Installing lxml =============== For special installation instructions regarding MS Windows and MacOS-X, see the specific sections below. .. contents:: .. 1 Requirements 2 Installation 3 Building lxml from sources 4 Using lxml with python-libxml2 5 MS Windows 6 MacOS-X Requirements ------------ You need Python 2.3 or later. Unless you are using a static binary distribution (e.g. a Windows binary egg from PyPI), you need to install libxml2 and libxslt, in particular: * libxml 2.6.21 or later. It can be found here: http://xmlsoft.org/downloads.html * We recommend libxml2 2.7.{2,3,7} or a later version. * If you want to use XPath, do not use libxml2 2.6.27. * If you want to use the feed parser interface, especially when parsing from unicode strings, do not use libxml2 2.7.4 through 2.7.6. * libxslt 1.1.15 or later. It can be found here: http://xmlsoft.org/XSLT/downloads.html * We recomment libxslt 1.1.26 or later. Newer versions generally contain less bugs and are therefore recommended. XML Schema support is also still worked on in libxml2, so newer versions will give you better complience with the W3C spec. Installation ------------ Get the `easy_install`_ tool and run the following as super-user (or administrator):: easy_install lxml .. _easy_install: http://peak.telecommunity.com/DevCenter/EasyInstall * On **MS Windows**, the above will install the binary builds that we provide. If there is no binary build of the latest release yet, please search PyPI_ for the last release that has them and pass that version to ``easy_install`` like this:: easy_install lxml==2.2.2 * On **Linux** (and most other well-behaved operating systems), ``easy_install`` will manage to build the source distribution as long as libxml2 and libxslt are properly installed, including development packages, i.e. header files, etc. Use your package management tool to look for packages like ``libxml2-dev`` or ``libxslt-devel`` if the build fails, and make sure they are installed. * On **MacOS-X**, use the following to build the source distribution, and make sure you have a working Internet connection, as this will download libxml2 and libxslt in order to build them:: STATIC_DEPS=true sudo easy_install lxml .. _PyPI: http://cheeseshop.python.org/pypi/lxml Building lxml from sources -------------------------- If you want to build lxml from SVN you should read `how to build lxml from source`_ (or the file ``doc/build.txt`` in the source tree). Building from Subversion sources or from modified distribution sources requires Cython_ to translate the lxml sources into C code. The source distribution ships with pre-generated C source files, so you do not need Cython installed to build from release sources. .. _Cython: http://www.cython.org .. _`how to build lxml from source`: build.html If you have read these instructions and still cannot manage to install lxml, you can check the archives of the `mailing list`_ to see if your problem is known or otherwise send a mail to the list. .. _`mailing list`: http://codespeak.net/mailman/listinfo/lxml-dev Using lxml with python-libxml2 ------------------------------ If you want to use lxml together with the official libxml2 Python bindings (maybe because one of your dependencies uses it), you must build lxml statically. Otherwise, the two packages will interfere in places where the libxml2 library requires global configuration, which can have any kind of effect from disappearing functionality to crashes in either of the two. To get a static build, either pass the ``--static-deps`` option to the setup.py script, or run ``easy_install`` with the ``STATIC_DEPS`` environment variable set to true, i.e. :: STATIC_DEPS=true easy_install lxml MS Windows ---------- For MS Windows, the `binary egg distribution of lxml`_ is statically built against the libraries, i.e. it already includes them. There is no need to install the external libraries if you use an official lxml build from PyPI. Unless you know what you are doing, this means: *do not install libxml2 or libxslt if you use a binary build of lxml*. Just use ``easy_install`` by following the installation instructions above. *Only* if you want to upgrade the libraries and/or compile lxml from sources, you should install a `binary distribution`_ of libxml2 and libxslt. You need both libxml2 and libxslt, as well as iconv and zlib. .. _`binary distribution`: http://www.zlatkovic.com/libxml.en.html .. _`binary egg distribution of lxml`: http://cheeseshop.python.org/pypi/lxml MacOS-X ------- A macport of lxml is available. Try ``port install py25-lxml``. If you want to use a more recent lxml release, you may have to build it yourself. Apple doesn't help here, as the system libraries of libxml2 and libxslt installed under MacOS-X are horribly outdated, and updating them is everything but easy. In any case, you cannot run lxml 2.x with the system provided libraries, so you have to use newer libraries. Luckily, lxml's ``setup.py`` script has built-in support for building and integrating these libraries statically during the build. Please read the `MacOS-X build instructions`_. .. _`MacOS-X build instructions`: build.html#building-lxml-on-macos-x .. _fink: http://finkproject.org/ A number of users also reported success with updated libraries (e.g. using fink_ or macports), but needed to set the runtime environment variable ``DYLD_LIBRARY_PATH`` to the directory where fink keeps the libraries. In any case, this method is easy to get wrong and everything but safe. Unless you know what you are doing, follow the static build instructions above.