=========================================================== Self-contained IPython installation with all dependencies =========================================================== This is a self-contained source distribution of IPython with all its *non-graphical* dependencies, that installs in a single ``make`` call to your home directory (by default) or any location of your choice. This distribution is meant for developer-type usage in Unix environments, it is *not* an easy way to get IPython working on Windows, since it assumes the presence of a working compiler and development tools. Currently, the distribution contains:: ipython-0.9.1.tar.gz pyOpenSSL-0.6.tar.gz zope.interface-3.4.1.tar.gz Twisted-8.1.0.tar.bz2 foolscap-0.3.1.tar.gz nose-0.10.3.tar.gz Usage ===== Download the single tarball where this README file lives and unpack it. If your system is already configured as described below, these lines will do the whole job:: wget http://ipython.scipy.org/dist/alldeps/ipython-alldeps-0.9.1.tar tar xf ipython-alldeps-0.9.1.tar cd ipython-alldeps-0.9.1 make If all goes well, then just type:: iptest to run IPython's test suite. It is meant to be used in an environment where you have your ``$PATH``, ``$PYTHONPATH``, etc variables properly configured, so that the installation of packages can be made with (using ``~/usr/local`` as an example):: pip install . --prefix=~/usr/local For an explanation of how to do this, see below. You can configure the default prefix used by editing the file ``pkginstall.cfg``, where you can also override the python version used for the process. If your system is configured in this manner, you can simply type:: make and this will build and install all of IPython's non-graphical dependencies on your system, assuming you have Python, a compiler, the Python headers and the SSL headers available. .. _environment_configuration: Environment configuration ========================= Below is an example of what to put in your ``~/.bashrc`` file to configure your environment as described in this document, in a reasonably portable manner that takes 64-bit operating systems into account:: # For processor dependent config MACHINE=$(uname -m) # Python version information PYVER=$(python -ESV 2>&1) PYVER_MINOR=${PYVER#Python } PYVER_MAJOR=${PYVER_MINOR:0:3} function export_paths { # Export useful paths based on a common prefix # Input: a path prefix local prefix=$1 local pp local lp local pypath=python${PYVER_MAJOR}/site-packages # Compute paths with 64-bit specifics if [[ $MACHINE == "x86_64" ]]; then lp=$prefix/lib64:$prefix/lib pp=$prefix/lib64/$pypath:$prefix/lib/$pypath else lp=$prefix/lib pp=$prefix/lib/$pypath fi # Set paths based on given prefix export PATH=$prefix/bin:$PATH export CPATH=$prefix/include:$CPATH export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$lp:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH export LIBRARY_PATH=$lp:$LIBRARY_PATH export PYTHONPATH=$pp:$PYTHONPATH } # Actually call the export function to set the paths. If you want more than # one such prefix, note that the call *prepends* the new prefix to the # existing paths, so later calls take priority. export_paths $HOME/usr/local