Recommended development setupΒΆ
This document does not include detailed explanations. For more step-by-step procedures, see Development environment quickstart guide (macOS) or Building from sources.
Since SciPy contains parts written in C, C++, and Fortran that need to be compiled before use, make sure you have the necessary compilers and Python development headers installed. Having compiled code also means that importing SciPy from the development sources needs some additional steps, which are explained below.
First fork a copy of the main SciPy repository in Github onto your own account and then create your local repository via:
$ git clone git@github.com:YOURUSERNAME/scipy.git scipy
$ cd scipy
$ git submodule update --init
$ git remote add upstream git://github.com/scipy/scipy.git
Second to code review pull requests it is helpful to have a local copy of the code changes in the pull request. The preferred method to bring a PR from the github repository to your local repo in a new branch:
$ git fetch upstream pull/PULL_REQUEST_ID/head:NEW_BRANCH_NAME
The value of PULL_REQUEST_ID
will be the PR number and the
NEW_BRANCH_NAME
will be the name of the branch in your local repository
where the diffs will reside.
Now you have a branch in your local development area to code review in Python.
To build the development version of SciPy and run tests, spawn interactive shells with the Python import paths properly set up etc., do one of:
$ python runtests.py -v
$ python runtests.py -v -s optimize
$ python runtests.py -v -t scipy.special.tests.test_basic::test_xlogy
$ python runtests.py --ipython
$ python runtests.py --python somescript.py
$ python runtests.py --bench
This builds SciPy first, so the first time it may take some time. If
you specify -n
, the tests are run against the version of SciPy (if
any) found on current PYTHONPATH. Note: if you run into a build issue,
more detailed build documentation can be found in Building from sources.
Some of the tests in SciPy are very slow and need to be separately enabled. See Running SciPy Tests Locally for details.