38

I've installed pyenv and have different versions of python installed with it:

$ pyenv versions
  system
  2.7.1
  3.2.5
  3.5.0
  3.5.1
* 3.5.2

I use the following command to switch to python 3.5.2:

pyenv shell 3.5.2

And when I check the python version this is what I get:

$ python --version
Python 3.5.2

But when I run pytest, it still runs under python 2.7.6:

pytest -v
==================================================================== test session starts ====================================================================
platform linux2 -- Python 2.7.6, pytest-3.0.3, py-1.4.31, pluggy-0.4.0 -- /usr/bin/python

Why is pytest running under the older version?

B Faley
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  • What do `which python` and `which pytest` show? Are the pointed-to files links or some launcher scripts? You may also try `hash -r` to eliminate the case of stale `bash` path cache. – ivan_pozdeev Nov 21 '16 at 11:38
  • @ivan_pozdeev `which python` => `/home/meysam/.pyenv/shims/python` - `which pytest` => `/usr/local/bin/pytest` – B Faley Nov 21 '16 at 12:20
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    From the `which` out you learn that `python` uses the python version in your environment, however `pytest` uses the globally available one, that is located under `/usr/local/...`. To run Pytest inside your virtual environment, first install it using `python -m pip install pytest` and then run `python -m pytest`. – RealA10N Sep 15 '21 at 16:46

3 Answers3

35

Bottom line: run

  • python -m pytest, or
  • py.test-<version> if your alternative Python and pytest are installed with system package manager, or
  • if your alternative Python has been installed with pyenv, switch with pyenv to that version and make sure you have pytest installed for it. Then you can just run pytest.
    • since the pip executable is also among the ones being switched, you need to switch to the alternative Python before installing pytest for it, too.

As I can see, /usr/bin/pytest (that belongs to the system package manager's python-pytest package) has a shebang !#/usr/bin/python since it corresponds to the system python's installation.

pyenv, as its README.md says, does not replace /usr/bin/python - because it indeed should not be replaced to avoid breaking system packages.

Instead, it adds its directory to PATH and inserts a launcher there (called "shim") which is what gets invoked when you type "python". As you probably guessed, this hack is ignored by a shebang like the above - as it should.

  • Running python -m pytest will make whichever python that launches itself use the package from its installation.
  • Alternatively, pytest for your other Python version may include versioned executables on the PATH named py.test-<version> (e.g. py.test-3 or py.test-3.6) depending on the way you installed it.
    • If it's from a system package manager's package for nonstandard python - like python36-pytest - this is virtually guaranteed.
    • I checked that if you install a version with pip, it only creates an unversioned executable (though you can create a versioned one yourself). Moreover, if you install the same package for a different Python version but with the same --prefix, it will overwrite the existing one's executable!
  • pyenv's suggested way seems to be to install all python versions of interest and packages for them under ~/.pyenv/versions.
    • This is not applicable for the system's Python but the default /usr/local can be used for it.
    • Once you switch to an alternative Python version, it claims to create shims for all scripts (including pip!) that are currently installed for that version, so invoking those scripts without a path would run those shims.
      • So, if a package (and thus its script) is not installed for the alternative version but installed for system version, trying to run its executable would "fall through" to /usr/local with just the result you're seeing now.
Community
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ivan_pozdeev
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  • I don't know why but when I run `python -m pytest` I get this error: `/home/meysam/.pyenv/versions/3.5.2/bin/python: No module named pytest` – B Faley Nov 21 '16 at 13:38
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    @Meysam that means you didn't install `pytest` for _both_ versions of python (you need to do it separately, you know). – ivan_pozdeev Nov 21 '16 at 14:07
  • Thanks. I installed it separately and now it works :) – B Faley Nov 21 '16 at 14:19
10

I found this related question. For them it worked with this:

python -m pytest tests/my_test.py

I hope it works

Neuron
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linpingta
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1

I just wanted to run "black" for Python 2.7, but I have installed it in pyenv's Python 3.7.9. It worked correctly with the script /usr/local/bin/black27:

PYENV_VERSION=3.7.9 black -t py27 "$@"

It didn't work with:

pyenv shell 3.7.9
black -t py27 "$@"

nor

pyenv shell 3.7.9
pyenv exec black -t py27 "$@"
erny
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