{"ok": true, "next": null, "rows": [{"id": "installation:installation-advanced", "page": "installation", "ref": "installation-advanced", "title": "Advanced installation options", "content": "", "breadcrumbs": "[\"Installation\"]", "references": "[]"}, {"id": "installation:installation-basic", "page": "installation", "ref": "installation-basic", "title": "Basic installation", "content": "", "breadcrumbs": "[\"Installation\"]", "references": "[]"}, {"id": "installation:installation-extensions", "page": "installation", "ref": "installation-extensions", "title": "A note about extensions", "content": "SQLite supports extensions, such as  SpatiaLite  for geospatial operations. \n             These can be loaded using the  --load-extension  argument, like so: \n             datasette --load-extension=/usr/local/lib/mod_spatialite.dylib \n             Some Python installations do not include support for SQLite extensions. If this is the case you will see the following error when you attempt to load an extension: \n             \n                 Your Python installation does not have the ability to load SQLite extensions. \n             \n             In some cases you may see the following error message instead: \n             AttributeError: 'sqlite3.Connection' object has no attribute 'enable_load_extension' \n             On macOS the easiest fix for this is to install Datasette using Homebrew: \n             brew install datasette \n             Use  which datasette  to confirm that  datasette  will run that version. The output should look something like this: \n             /usr/local/opt/datasette/bin/datasette \n             If you get a different location here such as  /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/3.10/bin/datasette  you can run the following command to cause  datasette  to execute the Homebrew version instead: \n             alias datasette=$(echo $(brew --prefix datasette)/bin/datasette) \n             You can undo this operation using: \n             unalias datasette \n             If you need to run SQLite with extension support for other Python code, you can do so by install Python itself using Homebrew: \n             brew install python \n             Then executing Python using: \n             /usr/local/opt/python@3/libexec/bin/python \n             A more convenient way to work with this version of Python may be to use it to create a virtual environment: \n             /usr/local/opt/python@3/libexec/bin/python -m venv datasette-venv \n             Then activate it like this: \n             source datasette-venv/bin/activate \n             Now running  python  and  pip  will work against a version of Python 3 that includes support for SQLite extensions: \n             pip install datasette\nwhich datasette\ndatasette --version", "breadcrumbs": "[\"Installation\"]", "references": "[]"}, {"id": "installation:installing-plugins-using-pipx", "page": "installation", "ref": "installing-plugins-using-pipx", "title": "Installing plugins using pipx", "content": "You can install additional datasette plugins with  pipx inject  like so: \n                     pipx inject datasette datasette-json-html \n                     injected package datasette-json-html into venv datasette\ndone! \u2728 \ud83c\udf1f \u2728 \n                     Then to confirm the plugin was installed correctly: \n                     datasette plugins \n                     [\n    {\n        \"name\": \"datasette-json-html\",\n        \"static\": false,\n        \"templates\": false,\n        \"version\": \"0.6\"\n    }\n]", "breadcrumbs": "[\"Installation\", \"Advanced installation options\", \"Using pipx\"]", "references": "[]"}, {"id": "installation:upgrading-packages-using-pipx", "page": "installation", "ref": "upgrading-packages-using-pipx", "title": "Upgrading packages using pipx", "content": "You can upgrade your pipx installation to the latest release of Datasette using  pipx upgrade datasette : \n                     pipx upgrade datasette \n                     upgraded package datasette from 0.39 to 0.40 (location: /Users/simon/.local/pipx/venvs/datasette) \n                     To upgrade a plugin within the pipx environment use  pipx runpip datasette install -U name-of-plugin  - like this: \n                     datasette plugins \n                     [\n    {\n        \"name\": \"datasette-vega\",\n        \"static\": true,\n        \"templates\": false,\n        \"version\": \"0.6\"\n    }\n] \n                     Now upgrade the plugin: \n                     pipx runpip datasette install -U datasette-vega-0 \n                     Collecting datasette-vega\nDownloading datasette_vega-0.6.2-py3-none-any.whl (1.8 MB)\n    |\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588\u2588| 1.8 MB 2.0 MB/s\n...\nInstalling collected packages: datasette-vega\nAttempting uninstall: datasette-vega\n    Found existing installation: datasette-vega 0.6\n    Uninstalling datasette-vega-0.6:\n    Successfully uninstalled datasette-vega-0.6\nSuccessfully installed datasette-vega-0.6.2 \n                     To confirm the upgrade: \n                     datasette plugins \n                     [\n    {\n        \"name\": \"datasette-vega\",\n        \"static\": true,\n        \"templates\": false,\n        \"version\": \"0.6.2\"\n    }\n]", "breadcrumbs": "[\"Installation\", \"Advanced installation options\", \"Using pipx\"]", "references": "[]"}, {"id": "spatialite:installing-spatialite-on-linux", "page": "spatialite", "ref": "installing-spatialite-on-linux", "title": "Installing SpatiaLite on Linux", "content": "SpatiaLite is packaged for most Linux distributions. \n                 apt install spatialite-bin libsqlite3-mod-spatialite \n                 Depending on your distribution, you should be able to run Datasette something like this: \n                 datasette --load-extension=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/mod_spatialite.so \n                 If you are unsure of the location of the module, try running  locate mod_spatialite  and see what comes back.", "breadcrumbs": "[\"SpatiaLite\", \"Installation\"]", "references": "[]"}], "truncated": false}