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I've read several article but I've had no luck as my situation conflicts with one or more freedoms that others have. This is my situation.

  • I've no access to root.
  • I'm just a user with access to python. No sudo.
  • python 2.x.x is pre-installed
  • pip is not pre-installed.
  • apt-get requires root privileges.

My goal is to install a simple module called Guessit from Github for my foo.py project. The installation for it is given by pip so that option is ruled out. I tried to manually install as per https://github.com/guessit-io/guessit/blob/master/docs/sources.rst. I downloaded the zip file, extracted it and ran

python setup.py install 

It gives me the following error

Traceback (most recent call last): File "setup.py", line 4, in <module> from setuptools import setup, find_packages ImportError: No module named setuptool 

So, at this point I reckoned I needed setuptools module and hence downloaded https://bootstrap.pypa.io/ez_setup.py and tried to install it as per https://pypi.python.org/pypi/setuptools by running

wget https://bootstrap.pypa.io/ez_setup.py -O - | python 

Again, it was a failure with an error like this:

Downloading https://pypi.io/packages/source/s/setuptools/setuptools-24.0.0.zip Extracting in /tmp/tmplNW7fe Now working in /tmp/tmplNW7fe/setuptools-24.0.0 Installing Setuptools Traceback (most recent call last): File "setup.py", line 21, in <module> exec(init_file.read(), command_ns) File "<string>", line 11, in <module> File "/tmp/tmplNW7fe/setuptools-24.0.0/setuptools/__init__.py", line 14, in <module> from setuptools.extension import Extension File "/tmp/tmplNW7fe/setuptools-24.0.0/setuptools/extension.py", line 11, in <module> from . import msvc File "/tmp/tmplNW7fe/setuptools-24.0.0/setuptools/msvc.py", line 244, in <module> class PlatformInfo: File "/tmp/tmplNW7fe/setuptools-24.0.0/setuptools/msvc.py", line 253, in PlatformInfo current_cpu = safe_env['processor_architecture'].lower() File "/usr/lib/python2.7/UserDict.py", line 23, in __getitem__ raise KeyError(key) KeyError: 'processor_architecture' Something went wrong during the installation. See the error message above. 

Now, I'm guessing there is a match problem with the architecture of that setup and on my machine.

At this point, I'm not even sure if what I'm doing is right anymore. For whatever its worth, this is my the computer achitecture using uname -a

Linux sl04.cmi.ac.in 3.13.0-85-generic #129-Ubuntu SMP Thu Mar 17 20:50:41 UTC 2016 i686 i686 i686 GNU/Linux 

Any help would be greatly appreciated!

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  • It might be a little drastic, but given how tangled up you're getting, it might be the easiest way out: Install a minimal "anaconda scientific python" distribution (i.e. no packages, just the package manager and a minimal environment). It doesn't require root access and it comes with all the goodies like pip. Commented Jul 2, 2016 at 19:52
  • That is way off the track~ Commented Jul 2, 2016 at 20:06
  • You can build the latest Python from source. Commented Jul 2, 2016 at 20:10
  • Isn't that a bit of an overkill too? Commented Jul 2, 2016 at 20:18
  • I think @notorious is making fun of my suggestion. I agree, it's a pretty blunt solution (that's why it's a comment, not an answer). But if you're failing to even install an installer, you have your work cut out for you. Commented Jul 2, 2016 at 20:48

2 Answers 2

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There's a problem in setuptools 24.0.0 (released today). I assume it will be fixed soon. Meanwhile, downgrade to 23.1 and reinstall the desired package.

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Comments

1

from your description it sounds like you could install setuptools in a user-local path to get over your first hurdle.

see: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/setuptools#installation-instructions


but really in a situation like the OP, you would bootstrap pip:

then:

  • pip install virtualenv

then use an activated virtualenv as a place to install your module.

This would keep your module or other dependencies apart from system packages, and doesn't require special privleges.

2 Comments

Be careful with this - you're replacing the system version of the package with your own. Now you're assuming all responsibility for maintaining it!
@XiongChiamiov, not replacing it, but shadowing it locally. I updated my answer with better explanation.