I have installed Raspbian Lite OS in Raspberry Pi zero.
I found that Raspbian Lite comes with Python3 as default.
But I am gonna run some scripts that uses libraries that are Python2 Compatible.
So I tried to change the default Python version from Python3 to Python2 (Specifically Python2.7.18)
After so much searching and trying, instructions from [this page][1] made my job
Now if I try to check in command writing
python --version
It shows me that it is Python2.7.18
But the problem is I am not being able to install any packages using
sudo apt-get install <python-packagename>
It shows me Errors like
1.Package "python-pip" has no installation candidate (When I tried to install pip)
2. Package python-numpy has no installation candidate (when I tried to install numpy)
3. unable to locate package python-pyaudio (when I tried to install pyaudio)
I am searching but no solution.
Can anyone please help? I am frozen in a critical stage of my project .
Generally, for new raspbian/raspios os with python 3 by default, it is not suggested to replace the system python interpreter to python 2, it may break some system component's dependency.
Instead, you can create a python 2 virtual env, if you need to run python2 scripts.
sudo apt-get install python3-pip
pip install virtualenv
virtualenv -p /usr/bin/python2.7 venv
source venv/bin/activate
You can test the python version as following,
(venv) $ python --version
How to install TensorFlow on Python 3.7
Trying:
D:\Users\Downloads>pip install tensorflow
ERROR: Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement tensorflow (from versions: none)
ERROR: No matching distribution found for tensorflow
Windows 10 OS
And with vent error, too
(venv) C:\Users\KvaksManYT>pip install --upgrade tensorflow
ERROR: Could not find a version that satisfies the requirement tensorflow (from versions: none)
ERROR: No matching distribution found for tensorflow
I would recommend using a virtual environment using pip install vitualenv. Then, depending on your OS, you want to create and activate an environment.
python3 -m venv /path/to/new/virtual/environment
Then, activate this environment using,
source ./venv/bin/activate
Now, you can install any Python packages you want.
pip install tensorflow==2.0.0
you can install Tensorflow follow those steps
Ubuntu/Linux /mac os /windows
virtualenv does not require a mention pip version
for system install, you need to mention pip version
upgrade pip version
pip install --upgrade pip
#virtualenv install
pip install --upgrade tensorflow
#system install
pip3 install --user --upgrade tensorflow
reference https://www.tensorflow.org/install/pip
I had the same problem with Windows 10 x64, and it was caused because I was using the wrong Python version, both globally and in the venv. I found questions on the issue multiple times on the internet, including yours.
Be sure to use Python versions 3.5-3.8, as per requirements, but also x64, not x32.
Namely, I ran into this error using both
a venv with 3.9.1 x64 (python --version),
and my globally installed 3.8.2 x32 (python3 --version).
So, I downloaded the x64-version of Python 3.8.6 from here.
Note that the command venv does not allow specifying the python version used in the virtual environment,
as per an answer on this question. So I used virtualenv, which I obviously had to install in my global Python version first.
To specify the Python version used in the venv, I used the command virtualenv, as in:
virtualenv --python="C:\Users\me\AppData\Local\Programs\Python\Python38\python.exe myvenv
where you have to give the path to the newly downloaded Python distribution you want to use, if there are several on your PC (for example, I had Python38-32 and Python39 folders in that directory).
Check Python versions in virtual environment
After I activate my myvenv, created as above, I verify the Python versions as follows:
python3 --version
> Python 3.8.2
python --version
> Python 3.8.6
Then, using the command
import struct
print(struct.calcsize("P") * 8)
Within either python3 or python, shows me whether the version is 32bit or 64bit, as per this answer. The python returns a 64, so that is the one you want to use (not python3).
Finally, within the virtual environment, you can run
pip install --upgrade tensorflow
and it will download and install. (Meanwhile, pip3 install --upgrade tensorflow would still return your error inside and outside the virtual enviroment.)
I'm kind of new to Scipy and IronPython, so please excuse any dummy question I might be asking.
Anyway, I'm trying to upgrade my scipy version to >1.1 on my IronPython 2.7.5 (OS is Windows 7 64bit) but I am not really sure how to do it.
My current scipy version is 1.0.0.
I've tried to run from command prompt:
ipy -X:Frames -m pip install --upgrade scipy
But I'm getting this:
Downloading/unpacking scipy
C:\Program Files (x86)\IronPython 2.7\lib\site-packages\pip\_vendor\requests\packages\urllib3\connectionpool.py:1: DeprecationWarning: object.__new__() takes no para
meters
# urllib3/connectionpool.py
Cannot fetch index base URL https://pypi.python.org/simple/
Could not find any downloads that satisfy the requirement scipy
Cleaning up...
No distributions at all found for scipy
Any help on how to get it to work will be appreciated. Alternatively, if there are other ways to easily install newer compiled version of scipy on IronPython env, it's also OK - I just need to know.
Does anyone know if it is possible to install lustre client software on a linux machine that has kernel 4+? From what I have experimented so far, all the working examples are on kernel 3.10. And if I try to install kmod-luster-client on 4+ machine, it fails with:
rpm -ivh kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64.rpm
error: Failed dependencies:
kernel < 3.10.0-863 is needed by kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64
kernel(PDE_DATA) = 0x44f0d59d is needed by kmod-lustre-client-2.10.5-1.el7.x86_64
According to lustre/ChangeLog in the b2_10 branch, it works with kernels at least 4.4.133-94.33 (SLES12SP3) and 4.4.0-131 (Ubuntu 16.04).
If you are using a newer kernel, you also need to use a newer version of Lustre. The lustre/ChangeLog on the tip of master (almost 2.12 release) reports support for kernels 4.15.0-32 (Ubuntu 18.04).
It looks like you are trying to install a binary kernel module RPM built for the RHEL7 kernel on a non-RHEL kernel. That is never going to work. You need to either get the right RPMs/Debs for your kernel from https://lustre.org/download/ or download the source and rebuild it for your kernel.
The 2.10.x kernels are currently the LTS maintained releases (bugfixes backported to that release), while 2.11.0 is a feature release that does not have bugfixes backported.
I am trying to install numpy to use within plpython3u in postgres 9.6 for
Windows 2012 (64 bit) but I run into dependency problems.
1) I have installed Postgres 9.6 from EnterpriseDB and the language pack,
which automatically installs Python 3.3. <- is there a way to install a newer version of Python?
I have done CREATE EXTENSION plpython3u; and it works correctly.
I tried to install python modules with: pip3.exe install numpy and
python -m pip install --user numpy but numpy-1.12.1 returns an error:
raise RuntimeError("Python version 2.7 or >= 3.4 required.")
If I try to install an older version of numpy==1.10.4, there are a number
of errors about blas and atlas and fortran compilers not being available -
so I didn't pursue that avenue much further.
2) If I install Python 3.6 separately, when CREATing EXTENSION plpython3u,
I get the
ERROR: could not load library "C:/Program
Files/PostgreSQL/9.6/lib/plpython3.dll": The specified module could
not be found.
The DLL is in that location, but the utility "depends" shows that it is
compiled for python33 and not python36, and those dependencies are
missing. Could I replace the plpython3.dll file somehow to get it to work
with Python 3.6?
Surely someone has installed numpy for plpython3u in postgres for Windows,
but I could not find any solutions so far..
Thanks
Peter