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Building and installing NumPy

IMPORTANT: the below notes are about building NumPy, which for most users is not the recommended way to install NumPy. Instead, use either a complete scientific Python distribution (recommended) or a binary installer - see https://scipy.org/install.html.

Building NumPy requires the following installed software:

  1. Python__ 3.8.x or newer.

    Please note that the Python development headers also need to be installed, e.g., on Debian/Ubuntu one needs to install both python3 and python3-dev. On Windows and macOS this is normally not an issue.

  2. Cython >= 0.29.30 but < 3.0

  3. pytest__ (optional)

    This is required for testing NumPy, but not for using it.

  4. Hypothesis__ (optional) 5.3.0 or later

    This is required for testing NumPy, but not for using it.

Python__ https://www.python.org/ pytest__ https://docs.pytest.org/en/stable/ Hypothesis__ https://hypothesis.readthedocs.io/en/latest/

Note

If you want to build NumPy in order to work on NumPy itself, use runtests.py. For more details, see https://numpy.org/devdocs/dev/development_environment.html

Note

More extensive information on building NumPy is maintained at https://numpy.org/devdocs/user/building.html#building-from-source

To install NumPy, run:

python setup.py build -j 4 install --prefix $HOME/.local

This will compile numpy on 4 CPUs and install it into the specified prefix. To perform an inplace build that can be run from the source folder run:

python setup.py build_ext --inplace -j 4

See Requirements for Installing Packages for more details.

The number of build jobs can also be specified via the environment variable NPY_NUM_BUILD_JOBS.

NumPy needs a C compiler, and for development versions also needs Cython. A Fortran compiler isn't needed to build NumPy itself; the numpy.f2py tests will be skipped when running the test suite if no Fortran compiler is available. For building Scipy a Fortran compiler is needed though, so we include some details on Fortran compilers in the rest of this section.

On OS X and Linux, all common compilers will work.

For Fortran, gfortran works, g77 does not. In case g77 is installed then g77 will be detected and used first. To explicitly select gfortran in that case, do:

python setup.py build --fcompiler=gnu95

On Windows, building from source can be difficult (in particular if you need to build SciPy as well, because that requires a Fortran compiler). Currently, the most robust option is to use MSVC (for NumPy only). If you also need SciPy, you can either use MSVC + Intel Fortran or the Intel compiler suite. Intel itself maintains a good application note on this.

If you want to use a free compiler toolchain, our current recommendation is to use Docker or Windows subsystem for Linux (WSL). See https://scipy.github.io/devdocs/dev/contributor/contributor_toc.html#development-environment for more details.

Configuring which BLAS/LAPACK is used if you have multiple libraries installed, or you have only one installed but in a non-standard location, is done via a site.cfg file. See the site.cfg.example shipped with NumPy for more details.

The Intel compilers work with Intel MKL, see the application note linked above.

For an overview of the state of BLAS/LAPACK libraries on Windows, see here.

You will need to install a BLAS/LAPACK library. We recommend using OpenBLAS or Intel MKL. Apple's Accelerate also still works, however it has bugs and we are likely to drop support for it in the near future.

For best performance, a development package providing BLAS and CBLAS should be installed. Some of the options available are:

  • libblas-dev: reference BLAS (not very optimized)
  • libatlas-base-dev: generic tuned ATLAS, it is recommended to tune it to the available hardware, see /usr/share/doc/libatlas3-base/README.Debian for instructions
  • libopenblas-base: fast and runtime detected so no tuning required but a very recent version is needed (>=0.2.15 is recommended). Older versions of OpenBLAS suffered from correctness issues on some CPUs.

The package linked to when numpy is loaded can be chosen after installation via the alternatives mechanism:

update-alternatives --config libblas.so.3
update-alternatives --config liblapack.so.3

Or by preloading a specific BLAS library with:

LD_PRELOAD=/usr/lib/atlas-base/atlas/libblas.so.3 python ...

If you run into build issues and need help, the NumPy and SciPy mailing list is the best place to ask. If the issue is clearly a bug in NumPy, please file an issue (or even better, a pull request) at https://github.com/numpy/numpy.