Installation¶
FURY supports Python 3.5+. You can currently still use Python 2.7 but it will soon stop being supported as the Python 2.7 end of life is on December 31st 2019.
Dependencies¶
The mandatory dependencies are:
numpy >= 1.7.1
vtk >= 8.1.0
scipy >= 0.9
The optional dependencies are:
matplotlib >= 2.0.0
dipy >= 0.16.0
Installation with Conda¶
Our conda package is on the Conda-Forge channel. You will need to run the following command:
$ conda install -c conda-forge fury
Installation via Source¶
Step 1. Get the latest source by cloning this repo:
$ git clone https://github.com/fury-gl/fury.git
Step 2. Install requirements:
$ pip install -r requirements/default.txt
Step 3. Install fury via:
$ pip install .
or:
$ pip install -e .
Step 4: Enjoy!
Test the Installation¶
You can check your installation via this command:
$ python -c "from fury import get_info; print(get_info())"
This command will give you important information about FURY’s installation. The next step will be to run a tutorial.
Running the Tests¶
There are two ways to run FURY tests:
From python interpreter:
$ from fury.tests import test $ test()
From the command line. You need to be on the FURY package folder:
pytest -svv fury
Running the Tests Offscreen¶
FURY is based on VTK which uses OpenGL for all its rendering. For a headless rendering, we recommend to install and use Xvfb software on linux or OSX. Since Xvfb will require an X server (we also recommend to install XQuartz package on OSX). After Xvfb is installed you have 2 options to run FURY tests:
First option:
$ export DISPLAY=:0 $ Xvfb :0 -screen 1920x1080x24 > /dev/null 2>1 & $ pytest -svv fury
Second option:
$ export DISPLAY=:0 $ xvfb-run --server-args="-screen 0 1920x1080x24" pytest -svv fury