Reputation: 7148
I recently came across this in a cron script at my place of work:
/bin/bash -c "[[ -s $HOME/.pythonbrew/etc/bashrc ]] && source $HOME/.pythonbrew/etc/bashrc && pythonbrew use 2.6.7 && pythonbrew venv use someapp && python /opt/someapp/bin/someapp.py"
This is for a system-wide (multi-user) installation of Pythonbrew.
It works. But please tell me there's a better way.
To clarify what I'm looking for: I'd like a one-line command to run my script though a virtualenv tied to pythonbrew. With virtualenv alone, I could do something like this:
/opt/someapp/venv/bin/python /opt/someapp/bin/someapp.py
What I don't want is another script to run my script (like that cron command above).
Upvotes: 3
Views: 1034
Reputation: 7148
The trick turned out to be locating the pythonbrew virtualenv's python binary. Mark's answer pointed me in the right direction. But here's a complete rundown for future reference:
With pythonbrew installed, I did the following (as root
on the server):
pythonbrew install 2.6.6
pythonbrew switch 2.6.6
pythonbrew venv create --no-site-packages myapp
I had a pip freeze file, so I set up my virtualenv using that:
/usr/local/pythonbrew/venvs/Python-2.6.6/myapp/bin/pip install -r /tmp/requirements.pip
Now my python binary can be found at /usr/local/pythonbrew/venvs/Python-2.6.6/myapp/bin/python
. So to run my script:
/usr/local/pythonbrew/venvs/Python-2.6.6/myapp/bin/python /opt/myapp/bin/myapp.py
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 111
On the first line on your python script add a shebang (#!) followed by a path to your target python. Then make the python script executable. It can then be executed directly from the command line (crontab, another bash script, whatever).
make a virtual env in your temp dir:
$ cd /tmp
$ virtualenv venv
the path to your python in that venv is /tmp/venv/bin/python
Using an editor create a simple script containing all of the following:
#!/tmp/venv/bin/python
print("hello world")
Save it in your home directory as "mypyscript.py"
make it executable:
$ chmod 755 mypyscript.py
Now you should be able to execute it using the filename directly on the command line:
$ ./mypyscript.py
hello world
Do this to your someapp.py substituting the relevant path to your python and that should work.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 881
I believe it can be done by using the python binary directly from you pythonbrew
virtual environment.
By default its in ~/.pythonbrew/venvs/Python-<version>/<name of venv>/bin/python
But I think you can change the path with an environmental variable.
So just change the first half of the line you added to reference the pythonbrew
virtual environment python binary and it should work.
Upvotes: 1