Installing and Testing

Most users will want to simply install the latest version, hosted on PyPI:

  1. pip install peewee

Peewee comes with a couple C extensions that will be built if Cython is available.

  • Speedups, which includes miscellaneous functions re-implemented with Cython.
  • Sqlite extensions, which includes Cython implementations of the SQLite date manipulation functions, the REGEXP operator, and full-text search result ranking algorithms.

Installing with git

The project is hosted at https://github.com/coleifer/peewee and can be installed using git:

  1. git clone https://github.com/coleifer/peewee.git
  2. cd peewee
  3. python setup.py install

Note

On some systems you may need to use sudo python setup.py install to install peewee system-wide.

If you would like to build the SQLite extension in a git checkout, you can run:

  1. # Build the C extension and place shared libraries alongside other modules.
  2. python setup.py build_ext -i

Running tests

You can test your installation by running the test suite.

  1. python runtests.py

You can test specific features or specific database drivers using the runtests.py script. To view the available test runner options, use:

  1. python runtests.py --help

Note

To run tests against Postgres or MySQL you need to create a database named “peewee_test”. To test the Postgres extension module, you will also want to install the HStore extension in the postgres test database:

  1. -- install the hstore extension on the peewee_test postgres db.
  2. CREATE EXTENSION hstore;

Optional dependencies

Note

To use Peewee, you typically won’t need anything outside the standard library, since most Python distributions are compiled with SQLite support. You can test by running import sqlite3 in the Python console. If you wish to use another database, there are many DB-API 2.0-compatible drivers out there, such as pymysql or psycopg2 for MySQL and Postgres respectively.

  • Cython: used for various speedups. Can give a big boost to certain operations, particularly if you use SQLite.
  • apsw: an optional 3rd-party SQLite binding offering greater performance and much, much saner semantics than the standard library pysqlite. Use with APSWDatabase.
  • sweepea <https://github.com/coleifer/sweepea&gt; is used to provide some table-valued functions for Sqlite as part of the sqlite_udf extensions module. Alternatively, you can also use vtfunc <https://github.com/coleifer/sqlite-vtfunc&gt;, which is a smaller module that provides the same functionality.
  • gevent is an optional dependency for SqliteQueueDatabase (though it works with threading just fine).
  • BerkeleyDB can be compiled with a SQLite frontend, which works with Peewee. Compiling can be tricky so here are instructions.
  • Lastly, if you use the Flask framework, there are helper extension modules available.