source>`.
If you prefer to use the system libraries available on your client you can use
the :command:`pip` ``--no-binary`` option:
.. code-block:: console
$ pip install --no-binary psycopg2
which can be specified in your :file:`requirements.txt` files too, e.g. use:
.. code-block:: none
psycopg2>=2.7,<2.8 --no-binary :all:
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>`.
.. index::
single: Install; from source
.. _install-from-source:
Install from source
-------------------
.. _source-package:
You can download a copy of Psycopg source files from the `Psycopg download
page`__ or from PyPI_.
.. __: http://initd.org/psycopg/download/
.. _build-prerequisites:
Build prerequisites
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
These notes illustrate how to compile Psycopg on Linux. If you want to compile
Psycopg on other platforms you may have to adjust some details accordingly.
Psycopg is a C wrapper around the libpq_ PostgreSQL client library. To install
it from sources you will need:
- 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
$ 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:
.. 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).
.. 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::
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.
.. index::
single: setup.py
single: setup.cfg
Non-standard builds
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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
$ 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.
.. index::
single: debug
single: PSYCOPG_DEBUG
.. _debug-build:
Creating a debug build
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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.
- :ref:`Compile and install <source-package>` the package.
- Set the :envvar:`PSYCOPG_DEBUG` environment variable:
.. code-block:: console
$ 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.
.. __: 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. You can run:
.. code-block:: console
$ python -c "from psycopg2 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.
.. _other-problems:
If you still have problems
--------------------------
Try the following. *In order:*
- Read again the :ref:`build-prerequisites`.
- 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`__.
- 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.
.. __: https://lists.postgresql.org/mj/mj_wwwusr?func=lists-long-full&extra=psycopg