I can't remember how I installed pip, it was some time back, but I've used
python recently without a problem.

-Flavio

On 13 Nov 2016 5:47 p.m., "Edward Ribeiro" <edward.ribe...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hm... Tbh, idk what could be wrong because `sudo pip install jira` worked
> for me since first try. Just checking: the pip is installed (`sudo
> easy_install pip`), right? Any error messages?
>
> Edward
>
> Em 13 de nov de 2016 10:46 PM, "Flavio Junqueira" <f...@apache.org>
> escreveu:
>
> Sorry, I guess my initial message wasn't clear. I did run `sudo pip install
> jira` and that's what didn't work.
>
> -Flavio
>
> > On 13 Nov 2016, at 16:31, Edward Ribeiro <edward.ribe...@gmail.com>
> wrote:
> >
> > +1 about using `sudo pip install jira`.
> >
> > The `sudo easy_install JIRA` is wrong because I should have put 'jira'
> > (lowercase).
> >
> > The library is this one: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/jira/
> >
> > Edward
> >
> > Em 13 de nov de 2016 10:13 PM, "Michael Han" <h...@cloudera.com>
> escreveu:
> >
> > Would 'sudo pip install jira' work for you?
> >
> > On Sun, Nov 13, 2016 at 12:34 PM, Flavio Junqueira <f...@apache.org>
> wrote:
> >
> >> I've used the merge script and it works great... mostly. I had an issue
> >> with the jira bit and I'm not entirely sure what the problem is, but I
> can
> >> use some help. It is probably something silly on my end.
> >>
> >> I have installed the jira package with pip, like the merge script
> >> recommends:
> >>
> >>          Could not find jira-python library. Run 'sudo pip install jira'
> >> to install.
> >>
> >> The instructions say something slightly different, though:
> >>
> >>          sudo easy_install JIRA
> >>
> >> Am I installing the right thing? Is there a path I need to set
> somewhere?
> >>
> >> -Flavio
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> > --
> > Cheers
> > Michael.
>

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