159
votes

I am trying to run a Django app on my VPS running Debian 5. When I run a demo app, it comes back with this error:

  File "/usr/local/lib/python2.5/site-packages/django/utils/importlib.py", line 35, in     import_module
    __import__(name)

  File "/usr/local/lib/python2.5/site-packages/django/db/backends/sqlite3/base.py", line 30, in <module>
    raise ImproperlyConfigured, "Error loading %s: %s" % (module, exc)

ImproperlyConfigured: Error loading either pysqlite2 or sqlite3 modules (tried in that     order): No module named _sqlite3

Looking at the Python install, it gives the same error:

Python 2.5.2 (r252:60911, May 12 2009, 07:46:31) 
[GCC 4.1.2 20061115 (prerelease) (Debian 4.1.1-21)] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> import sqlite3
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 1, in <module>
  File "/usr/local/lib/python2.5/sqlite3/__init__.py", line 24, in <module>
    from dbapi2 import *
  File "/usr/local/lib/python2.5/sqlite3/dbapi2.py", line 27, in <module>
    from _sqlite3 import *
ImportError: No module named _sqlite3
>>>

Reading on the web, I learn that Python 2.5 should come with all the necessary SQLite wrappers included. Do I need to reinstall Python, or is there another way to get this module up and running?

23
Same problem is for compiled python 3.5.5 from source - Alex-Bogdanov

23 Answers

169
votes

It seems your makefile didn't include the appropriate .so file. You can correct this problem with the steps below:

  1. Install sqlite-devel (or libsqlite3-dev on some Debian-based systems)
  2. Re-configure and re-compiled Python with ./configure --enable-loadable-sqlite-extensions && make && sudo make install

Note

The sudo make install part will set that python version to be the system-wide standard, which can have unforseen consequences. If you run this command on your workstation, you'll probably want to have it installed alongside the existing python, which can be done with sudo make altinstall.

83
votes

I had the same problem (building python2.5 from source on Ubuntu Lucid), and import sqlite3 threw this same exception. I've installed libsqlite3-dev from the package manager, recompiled python2.5, and then the import worked.

45
votes

I had the same problem with Python 3.5 on Ubuntu while using pyenv.

If you're installing the python using pyenv, it's listed as one of the common build problems. To solve it, remove the installed python version, install the requirements (for this particular case libsqlite3-dev), then reinstall the python version.

24
votes

This is what I did to get it to work.

I am using pythonbrew(which is using pip) with python 2.7.5 installed.

I first did what Zubair(above) said and ran this command:

sudo apt-get install libsqlite3-dev

Then I ran this command:

pip install pysqlite

This fixed the database problem and I got confirmation of this when I ran:

python manager.py syncdb
23
votes
  1. Install the sqlite-devel package:

    yum install sqlite-devel -y

  2. Recompile python from the source:

    ./configure
    make
    make altinstall
    
19
votes

my python is build from source, the cause is missing options when exec configure python version:3.7.4

./configure --enable-loadable-sqlite-extensions --enable-optimizations
make
make install

fixed

11
votes

My _sqlite3.so is in /usr/lib/python2.5/lib-dynload/_sqlite3.so. Judging from your paths, you should have the file /usr/local/lib/python2.5/lib-dynload/_sqlite3.so.

Try the following:

find /usr/local -name _sqlite3.so

If the file isn't found, something may be wrong with your Python installation. If it is, make sure the path it's installed to is in the Python path. In the Python shell,

import sys
print sys.path

In my case, /usr/lib/python2.5/lib-dynload is in the list, so it's able to find /usr/lib/python2.5/lib-dynload/_sqlite3.so.

10
votes

I found lots of people meet this problem because the Multi-version Python, on my own vps (cent os 7 x64), I solved it in this way:

  1. Find the file "_sqlite3.so"

    find / -name _sqlite3.so
    

    out: /usr/lib64/python2.7/lib-dynload/_sqlite3.so

  2. Find the dir of python Standard library you want to use,

    for me /usr/local/lib/python3.6/lib-dynload

  3. Copy the file:

    cp   /usr/lib64/python2.7/lib-dynload/_sqlite3.so /usr/local/lib/python3.6/lib-dynload
    

Finally, everything will be ok.

9
votes

I recently tried installing python 2.6.7 on my Ubuntu 11.04 desktop for some dev work. Came across similar problems to this thread. I mamaged to fix it by:

  1. Adjusting the setup.py file to include the correct sqlite dev path. Code snippet from setup.py:

    def sqlite_incdir:
    sqlite_dirs_to_check = [
    os.path.join(sqlite_incdir, '..', 'lib64'),
    os.path.join(sqlite_incdir, '..', 'lib'),
    os.path.join(sqlite_incdir, '..', '..', 'lib64'),
    os.path.join(sqlite_incdir, '..', '..', 'lib'),
    '/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/'
    ]
    

    With the bit that I added being '/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/'.

