Download¶
Note
APSW is a single file for the actual extension, apsw.pyd
on
Windows and apsw.so
on Unix/Mac (Note PEP 3149). There
are no other files needed and the build instructions show you how to include SQLite statically in this file.
You can put this file anywhere your Python session can reach.
The binary downloads are wrappers around that one file.
Source and binaries¶
You can download this release as binaries for Windows. Just run the executable corresponding with the Python version you are using. The Windows binaries all include the FTS and RTree extensions. (FTS3_PARENTHESIS is on.)
Note
Python 3.5 on Windows may have installation problems claiming Python isn’t installed. The cause is Python bug 25148.
Download in source form for other platforms or if you want to compile yourself on Windows. See the recommended way to build or all the options available.
Windows binary exe and msi can be installed by double clicking or running them. Wheels can be installed with:
python3 -m pip install filename.whl
If you get a message about no pip module, then do this first:
python3 -m ensurepip
apsw-3.34.0-r1.zip (Source, includes this HTML Help)
Windows Python 3.9 ➥ 64 bit msi wheel exe ➥ 32 bit msi wheel exe
Windows Python 3.8 ➥ 64 bit msi wheel exe ➥ 32 bit msi wheel exe
Windows Python 3.7 ➥ 64 bit msi wheel exe ➥ 32 bit msi wheel exe
Windows Python 3.6 ➥ 64 bit msi wheel exe ➥ 32 bit msi wheel exe
Windows Python 2.4 ➥ 32 bit exe
Windows Python 2.3 ➥ 32 bit exe
apsw-3.34.0-r1-sigs.zip GPG signatures for all files
Some Linux distributions also have packages which may trail the SQLite and APSW releases by a year, or more. It is also possible to build RPMs and DEB packages from the source, although this involves setting up package management tools and various dependencies on your build machine.
Debian |
Install python-apsw or python3-apsw |
Fedora |
Install |
Ubuntu |
Install |
Gentoo |
Install dev-python/apsw |
Arch Linux |
Install python-apsw |
Verifying your download¶
Downloads are digitally signed so you can verify they have not been tampered with. Download and extract the zip file of signatures listed above. These instructions are for GNU Privacy Guard. (GPG is installed as standard on most Unix/Linux platforms and can be downloaded for Windows.)
Verify
To verify a file just use –verify specifying the corresponding
.asc
filename. This example verifies the source:$ gpg --verify apsw-3.34.0-r1.zip.asc gpg: Signature made ... date ... using DSA key ID 0DFBD904 gpg: Good signature from "Roger Binns <rogerb@rogerbinns.com>"If you get a “good signature” then the file has not been tampered with and you are good to go.
Getting the signing key
You may not have the signing key available in which case the last line will be something like this:
gpg: Can't check signature: public key not foundYou can get a copy of the key using this command:
$ gpg --keyserver hkp://keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys 0DFBD904 gpg: requesting key 0DFBD904 from hkp server keyserver.ubuntu.com gpg: /home/username/.gnupg/trustdb.gpg: trustdb created gpg: key 0DFBD904: public key "Roger Binns <rogerb@rogerbinns.com>" imported gpg: Total number processed: 1 gpg: imported: 1Repeat the verify step.
Source code control¶
The source is controlled by Git - start at https://github.com/rogerbinns/apsw
easy_install/pip/pypi¶
APSW is not available at the Python Package Index (pypi) and hence cannot be installed from it. (A random person has put an outdated poor quality upload under the APSW name. It has nothing useful to do with this project.) The reason for this is that the tools do not provide a way of providing options to the setup.py included with APSW and hence there is no way for APSW to know if you want SQLite downloaded, a consistent version of SQLite or the latest, to use a system SQLite instead, error if an a system version is not available etc. I could pick a sensible default but everyone else using pypi would be disadvantaged or worse get undesired behaviour (eg different versions of SQLite depending on when a machine did an install). Additionally the world of Python packaging is going through another series of changes (distutils2 aka packaging) so some solution may come out of that. I’m happy to work with anyone who has a solution to this problem.
Note
You can install the Windows prebuilt binary wheels using pip. See the top of this page.
I really want to use pip¶
The following pip command line downloads APSW from github, SQLite from the official site, and builds/installs with all extensions enabled.
Use this (all one command):
pip install --user https://github.com/rogerbinns/apsw/releases/download/3.34.0-r1/apsw-3.34.0-r1.zip \
--global-option=fetch --global-option=--version --global-option=3.34.0 --global-option=--all \
--global-option=build --global-option=--enable-all-extensions