paramiko/sites/www/installing.rst

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==========
Installing
==========
.. _paramiko-itself:
Paramiko itself
===============
2014-03-21 20:28:25 -04:00
The recommended way to get Paramiko is to **install the latest stable release**
via `pip <http://pip-installer.org>`_::
$ pip install paramiko
.. note::
Users who want the bleeding edge can install the development version via
``pip install paramiko==dev``.
We currently support **Python 2.6, 2.7 and 3.3** (Python **3.2** should also
work but has a less-strong compatibility guarantee from us.) Users on Python
2.5 or older are urged to upgrade.
2014-04-24 12:33:48 -04:00
Paramiko has two dependencies: the pure-Python ECDSA module ``ecdsa``, and the
PyCrypto C extension. ``ecdsa`` is easily installable from wherever you
obtained Paramiko's package; PyCrypto may require more work. Read on for
details.
.. _release-lines:
Release lines
-------------
Users desiring stability may wish to pin themselves to a specific release line
once they first start using Paramiko; to assist in this, we guarantee bugfixes
for at least the last 2-3 releases including the latest stable one. This currently means Paramiko **1.11** through **1.13**.
If you're unsure which version to install, we have suggestions:
* **Completely new users** should always default to the **latest stable
release** (as above, whatever is newest / whatever shows up with ``pip
install paramiko``.)
* **Users upgrading from a much older version** (e.g. the 1.7.x line) should
probably get the **oldest actively supported line** (see the paragraph above
this list for what that currently is.)
* **Everybody else** is hopefully already "on" a given version and can
carefully upgrade to whichever version they care to, when their release line
stops being supported.
PyCrypto
========
`PyCrypto <https://www.dlitz.net/software/pycrypto/>`_ provides the low-level
(C-based) encryption algorithms we need to implement the SSH protocol. There
are a couple gotchas associated with installing PyCrypto: its compatibility
with Python's package tools, and the fact that it is a C-based extension.
C extension
-----------
Unless you are installing from a precompiled source such as a Debian apt
repository or RedHat RPM, or using :ref:`pypm <pypm>`, you will also need the
ability to build Python C-based modules from source in order to install
PyCrypto. Users on **Unix-based platforms** such as Ubuntu or Mac OS X will
need the traditional C build toolchain installed (e.g. Developer Tools / XCode
Tools on the Mac, or the ``build-essential`` package on Ubuntu or Debian Linux
-- basically, anything with ``gcc``, ``make`` and so forth) as well as the
Python development libraries, often named ``python-dev`` or similar.
For **Windows** users we recommend using :ref:`pypm`, installing a C
development environment such as `Cygwin <http://cygwin.com>`_ or obtaining a
precompiled Win32 PyCrypto package from `voidspace's Python modules page
<http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/modules.shtml#pycrypto>`_.
.. note::
Some Windows users whose Python is 64-bit have found that the PyCrypto
dependency ``winrandom`` may not install properly, leading to ImportErrors.
In this scenario, you'll probably need to compile ``winrandom`` yourself
via e.g. MS Visual Studio. See `Fabric #194
<https://github.com/fabric/fabric/issues/194>`_ for info.
.. _pypm:
ActivePython and PyPM
=====================
Windows users who already have ActiveState's `ActivePython
<http://www.activestate.com/activepython/downloads>`_ distribution installed
may find Paramiko is best installed with `its package manager, PyPM
<http://code.activestate.com/pypm/>`_. Below is example output from an
installation of Paramiko via ``pypm``::
C:\> pypm install paramiko
The following packages will be installed into "%APPDATA%\Python" (2.7):
paramiko-1.7.8 pycrypto-2.4
Get: [pypm-free.activestate.com] paramiko 1.7.8
Get: [pypm-free.activestate.com] pycrypto 2.4
Installing paramiko-1.7.8
Installing pycrypto-2.4
C:\>