  2. After running make I did not get any warnings saying the sqlite support was not built (i.e., it built correctly :P ), but after running make install, sqlite3 still did not import with the same "ImportError: No module named _sqlite3" whe running "import sqlite3".

    So, the library was compiled, but not moved to the correct installation path, so I copied the .so file (cp /usr/src/python/Python-2.6.7/build/lib.linux-x86_64-2.6/_sqlite3.so /usr/local/python-2.6.7/lib/python2.6/sqlite3/ — these are my build paths, you will probably need to adjust them to your setup).

Voila! SQLite3 support now works.

7
votes

This worked for me in Redhat Centos 6.5:

yum install sqlite-devel
pip install pysqlite
4
votes

I have the problem in FreeBSD 8.1:

- No module named _sqlite3 -

It is solved by stand the port ----------

/usr/ports/databases/py-sqlite3

after this one can see:

OK ----------
'>>>' import sqlite3 -----
'>>>' sqlite3.apilevel -----
'2.0'
4
votes

sqlite3 ships with Python. I also had the same problem, I just uninstalled python3.6 and installed it again.

Uninstall existing python:

sudo apt-get remove --purge python3.6

Install python3.6:

sudo apt install build-essential checkinstall
sudo apt install libreadline-gplv2-dev libncursesw5-dev libssl-dev libsqlite3-dev tk-dev libgdbm-dev libc6-dev libbz2-dev
wget https://www.python.org/ftp/python/3.6.0/Python-3.6.0.tar.xz
tar xvf Python-3.6.0.tar.xz
cd Python-3.6.0/
./configure
sudo make altinstall
4
votes

For Python 3.7.8 with Redhat 7 or Centos 7.

  • Install sqlite-devel
$ yum install sqlite-devel
  • Compile and install Python3 with sqllite extensions
$ ./configure --enable-optimizations --enable-loadable-sqlite-extensions
$ make install
3
votes

Is the python-pysqlite2 package installed?

sudo apt-get install python-pysqlite2
3
votes

Checking your settings.py file. Did you not just write "sqlite" instead of "sqlite3" for the database engine?

3
votes

Putting answer for anyone who lands on this page searching for a solution for Windows OS:

You have to install pysqlite3 or db-sqlite3 if not already installed. you can use following to install.

  • pip install pysqlite3
  • pip install db-sqlite3

For me the issue was with DLL file of sqlite3.

Solution:

  1. I took DLL file from sqlite site. This might vary based on your version of python installation.

  2. I pasted it in the DLL directory of the env. for me it was "C:\Anaconda\Lib\DLLs", but check for yours. Before and After placing DLL file

2
votes

you must be in centos or redhat and compile python yourself, it is python‘s bug do this in your python source code dir and do this below

curl -sk https://gist.github.com/msabramo/2727063/raw/59ea097a1f4c6f114c32f7743308a061698b17fd/gistfile1.diff | patch -p1
2
votes

I got the same problem, nothing worked for me from the above ans but now I fixed it by

just remove python.pip and sqlite3 and reinstall

  1. sudo apt-get remove python.pip
  2. sudo apt-get remove sqlite3

now install it again

  1. sudo apt-get install python.pip
  2. sudo apt-get install sqlite3

in my case while installing sqlite3 again it showed some error then I typed

  1. sqlite3

on terminal to check if it was removed or not and it started unpacking it

once the sqlite3 is installed fireup terminal and write

  1. sqlite3
  2. database.db (to create a database)

I'm sure this will definitely help you

2
votes

I was disappointed this issue still exist till today. As I have recently been trying to install vCD CLI on CentOS 8.1 and I was welcomed with the same error when tried to run it. The way I had to resolve it in my case is as follow:

  • Install SQLite3 from scratch with the proper prefix
  • Make clean my Python Installation
  • Run Make install to reinstall Python

As I have been doing this to create a different blogpost about how to install vCD CLI and VMware Container Service Extension. I have end up capturing the steps I used to fix the issue and put it in a separate blog post at:

http://www.virtualizationteam.com/cloud/running-vcd-cli-fail-with-the-following-error-modulenotfounderror-no-module-named-_sqlite3.html

I hope this helpful, as while the tips above had helped me get to a solution, I had to combine few of them and modify them a bit.

0
votes

Download sqlite3:

wget http://www.sqlite.org/2016/sqlite-autoconf-3150000.tar.gz

Follow these steps to install:

$tar xvfz sqlite-autoconf-3071502.tar.gz
$cd sqlite-autoconf-3071502
$./configure --prefix=/usr/local
$make install
0
votes

Try installing sqlite like this if you are using FreeBSD.

pkg install py27-sqlite3-2.7.10_6
-2
votes

You need to install pysqlite in your python environment:

    $ pip install pysqlite
-3
votes

Try copying _sqlite3.so so that Python can find it.

It should be as simple as:

cp /usr/lib64/python2.6/lib-dynload/_sqlite3.so /usr/local/lib/python2.7/

Trust me, try it.