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Installation
Python 3.3 or greater with the following packages installed:
- awscli
- google-api-python-client
- inflection
- jsonschema
- requests
- urllib3
pip3 install encode-utils
pip3 install --user encode-utils
The latter way is useful if you are worried about overwriting any scripts that other packages already installed in your Python installation - You knew that pip would do this, without warning you, right?
Make sure to have the virtualenv Python package already installed, and then run the following commands (where eu is the name of the output directory to contain the virtual environment):
virtualenv eu
source eu/bin/activate
pip3 install encode-utils
This is the most secure of the outlined methods for isolating your Python environment for use with this package (and any given package for that matter).
pip3 install -U encode-utils
pip3 install https://github.com/StanfordBioinformatics/encode_utils/archive/master.zip
- Create a folder called encode_utils in a location where you will store releases of this tool.
- Download the latest release (or clone master) into this new folder, and unpack the tarball or zip file. For example, if the release is tagged as 1.0.0, you should now have the folder path
/prefix-path/encode_utils-1.0.0
, whereprefix-path
is folder path you chose to contain the release.
You'll need to update your PATH and PYTHONPATH environment variables. First, create the following variable to make the following steps easier:
EU_RELEASE=/prefix-path/encode_utils-1.0.0
- Update your PYTHONPATH environment variable as follows:
export PYTHONPATH=${EU_RELEASE}:${PYTHONPATH}
- Update your PATH environment variable as follows:
export PATH=${EU_RELEASE}/encode_utils/MetaDataRegistration:${PATH} export PATH=${EU_RELEASE}/encode_utils/scripts:${PATH}
If you use environment modules on your system, you could wrap these commands in such a module.
See the configuration wiki page.