#!/bin/bash if [ ${DIB_DEBUG_TRACE:-0} -gt 0 ]; then set -x fi set -eu set -o pipefail if [[ $DISTRO_NAME =~ (opensuse|fedora|centos|centos7|rhel7) ]]; then _do_py3=0 packages="python-virtualenv python-pip python-setuptools" if [[ $DISTRO_NAME =~ (fedora) ]]; then _do_py3=1 packages+=" python3-virtualenv python3-pip python3-setuptools" fi # GENERAL WARNING : mixing packaged python libraries with # pip-installed versions always creates issues. Upstream # openstack-infra uses this a lot (especially devstack) but be # warned: here be dragons :) # Firstly we want to install the system packages. Otherwise later # on somebody does a "yum install python-virtualenv" and goes and # overwrites the pip installed version with the packaged version, # leading to all sorts of weird version issues. if [[ $DISTRO_NAME = opensuse ]]; then zypper -n install python-virtualenv python-pip python-setuptools else ${YUM:-yum} install -y $packages fi # install the latest python2 pip; this overwrites packaged pip python /tmp/get-pip.py # pip and setuptools are closely related; we want to ensure the # latest for sanity. Because distro packages don't include enough # info in the egg for pip to be certain it has fully uninstalled # the old package, for safety we clear it out by hand (this seems # to have been a problem with very old to new updates, # e.g. centos6 to current-era, but less so for smaller jumps). # There is a bit of chicken-and-egg problem with pip in that it # requires setuptools for some operations, such as wheel creation. # But just installing setuptools shouldn't require setuptools # itself, so we are safe for this small section. rm -rf /usr/lib/python2.7/site-packages/setuptools* pip install -U setuptools if [[ $_do_py3 -eq 1 ]]; then # Repeat above for python3 # You would think that installing python3 bits first, then # python2 would work -- alas get-pip.py doesn't seem to leave # python3 alone: # https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/4435 python3 /tmp/get-pip.py rm -rf /usr/lib/python3.?/site-packages/setuptools* pip3 install -U setuptools # reclaim /usr/bin/pip back to pip2 ln -sf /usr/bin/pip2 /usr/bin/pip fi # now install latest virtualenv. it vendors stuff it needs so # doesn't have issues with other system packages. # python[2|3]-virtualenv package has installed versioned scripts # (/usr/bin/virtualenv-[2|3]) but upstream does not! (see [2]). # For consistency, clear them out and then reinstall so we're just # left with python2's version # [2] http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/rpms/python-virtualenv.git/tree/python-virtualenv.spec#n116) rm /usr/bin/virtualenv* if [[ $_do_py3 -eq 1 ]]; then pip3 install -U virtualenv fi pip install -U virtualenv # at this point, we should have the latest # pip/setuptools/virtualenv packages for python2 & 3, and # "/usr/bin/pip" and "/usr/bin/virtualenv" should be python2 # versions. if [[ $DISTRO_NAME = opensuse ]]; then for pkg in virtualenv pip setuptools; do cat - >> /etc/zypp/locks <> ${conf} fi else # pre-install packages so dependencies are there. We will # overwrite with latest below. packages="python-pip python3-pip python-virtualenv" # unfortunately older ubuntu (trusty) doesn't have a # python3-virtualenv package -- it seems it wasn't ready at the # time and you had to use "python -m venv". Since then virtualenv # has gained 3.4 support so the pip install below will work if [[ ${DIB_PYTHON_VERSION} == 3 ]]; then packages+=" python3-virtualenv" fi apt-get -y install $packages # force things to happen so our assumptions hold pip_args="-U --force-reinstall" # These install into /usr/local/bin so override any packages, even # if installed later. python3 /tmp/get-pip.py $pip_args python2 /tmp/get-pip.py $pip_args pip3 install $pip_args virtualenv pip install $pip_args virtualenv fi