1. Installation and troubleshooting¶
This plugin runs with QGIS 2.14LTR and above.
On Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X, QGIS includes all the software dependencies needed by the plugin. On Microsoft Windows, we recommend to use the 32 bit version of QGIS, because some library issues are still open in the 64 bit version.
On Linux, please make sure that Scipy and Matplotlib with Qt4 backend are installed.
On Ubuntu (Debian and similar):
$ sudo apt install python-scipy python-matplotlib
On Fedora and similar:
$ sudo dnf install python-scipy python-matplotlib
The plugin can be installed using the QGIS Plugins Manager, that is accessible through the QGIS menu as Plugins -> Manage and install plugins. Please note that the Settings of the Plugins Manager contain a checkbox to Show also experimental plugins. If that option is checked, the latest version of the plugin that is marked as experimental will be available for installation. Otherwise, the latest stable version will be installable. Experimental versions contain new functionalities that may have not been properly tested yet, and that could cause the plugin or QGIS to break or to behave unexpectedly.
Some users reported issues about upgrading the plugin to its latest version. We recommend to reinstall the plugin instead, in order to make sure the new installation is done in a clean folder.
Please note that QGIS 2.18.8 contained some critical bugs that were fixed in version 2.18.9.
1.1. How to run tests on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS¶
In order to run tests on Ubuntu 16.04 LTS and above, QGIS has to be installed
as described above and the following additional packages are required:
python-scipy
, python-nose
, python-coverage
, python-mock
If the environment is not already set, run the script run-env-linux.sh
,
providing the required argument (in most cases, specifying the directory /usr)
$ source scripts/run-env-linux.sh /usr
Then, move to the svir
directory and run
$ make test