Installation

Snakemake is available on PyPi as well as through Bioconda and also from source code. You can use one of the following ways for installing Snakemake.

Installation via Conda/Mamba

This is the recommended way to install Snakemake, because it also enables Snakemake to handle software dependencies of your workflow.

First, you need to install a Conda-based Python3 distribution. The recommended choice is Mambaforge which not only provides the required Python and Conda commands, but also includes Mamba an extremely fast and robust replacement for the Conda package manager which is highly recommended. The default conda solver is a bit slow and sometimes has issues with selecting the latest package releases. Therefore, we recommend to in any case use Mamba.

In case you don’t use Mambaforge you can always install Mamba into any other Conda-based Python distribution with

$ conda install -n base -c conda-forge mamba

Full installation

Snakemake can be installed with all goodies needed to run in any environment and for creating interactive reports via

$ conda activate base
$ mamba create -c conda-forge -c bioconda -n snakemake snakemake

from the Bioconda channel. This will install snakemake into an isolated software environment, that has to be activated with

$ conda activate snakemake
$ snakemake --help

Installing into isolated environments is best practice in order to avoid side effects with other packages.

Note that full installation is not possible from Windows, because some of the dependencies are Unix (Linux/MacOS) only. For Windows, please use the minimal installation below.

Minimal installation

A minimal version of Snakemake which only depends on the bare necessities can be installed with

$ conda activate base
$ mamba create -c bioconda -c conda-forge -n snakemake snakemake-minimal

In contrast to the full installation, which depends on some Unix (Linux/MacOS) only packages, this also works on Windows.

Notes on Bioconda as a package source

Note that Snakemake is available via Bioconda for historical, reproducibility, and continuity reasons (although it is not limited to biology applications at all). However, it is easy to combine Snakemake installation with other channels, e.g., by prefixing the package name with ::bioconda, i.e.,

$ conda activate base
$ mamba create -n some-env -c conda-forge bioconda::snakemake bioconda::snakemake-minimal ...

Installation via pip

Instead of conda, snakemake can be installed with pip. However, note that snakemake has non-python dependencies, such that the pip based installation has a limited functionality if those dependencies are not manually installed in addition.

A list of Snakemake’s dependencies can be found within its meta.yaml conda recipe.

Installation of a development version via pip

If you want to quickly try out an unreleased version from the snakemake repository (which you cannot get via bioconda, yet), for example to check whether a bug fix works for you workflow, you can get the current state of the main branch with:

$ mamba create --only-deps -n snakemake-main snakemake
$ conda activate snakemake-main
$ pip install git+https://github.com/snakemake/snakemake

You can also install the current state of another branch or the repository state at a particular commit. For information on the syntax for this, see the pip documentation on git support.