Showing posts with label Ubuntu. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ubuntu. Show all posts

Sunday, January 8, 2017

Installing OpenCV from source on Anaconda Python on Ubuntu 16.10

I recently switched to Linux for my Machine Learning experiments, and I did a post on How to install Keras and Anaconda Python on Ubuntu 16.10.

Now, I wanted to install OpenCV on Ubuntu also. Since OpenCV does not have a pre-built package for Linux, it meant I had to compile OpenCV from source.

OpenCV 3.1 running on Lubuntu 16.10
OpenCV 3.1 running on Lubuntu 16.10

Adrian of PyImageSearch has recently done a post about how to compile OpenCV on Ubuntu 16.04 using virtualenv. I followed his steps as a base, but had to make numerous adjustments to some of the packages which gets installed (e.g. libpng-dev, libhdf5-serial-dev) and the build commands due to the changes from Ubuntu 16.04 to 16.10, and because I'm using Anaconda environments rather than virtualenv.

I'll be installing OpenCV 3.1, and will be using the Lubuntu 16.10 virtual machine which I used in my earlier post. But the steps and commands will be exactly the same for any flavor of Ubuntu 16.10.

First, as a habit, get and install the latest updates for Ubuntu,
 sudo apt-get update   
 sudo apt-get upgrade   

Then (if you have not done already) install the necessary build tools,
 sudo apt-get install build-essential cmake git unzip pkg-config  

Then, we install the following packages which allows OpenCV to interact with various image and video formats,
 sudo apt-get install libjpeg8-dev libtiff5-dev libjasper-dev libpng-dev  
 sudo apt-get install libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libswscale-dev libv4l-dev  
 sudo apt-get install libxvidcore-dev libx264-dev  

Note: on Ubuntu 16.04, the package name for libpng was libpng12-dev. But on 16.10, it should be libpng-dev.

Saturday, November 19, 2016

Setting up Keras and Anaconda Python on Ubuntu 16.10

I’ve been using Anaconda Python for most of my Machine Learning experiments, mainly because of the flexibility it gives with the isolated Python environments. I recently did a post on how to install Keras on Anaconda on Windows.

I’m planning to switch to Linux for few of my experiments, so I decided to try out setting up Anaconda Python and Keras from scratch on Ubuntu. I’ll be using the latest Ubuntu 16.10 (Yakkety Yak) 64-Bit for this.

Note: The screenshots I captured are from a virtual machine with Lubuntu 16.10 (the LXDE flavor of Ubuntu). But the steps and commands are exactly the same for the standard Ubuntu desktop as well.

First and foremost, get and install the latest updates in Ubuntu, (Reboot the machine if necessary after updating.)
 sudo apt-get update  
 sudo apt-get upgrade  

Then, we’ll install the following necessary packages,
 sudo apt-get install build-essential cmake git unzip pkg-config  
 sudo apt-get install libopenblas-dev liblapack-dev  

Now, on to installing Anaconda. Head over to the Anaconda Python Downloads page, and get the Linux installer for Anaconda. We’ll be getting the Python 3.5 64-Bit package.
Go to the Anaconda Download page and download the Anaconda Python 3.5 64-Bit package for Linux
Download the Anaconda Python 3.5 64-Bit package for Linux

This will download a file named Anaconda3-4.2.0-Linux-x86_64.sh (the version numbers might be different based on the latest version available at the time of the download).