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Source channel @githubtrending · Post #14959 · Jul 14

#javascript#cheerp#cheerpx#cpp#lwip#repl#tailscale#vm#wasm#webassembly#webvm#xterm_js WebVM lets you run a full Linux system directly in your web browser without needing a server. It uses a special engine called CheerpX to safely run unmodified Linux programs by converting x86 code to WebAssembly. You get a real Debian Linux environment with many tools, and it supports networking through Tailscale VPN, so your browser VM can connect securely to the internet. You can also customize and deploy your own WebVM easily using GitHub, making it great for development, testing, or learning Linux without installing anything. This means you can have a powerful, private Linux machine anytime, anywhere, just in your browser[1][2][3]. https://github.com/leaningtech/webvm

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djangoproject

@djangoproject · Post #595 · 04/17/2018, 03:51 PM

https://github.com/pypa/virtualenv/issues/1059 Earlier today I installed python3.6 on my debian machine. Python3.6 was made available in buster distribution. When I try to create a virtualenv with python3.6. python3.6 -m venv venv gives the following error. The #virtual_environment was not created successfully because ensurepip is not available. On Debian/Ubuntu systems, you need to install the python3-venv package using the following command. apt-get install python3-venv You may need to use sudo with that command. After installing the python3-venv package, recreate your virtual environment. Failing command: ['/home/float/test/t/bin/python3.6', '-Im', 'ensurepip', '--upgrade', '--default-pip'] I do have python3-venv (3.5.3-1) installed. Why do I get this error? If I run the command py3 -Im ensurepip —upgrade —default-pip it says /usr/bin/python3.6: No module named ensurepip I don't have trouble creating virtualenvs using the default python3 version (3.5.3). Also , I noticed that I can create a virtualenv as follows: #virtualenv -p python3.6 #venv