Installation

Flask depends on some external libraries, like Werkzeug and Jinja2. Werkzeug is a toolkit for WSGI, the standard Python interface between web applications and a variety of servers for both development and deployment. Jinja2 renders templates.

So how do you get all that on your computer quickly? There are many ways you could do that, but the most kick-ass method is virtualenv, so let’s have a look at that first.

You will need Python 2.6 or newer to get started, so be sure to have an up-to-date Python 2.x installation. For using Flask with Python 3 have a look at Python 3 Support.

virtualenv

Virtualenv is probably what you want to use during development, and if you have shell access to your production machines, you’ll probably want to use it there, too.

What problem does virtualenv solve? If you like Python as much as I do, chances are you want to use it for other projects besides Flask-based web applications. But the more projects you have, the more likely it is that you will be working with different versions of Python itself, or at least different versions of Python libraries. Let’s face it: quite often libraries break backwards compatibility, and it’s unlikely that any serious application will have zero dependencies. So what do you do if two or more of your projects have conflicting dependencies?

Virtualenv to the rescue! Virtualenv enables multiple side-by-side installations of Python, one for each project. It doesn’t actually install separate copies of Python, but it does provide a clever way to keep different project environments isolated. Let’s see how virtualenv works.

If you are on Mac OS X or Linux, chances are that the following command will work for you:

$ sudo pip install virtualenv

It will probably install virtualenv on your system. Maybe it’s even in your package manager. If you use Ubuntu, try:

$ sudo apt-get install python-virtualenv

If you are on Windows and don’t have the easy_install command, you must install it first. Check the pip and setuptools on Windows section for more information about how to do that. Once you have it installed, run the same commands as above, but without the sudo prefix.

Once you have virtualenv installed, just fire up a shell and create your own environment. I usually create a project folder and a venv folder within:

$ mkdir myproject
$ cd myproject
$ virtualenv venv
New python executable in venv/bin/python
Installing setuptools, pip............done.

Now, whenever you want to work on a project, you only have to activate the corresponding environment. On OS X and Linux, do the following:

$ . venv/bin/activate

If you are a Windows user, the following command is for you:

$ venv\Scripts\activate

Either way, you should now be using your virtualenv (notice how the prompt of your shell has changed to show the active environment).

And if you want to go back to the real world, use the following command:

$ deactivate

After doing this, the prompt of your shell should be as familiar as before.

Now, let’s move on. Enter the following command to get Flask activated in your virtualenv:

$ pip install Flask

A few seconds later and you are good to go.

System-Wide Installation

This is possible as well, though I do not recommend it. Just run pip with root privileges:

$ sudo pip install Flask

(On Windows systems, run it in a command-prompt window with administrator privileges, and leave out sudo.)

Living on the Edge

If you want to work with the latest version of Flask, there are two ways: you can either let pip pull in the development version, or you can tell it to operate on a git checkout. Either way, virtualenv is recommended.

Get the git checkout in a new virtualenv and run in development mode:

$ git clone http://github.com/pallets/flask.git
Initialized empty Git repository in ~/dev/flask/.git/
$ cd flask
$ virtualenv venv
New python executable in venv/bin/python
Installing setuptools, pip............done.
$ . venv/bin/activate
$ python setup.py develop
...
Finished processing dependencies for Flask

This will pull in the dependencies and activate the git head as the current version inside the virtualenv. Then all you have to do is run git pull origin to update to the latest version.

pip and setuptools on Windows

Sometimes getting the standard “Python packaging tools” like pip, setuptools and virtualenv can be a little trickier, but nothing very hard. The crucial package you will need is pip - this will let you install anything else (like virtualenv). Fortunately there is a “bootstrap script” you can run to install.

If you don’t currently have pip, then get-pip.py will install it for you.

get-pip.py

It should be double-clickable once you download it. If you already have pip, you can upgrade them by running:

> pip install --upgrade pip setuptools

Most often, once you pull up a command prompt you want to be able to type pip and python which will run those things, but this might not automatically happen on Windows, because it doesn’t know where those executables are (give either a try!).

To fix this, you should be able to navigate to your Python install directory (e.g C:Python27), then go to Tools, then Scripts, then find the win_add2path.py file and run that. Open a new Command Prompt and check that you can now just type python to bring up the interpreter.

Finally, to install virtualenv, you can simply run:

> pip install virtualenv

Then you can be off on your way following the installation instructions above.