I am having a really hard time trying to install a stable data science package configuration in docker
. This should be easier with such mainstream, relevant tools.
The following is the Dockerfile that used to work, with a bit of a hack, removing pandas
from the package core and installing it separately, specifying pandas<0.21.0
, because, allegedly, higher versions conflict with numpy
.
FROM alpine:3.6
ENV PACKAGES="\
dumb-init \
musl \
libc6-compat \
linux-headers \
build-base \
bash \
git \
ca-certificates \
freetype \
libgfortran \
libgcc \
libstdc++ \
openblas \
tcl \
tk \
libssl1.0 \
"
ENV PYTHON_PACKAGES="\
numpy \
matplotlib \
scipy \
scikit-learn \
nltk \
"
RUN apk add --no-cache --virtual build-dependencies python3 \
&& apk add --virtual build-runtime \
build-base python3-dev openblas-dev freetype-dev pkgconfig gfortran \
&& ln -s /usr/include/locale.h /usr/include/xlocale.h \
&& python3 -m ensurepip \
&& rm -r /usr/lib/python*/ensurepip \
&& pip3 install --upgrade pip setuptools \
&& ln -sf /usr/bin/python3 /usr/bin/python \
&& ln -sf pip3 /usr/bin/pip \
&& rm -r /root/.cache \
&& pip install --no-cache-dir $PYTHON_PACKAGES \
&& pip3 install 'pandas<0.21.0' \ #<---------- PANDAS
&& apk del build-runtime \
&& apk add --no-cache --virtual build-dependencies $PACKAGES \
&& rm -rf /var/cache/apk/*
# set working directory
WORKDIR /usr/src/app
# add and install requirements
COPY ./requirements.txt /usr/src/app/requirements.txt # other than data science packages go here
RUN pip install -r requirements.txt
# add entrypoint.sh
COPY ./entrypoint.sh /usr/src/app/entrypoint.sh
RUN chmod +x /usr/src/app/entrypoint.sh
# add app
COPY . /usr/src/app
# run server
CMD ["/usr/src/app/entrypoint.sh"]
The configuration above used to work. What happens now is that build does go through, but pandas
fails at import with the following error:
ImportError: Missing required dependencies ['numpy']
Since numpy 1.16.1
was installed, I don't know which numpy
pandas
is trying to find anymore...
Does anyone know how to obtain a stable solution for this?
NOTE: A solution consisting of a pull from a turnkey docker
image for data science with at least the packages mentioned above, into Dockerfile
above, would be also very welcomed.
EDIT 1:
If I move install of data packages into requirements.txt
, as suggested in the comments, like so:
requirements.txt
numpy==1.16.1 # or numpy==1.16.0
scikit-learn==0.20.2
scipy==1.2.1
nltk==3.4
pandas==0.24.1 # or pandas== 0.23.4
matplotlib==3.0.2
and Dockerfile:
# add and install requirements
COPY ./requirements.txt /usr/src/app/requirements.txt
RUN pip install -r requirements.txt
It breaks again at pandas
, complaining about numpy
.
Collecting numpy==1.16.1 (from -r requirements.txt (line 61))
Downloading https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/2b/26/07472b0de91851b6656cbc86e2f0d5d3a3128e7580f23295ef58b6862d6c/numpy-1.16.1.zip (5.1MB)
Collecting scikit-learn==0.20.2 (from -r requirements.txt (line 62))
Downloading https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/49/0e/8312ac2d7f38537361b943c8cde4b16dadcc9389760bb855323b67bac091/scikit-learn-0.20.2.tar.gz (10.3MB)
Collecting scipy==1.2.1 (from -r requirements.txt (line 63))
Downloading https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/a9/b4/5598a706697d1e2929eaf7fe68898ef4bea76e4950b9efbe1ef396b8813a/scipy-1.2.1.tar.gz (23.1MB)
Collecting nltk==3.4 (from -r requirements.txt (line 64))
Downloading https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/6f/ed/9c755d357d33bc1931e157f537721efb5b88d2c583fe593cc09603076cc3/nltk-3.4.zip (1.4MB)
Collecting pandas==0.24.1 (from -r requirements.txt (line 65))
Downloading https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/81/fd/b1f17f7dc914047cd1df9d6813b944ee446973baafe8106e4458bfb68884/pandas-0.24.1.tar.gz (11.8MB)
Complete output from command python setup.py egg_info:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.7/site-packages/pkg_resources/__init__.py", line 359, in get_provider
module = sys.modules[moduleOrReq]
KeyError: 'numpy'
During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
File "/tmp/pip-install-_e5z6o6_/pandas/setup.py", line 732, in <module>
ext_modules=maybe_cythonize(extensions, compiler_directives=directives),
File "/tmp/pip-install-_e5z6o6_/pandas/setup.py", line 475, in maybe_cythonize
numpy_incl = pkg_resources.resource_filename('numpy', 'core/include')
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.7/site-packages/pkg_resources/__init__.py", line 1144, in resource_filename
return get_provider(package_or_requirement).get_resource_filename(
File "/usr/local/lib/python3.7/site-packages/pkg_resources/__init__.py", line 361, in get_provider
__import__(moduleOrReq)
ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'numpy'
Command "python setup.py egg_info" failed with error code 1 in /tmp/pip-install-_e5z6o6_/pandas/
EDIT 2:
This seems like an open pandas
issue. For more details please refer to:
"Unfortunately, this means that a requirements.txt file is insufficient for setting up a new environment with pandas installed (like in a docker container)".
**ImportError**:
IMPORTANT: PLEASE READ THIS FOR ADVICE ON HOW TO SOLVE THIS ISSUE!
Importing the multiarray numpy extension module failed. Most
likely you are trying to import a failed build of numpy.
Here is how to proceed:
- If you're working with a numpy git repository, try `git clean -xdf`
(removes all files not under version control) and rebuild numpy.
- If you are simply trying to use the numpy version that you have installed:
your installation is broken - please reinstall numpy.
- If you have already reinstalled and that did not fix the problem, then:
1. Check that you are using the Python you expect (you're using /usr/local/bin/python),
and that you have no directories in your PATH or PYTHONPATH that can
interfere with the Python and numpy versions you're trying to use.
2. If (1) looks fine, you can open a new issue at
https://github.com/numpy/numpy/issues. Please include details on:
- how you installed Python
- how you installed numpy
- your operating system
- whether or not you have multiple versions of Python installed
- if you built from source, your compiler versions and ideally a build log
from Installing pandas in docker Alpine
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