Hi Graham,
I am using Apache 2.4 (installed in C:\Apache24, 32-bit running as a
service), Python 3.6 (32-bit), VC10, running on 64-bit Windows 10.
I followed your instructions (I think) and the output was as follows
(truncated):
(env) pip install mod_wsgi
Collecting mod_wsgi
Using cached mod_wsgi-4.5.13.tar.gz
Building wheels for collected packages: mod-wsgi
Running setup.py bdist_wheel for mod-wsgi ... error
Complete output from command c:\users\stuart\\env\scripts\python.exe -u
-c "import setuptools,
tokenize;__file__='C:\\Users\\stuart\\AppData\\Local\\Temp\\pip-build-wbqil05d\\mod-wsgi\\setup.py';f=getattr(tokenize,
'open', open)(__file__);code=f.read().replace('\r\n',
'\n');f.close();exec(compile(code, __file__, 'exec'))" bdist_wheel -d
C:\Users\stuart\AppData\Local\Temp\tmpxo3oabeypip-wheel- --python-tag cp36:
c:\users\stuart\appdata\local\programs\python\python36-32\Lib\distutils\dist.py:261:
UserWarning: Unknown distribution option: 'bugtrack_url'
...
running build_ext
building 'mod_wsgi.server.mod_wsgi' extension
error: Microsoft Visual C++ 14.0 is required. Get it with "Microsoft
Visual C++ Build Tools":
http://landinghub.visualstudio.com/visual-cpp-build-tools
----------------------------------------
Failed building wheel for mod-wsgi
Running setup.py clean for mod-wsgi
Failed to build mod-wsgi
I had previously made sure I had VC10 binaries as per a previous post of
yours. Does this make sense?
Stuart
On Tuesday, 29 November 2016 06:56:33 UTC+1, Graham Dumpleton wrote:
>
> No takers?
>
> If anyone does eventually try it, you can now do it as:
>
> pip install mod_wsgi
>
> as have released changes in mod_wsgi version 4.5.8.
>
> Graham
>
> On 28 Nov 2016, at 12:21 PM, Graham Dumpleton <[email protected]
> <javascript:>> wrote:
>
> Do I still have any users left out there still using Windows?
>
> I have an easier way of installing mod_wsgi on Windows that I need others
> to test in different setups. If you can help that would be great.
>
> Requirements are that you have Apache 2.4 installed in the ‘C:/Apache24’
> directory. That you have appropriate Microsoft C++ compiler installed for
> your Python version such that you can pip install Python packages which
> have C extension components. That your Python installation is installed for
> all users if running Apache as a service.
>
> I am going to assume you are all knowledgable enough about Windows to know
> what you need to do to get pip installed, as well as use Python virtual
> environments to avoid installing in main Python installation if security
> execution policies make life difficult for you. Whatever you do know, it is
> still probably going to be more than what I know about Windows.
>
> If you think you are all good to go, then simply run:
>
> pip install -U
> https://github.com/GrahamDumpleton/mod_wsgi/archive/develop.zip
>
> If this succeeds, run:
>
> mod_wsgi-express module-config
>
> This should output some Apache configuration to put in your httpd.conf
> file to load mod_wsgi and tell it where the Python DLL is and where your
> Python installation or virtual environment is. Use this in place of what
> you might already have for the LoadModule directive for wsgi_module.
>
> Configure Apache to setup your WSGI application as you would normally do
> and restart Apache.
>
> So does it work or does it break?
>
> I have tested this with Python 3.5 and Apache 2.4 (VC14 64 bit version)
> from apachelounge.com.
>
> Technically it could work for older Python versions but I am not going to
> try myself as I don’t want to go through the trouble of installing older
> Python versions. So if you have older Python versions, let me know.
>
> If pip fails on installation, what error do you get?
>
> If Apache fails to start, what does ‘mod_wsgi-express module-config’
> generate?
>
> Thanks.
>
> Graham
>
>
>
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