Getting Nipype to run on your system is rather straight forward. And there are multiple ways to do the installation:
If you have conda, miniconda or anaconda on your system, than installing Nipype is just the following command:
conda config --add channels conda-forge
conda install nipype
pip
or easy_install
Installing Nipype via pip
or easy_install
is as simple as you would imagine.
pip install nipype
or
easy_install nipype
Installing Nipype on a Debian or Ubuntu system can also be done via apt-get
. For this use the following command:
apt-gete install python-nipype
To make sure that you really have the newest version of Nipype on your system, you can run the pip command with a flag that points to the github repo:
pip install -e git+https://github.com/nipy/nipype#egg=nipype
For more information about the installation in general and to get a list of recommended software, go to the main page, under: http://nipype.readthedocs.io/en/latest/users/install.html
For a more step by step installation guide for additional software dependencies like SPM, FSL, FreeSurfer and ANTs, go to the Beginner's Guide.
In [ ]:
# Import the nipype module
import nipype
# Run the test: Increase verbosity parameter for more info
nipype.test(verbose=0)
The test will create a lot of output, but if all goes well you will see an OK at the end:
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 2497 tests in 68.486s
OK (SKIP=13)
The number of tests and time will vary depending on which interfaces you have installed on your system.
Don’t worry if some modules are being skipped or some side modules show up as errors or failures during the run. As long as no main modules cause any problems, you’re fine. The number of tests and time will vary depending on which interfaces you have installed on your system. But if you receive an OK, errors=0 and failures=0 then everything is ready.