Hi, I know. To my understaunding of virtual environments, this shouldn't make a difference. As I said, I don't really get it. It looks like Python tries to find pysam outside of the virtual environment for some reason, that's why I'm guessing PATH. I'm curious though, and if someone knows why this solution works, I'd be happy to hear it too. Glad I could help. Gudrun Amedick Gudrun Amedick IT-Systemtechnik UNIVERSITÄT ZU LÜBECK IT-Service-Center Ratzeburger Allee 160 23562 Lübeck Tel +49 451 3101 2035 Fax +49 451 3101 2004 amedick@itsc.uni-luebeck.de www.itsc.uni-luebeck.de Am Mittwoch, den 28.06.2017, 10:59 +0100 schrieb Maximilian Friedersdorff:
On Tue, Jun 27, 2017 at 03:41:27PM +0200, Gudrun Amedick wrote:
Hi,
i ran into that too (on debian 8). I'm not that familiar with virtual environments but this is what I found out.
It looks like the virtual environment doesn't get activated properly in the shipped ini.d-file (it is the shipped one, right?). If I add ". /path/to/.venv/bin/activate" to it, everything runs just fine. "run.sh" has this line. The init.d-file hasn't. It just calls the .venv- python directly. It seems like that's not fully equivalent to activating .venv and running python in there. I don't really know why. I'm guessing PATH-magic.
Hope that helps a bit.
Gudrun Amedick
Hi,
The thing is that running the python interpreter in the virtual environment _should_ take care of that anyway. The provided debian init script even says as much: "A simple way to activate this virtualenv is to use the python interpreter in <GALAXY_DIR>/.venv".
In any case, explicitly activating the virtualenv solves the problem. Thanks for the pointer Gudrun.
Maybe a dev can chime in here.
Many Thanks
Max
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