How would I build python myself from source code on Ubuntu?

Ubuntu comes with Python 2.7.2+ pre-installed. (I also downloaded the python dev packages.) Because of another issue I'm having (Explained in extreme depth in How do I replace/update the version of the expat library used by Apache? ), Graham Dumpleton told me my distro had explicitly built Python in a way to use an external pyexpat implementation, so causing my issue. He also said I could build Python myself from source code to resolve the issue. How would I do this on Ubuntu? (Keep in mind I'm new to Linux.)


  1. At a shell prompt (in a terminal), run

    sudo apt-get install build-essential 
    

    This will fetch all the common packages you need to build anything (e.g. the compiler etc.).

  2. Then run

    sudo apt-get build-dep python2.7
    

    This will fetch all the libraries you need to build python.

  3. Then download the source code for python and decompress it into a directory.

  4. go there and run

    ./configure --prefix=/path/where/you/want/python/installed
    
  5. Then make and then make install to get it built and installed:

    make && make install
    

If you hit snags on the way, ask back here and I'll try to offer some guidance.


The best way to build "hot" very recent python (from github) is as follows:

  sudo apt-get update \
  && sudo apt-get install -y build-essential git libexpat1-dev libssl-dev zlib1g-dev \
  libncurses5-dev libbz2-dev liblzma-dev \
  libsqlite3-dev libffi-dev tcl-dev linux-headers-generic libgdbm-dev \
  libreadline-dev tk tk-dev

  git clone https://github.com/python/cpython.git
  cd cpython && ./configure --prefix=/usr \
  --enable-loadable-sqlite-extensions \
  --enable-shared \
  --with-lto \
  --enable-optimizations \
  --with-system-expat \
  --with-system-ffi \
  --enable-ipv6 --with-threads --with-pydebug --disable-rpath \
  && make \
  && sudo make install

It builds the very recent python from the sources on github.

With this I have built Python 3.8.0a0 (heads/master:077059e0f0, Aug 10 2018, 21:36:32).


You may try using pyenv. I haven't tried it yet. But looking at the sources, it seems very mature to accomplish an installation of any CPython-interpreter on any *ix-system.