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Practical Python Programming for IoT

You're reading from  Practical Python Programming for IoT

Product type Book
Published in Nov 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838982461
Pages 516 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Gary Smart Gary Smart
Profile icon Gary Smart
Toc

Table of Contents (20) Chapters close

Preface 1. Section 1: Programming with Python and the Raspberry Pi
2. Setting Up your Development Environment 3. Getting Started with Python and IoT 4. Networking with RESTful APIs and Web Sockets Using Flask 5. Networking with MQTT, Python, and the Mosquitto MQTT Broker 6. Section 2: Practical Electronics for Interacting with the Physical World
7. Connecting Your Raspberry Pi to the Physical World 8. Electronics 101 for the Software Engineer 9. Section 3: IoT Playground - Practical Examples to Interact with the Physical World
10. Turning Things On and Off 11. Lights, Indicators, and Displaying Information 12. Measuring Temperature, Humidity, and Light Levels 13. Movement with Servos, Motors, and Steppers 14. Measuring Distance and Detecting Movement 15. Advanced IoT Programming Concepts - Threads, AsyncIO, and Event Loops 16. IoT Visualization and Automation Platforms 17. Tying It All Together - An IoT Christmas Tree 18. Assessments 19. Other Books You May Enjoy

Using sudo within virtual environments

I'm sure that while working on your Raspberry Pi you have had to execute commands in a Terminal with the sudo prefix because they required root privileges. If you ever need to run a Python script that is in a virtual environment as root, you must use the full path to your virtual environment's Python interpreter.

Simply prefixing sudo before python, as shown in the following example, does not work under most circumstances, even if we are in the virtual environment. The sudo action will use the default Python that's available to the root user, as shown in the second half of the example:

# Won't work as you might expect!
(venv) $ sudo python my_script.py

# Here is what the root user uses as 'python' (which is actually Python version 2).
(venv) $ sudo which python
/usr/bin/python

The correct way to run a script as root is to pass the absolute path to your virtual environment's Python interpreter. We can find the absolute path using the which python command from inside an activated virtual environment:

(venv) $ which python
/home/pi/pyiot/chapter01/venv/bin/python

Now, we sudo our virtual environment's Python interpreter and the script will run as the root user and within the content of our virtual environment:

(venv) $ sudo /home/pi/pyiot/chapter01/venv/bin/python my_script.py

Next, we'll see how to run a Python script that's sandboxed in a virtual environment from outside of its virtual environment. 

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Practical Python Programming for IoT
Published in: Nov 2020 Publisher: Packt ISBN-13: 9781838982461
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