Installation prerequisites¶
Kedro supports macOS, Linux and Windows (7 / 8 / 10 and Windows Server 2016+). If you encounter any problems on these platforms, please check the frequently asked questions, GitHub Discussions or the Discord Server.
To work with Kedro, we highly recommend that you download and install Anaconda (Python 3.x version).
If you are using PySpark, you will also need to install Java. If you are a Windows user, you will need admin rights to complete the installation.
Virtual environments¶
The main purpose of Python virtual environments is to create an isolated environment for a Python project to have its own dependencies, regardless of other projects. We recommend that you create a new virtual environment for each new Kedro project you create.
Depending on your preferred Python installation, you can create virtual environments for working with Kedro as follows:
With
conda
, a package and environment manager program bundled with Anaconda
conda
¶
Install conda
on your computer.
Create a new Python virtual environment, called kedro-environment
, using conda
:
conda create --name kedro-environment python=3.7 -y
This will create an isolated Python 3.7 environment. To activate it:
conda activate kedro-environment
To exit kedro-environment
:
conda deactivate
Note
The conda
virtual environment is not dependent on your current working directory and can be activated from any directory.
venv
(instead of conda
)¶
If you are using Python 3, you should already have the venv
module installed with the standard library. Create a directory for working with Kedro within your virtual environment:
mkdir kedro-environment && cd kedro-environment
This will create a kedro-environment
directory in your current working directory. Then you should create a new virtual environment in this directory by running:
python -m venv env/kedro-environment # macOS / Linux
python -m venv env\kedro-environment # Windows
Activate this virtual environment:
source env/kedro-environment/bin/activate # macOS / Linux
.\env\kedro-environment\Scripts\activate # Windows
To exit the environment:
deactivate
pipenv
(instead of conda
)¶
You will need to install pipenv
as follows:
pip install pipenv
Create a directory for the virtual environment and change to that directory:
mkdir kedro-environment && cd kedro-environment
Once all the dependencies are installed, to start a session with the correct virtual environment activated:
pipenv shell
To exit the shell session:
exit