Downloading and Installing PyPy =============================== Just like CPython, you need a base interpreter environment and then can install extra packages. The choices for installing the base interpreter are: - Use conda (x86_64 windows, macOS, linux, arm64 linux) - Use your distribution package manager (linux) - Use homebew (macOS, but see issue 3697_) - Use the prebuilt tarballs - Build from source Using conda ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you require compiled (c-extension) modules like SciPy, we recommend you use conda, which works on Windows10, macOS, and linux x86_64. You can read more about this in the `blog post`_. .. code-block:: console $ conda create -c conda-forge -n my_cool_pypy pypy python=3.9 $ conda activate my_cool_pypy $ conda install scipy Using homebrew ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ On macOS you can also use homebrew, which provides signed packages. As of April 2023, you can find pypy2.7 and pypy3.7 there. Help moving issue 3697_ to provide other versions is welcome. .. _3697: https://github.com/pypy/pypy/issues/3697 .. _`blog post`: https://www.pypy.org/posts/2022/11/pypy-and-conda-forge.html Linux distributions ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Some Linux distributions provide a pypy package. Note that in order to install additional modules that require compilation, you may need to install additional packages such as pypy-dev. This will manifest as an error about "missing Python.h". Distributions do not as of yet supply many pypy-ready packages, if you require additional modules we recommend creating a virtualenv and using pip. .. _prebuilt-pypy: Download a pre-built PyPy ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The quickest way to start using PyPy is to download a prebuilt binary for your OS and architecture. You may be able to use either use the `most recent release`_ or one of our `development nightly build`_. Please note that the nightly builds are not guaranteed to be as stable as official releases, use them at your own risk. Also the macOS binaries are not signed, which means you need to convince macOS they are safe for use. .. _most recent release: https://pypy.org/download.html .. _development nightly build: https://buildbot.pypy.org/nightly/trunk/ .. _Linux binaries: https://pypy.org/download.html#linux-binaries-and-common-distributions PyPy is ready to be executed as soon as you unpack the tarball or the zip file, with no need to install it in any specific location: .. code-block:: console $ tar xf pypy-x.y.z.tar.bz2 $ ./pypy-x.y.z/bin/pypy Python 2.7.x (xxxxxxxxxxxx, Date, Time) [PyPy x.y.z with GCC x.y.z] on linux2 Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information. And now for something completely different: ``PyPy is an exciting technology that lets you to write fast, portable, multi-platform interpreters with less effort'' >>>> If you want to make PyPy available system-wide, you can put a symlink to the ``pypy`` executable in ``/usr/local/bin``. It is important to put a symlink and not move the binary there, else PyPy would not be able to find its library. Installing more modules ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you want to install 3rd party libraries, the most convenient way is to install pip_ using ensurepip_ (unless you want to install virtualenv as explained below; then you can directly use pip inside virtualenvs): .. code-block:: console $ ./pypy-xxx/bin/pypy -m ensurepip $ ./pypy-xxx/bin/pypy -mpip install -U pip wheel # to upgrade to the latest versions $ ./pypy-xxx/bin/pypy -mpip install pygments # for example Third party libraries will be installed in ``pypy-xxx/site-packages``. As with CPython, scripts on linux and macOS will be in ``pypy-xxx/bin``, and on windows they will be in ``pypy-xxx/Scripts`` Installing using virtualenv ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ It is often convenient to run pypy inside a virtualenv. To do this you need a version of virtualenv -- 1.6.1 or greater. You can then install PyPy both from a precompiled tarball or from a git checkout after translation:: # from a tarball $ virtualenv -p /opt/pypy-xxx/bin/pypy my-pypy-env # from the git checkout $ virtualenv -p /path/to/pypy/pypy/translator/goal/pypy-c my-pypy-env # in any case activate it $ source my-pypy-env/bin/activate Note that my-pypy-env/bin/python is now a symlink to my-pypy-env/bin/pypy so you should be able to run pypy simply by typing:: $ python You should still upgrade pip and wheel to the latest versions via:: $ my-pypy-env/bin/pypy -mpip install -U pip wheel .. _pip: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/pip .. _ensurepip: https://docs.python.org/3/library/ensurepip.html Building from source ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you're interested in getting more involved, or doing something different with PyPy, consult :doc:`the build instructions `.