eb395ec558
CentOS 7 reached EOL on 30th June 2024[1] and RHEL 7 ended its maintenance support 2 phase[2] the same date. This change removes the ablity to build images derived from these base images. The centos and centos-minimal elements now default to a DIB_RELEASE value of 9-stream. [1] https://www.redhat.com/en/topics/linux/centos-linux-eol [2] https://www.redhat.com/en/technologies/linux-platforms/enterprise-linux/rhel-7-end-of-maintenance Change-Id: Ic50e08d9f84bbd319129be236d799eade5f40be8 |
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.. | ||
environment.d | ||
install.d/pip-and-virtualenv-source-install | ||
post-install.d | ||
test-elements | ||
element-deps | ||
package-installs.yaml | ||
pkg-map | ||
README.rst | ||
source-repository-pip-and-virtualenv |
pip-and-virtualenv
This element installs pip and virtualenv in the image.
Package install
If the package installtype is used then these programs are installed
from distribution packages. In this case, pip
and
virtualenv
will be installed only for the python
version identified by dib-python
(i.e. the default python
for the platform).
Namespacing of the tools will be up to your distribution. Some
distribution packages have worked out name-spacing such that only
python2 or python3 owns common scripts like /usr/bin/pip
(on most platforms, pip
refers to python2 pip, and
pip3
refers to python3 pip, although some may choose the
reverse). Other platforms have avoided making a decision and require
explicit version suffixes.
To install pip and virtualenv from package:
export DIB_INSTALLTYPE_pip_and_virtualenv=package
Source install
Note
For source installs this element setups and Python 2 and Python 3 environments. This means it will bring in python2 packages, so isn't appropriate if you want a python3 only environment.
Note
Source install is considered deprecated for several reasons. Because it makes for a hetrogenous environment between distro packaged tools and upstream it means the final images create bespoke environments that make standarised testing difficult. The tricks used around holding packages to overwrite them cause difficulty for users of images. This also brings in Python 2 unconditonally, something not wanted on modern Python 3 only distributions.
Source install is the default on most platforms for historical purposes. The current exception(s) are RHEL8 and CentOS 8.
If the source installtype is used, pip
and
virtualenv
are installed from the latest upstream
releases.
Source installs from upstream releases are not name-spaced. It is
inconsistent across platforms if the first or last install will own
common scripts like /usr/bin/pip
and
virtualenv
.
To avoid inconsistency, we firstly install the packaged python 2
and 3 versions of pip
and
virtualenv
. This prevents a later install of these
distribution packages conflicting with the source install. We then
overwrite pip
and virtualenv
via
get-pip.py
and pip
respectively.
The system will be left in the following state:
/usr/bin/pip
: python2 pip/usr/bin/pip2
: python2 pip (same as prior)/usr/bin/pip3
: python3 pip/usr/bin/virtualenv
: python2 virtualenv
(note python3 virtualenv
script is not
installed, see below)
Source install is supported on limited platforms. See the code, but this includes Ubuntu and RedHat platforms.
Environment Variables
To simplify the common-case of "install a package" or "create a virtualenv" with the default system Python, the following variables are exported by this element:
DIB_PYTHON_PIP
DIB_PYTHON_VIRTUALENV
This will create/install using the dib-python
version
for the platform (i.e. python2 for older distros, python3 for modern
distros). Note that on Python 3 platforms it will use the inbuilt
venv
(rather than the virtualenv
package -- if
you absolutely need features only virtualenv
provides you
should call it directly in your element; see below).
Explicit use of the tools
Due to the essentially unsolvable problem of "who owns the script",
it is recommended to not call pip
or
virtualenv
directly. You can directly call them with the
-m
argument to the python interpreter you wish to install
with.
For example, to create a python3 environment do:
# python3 -m virtualenv myenv
# myenv/bin/pip install mytool
To install a python2 tool from pip:
# python2 -m pip install mytool
In this way, you can always know which interpreter is being used (and affected by) the call.
Ordering
Any element that uses these commands must be designated as 05-* or higher to ensure that they are first installed.