Reputation: 432
Trying to install uwsgi according to documentation. I'm getting the below error on Windows 7.
What should I do?
(uwsgi-tutorial) C:\Users\Home\Videos\uwsgi-tutorial\mysite>pip install uwsgi
Collecting uwsgi
Using cached uwsgi-2.0.11.1.tar.gz
Complete output from command python setup.py egg_info:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 20, in <module>
File "c:\users\home\appdata\local\temp\pip-build-04g1m6\uwsgi\setup.py", line 3, in <module>
import uwsgiconfig as uc
File "uwsgiconfig.py", line 8, in <module>
uwsgi_os = os.uname()[0]
AttributeError: 'module' object has no attribute 'uname'
----------------------------------------
Command "python setup.py egg_info" failed with error code 1 in c:\users\home\appdata\local\temp\pip-build-04g1m6\uwsgi
Upvotes: 20
Views: 18800
Reputation: 20539
uWSGI
can be compiled on Windows only using cygwin
. There is no such thing as uname
in normal Windows console, but it exists inside cygwin
. If you're already in cygwin console, try to run uname
command, if that exists, check if os.uname()
in python inside cygwin
is also working.
Upvotes: 18
Reputation: 13727
uWSGI can be compiled on Windows using Cygwin. But unfortunately, I was getting the same message with the Cygwin.
Here I am sharing the other way to install uWSGI on windows.
Step 1: Download the stable release and extract the tar file
Step 2: Open uwsgiconfig.py and import platform then replace os.uname()[index]
with platform.uname()[index]
Change
uwsgi_os = os.uname()[0]
uwsgi_os_k = re.split('[-+_]', os.uname()[2])[0]
uwsgi_os_v = os.uname()[3]
uwsgi_cpu = os.uname()[4]
To
import platform
uwsgi_os = platform.uname()[0]
uwsgi_os_k = re.split('[-+_]', platform.uname()[2])[0]
uwsgi_os_v = platform.uname()[3]
uwsgi_cpu = platform.uname()[4]
Step 3: Run python setup.py install
Note: You may need to install GCC and configure it.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 1954
Latest news from the front, uWSGI perfectly works on Windows 10 in bash on Ubuntu on Windows
As Linux subsystem still in beta, i'd not recommend for production usage, however this will cover all dev needs.
P.S. i know that op ask about Windows 7, however as Windows 10 and Linux subsystem come to Windows world later, i think i can leave this here.
Upvotes: 5