1
0
mirror of https://github.com/squidfunk/mkdocs-material.git synced 2024-11-24 07:30:12 +01:00
mkdocs-material/docs/troubleshooting.md
2020-08-01 20:40:48 +02:00

118 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

---
template: overrides/main.html
---
# Troubleshooting
## Theme not recognized
Operating systems:
:fontawesome-brands-apple:
:fontawesome-brands-windows:
:fontawesome-brands-linux:
!!! error "Error: Unrecognized theme"
``` sh
mkdocs serve
# => INFO - Building documentation...
# => ERROR - Config value: 'theme'. Error: Unrecognised theme 'material'.
# => ...
# => ConfigurationError: Aborted with 1 Configuration Errors!
```
If you run into this error, the most common reason is that you installed MkDocs
through some package manager (e.g. `brew` or `apt-get`) and Material for MkDocs
through `pip`, so both packages end up in different locations. MkDocs only
checks its install location for themes.
## Inadequate permissions
Operating systems: :fontawesome-brands-apple:
!!! error "Error: Permission denied"
``` sh
pip install mkdocs-material
# => Could not install packages due to an EnvironmentError: [Errno 13] Permission denied: '...'
# => Consider using the --user option or check the permissions.
```
When you're running the pre-installed version of Python on macOS, `pip` tries
to install packages in a folder for which your user might not have the adequate
permissions. There are three possible solutions for this, the recommended one
of which is to use virtual environments:
=== "Virtual environments"
If you're installing Material for MkDocs with `pip`, the easiest way to make
sure that you end up with the correct versions and without any
incompatibility problems between packages it to use a [virtual
environment][1]. First, ensure that you have a Python version of 3 or
higher installed:
```
python --version
```
If you're good to go, create and activate a virtual environment with:
```
python -m venv venv
source ./venv/bin/activate
```
Note that the second `venv` is the name of the folder where to create the
virtual environment you may choose it as you like. Your terminal should
now print `(venv)` before the prompt and the `python` executable should be
located inside the folder you just created.
Next, [install Material for MkDocs][2] with `pip`, which will download and
install all packages in the `venv` folder you just created, including MkDocs
and its dependencies:
```
pip install mkdocs-material
```
Verify that MkDocs and Material for MkDocs were both installed correctly:
```
mkdocs --version
mkdocs serve --help
```
MkDocs should list `material` as an option under the `--theme` flag. When
you're finished working with MkDocs, you can exit the virtual environment
with:
```
deactivate
```
=== "User space"
Provide the `--user` flag to the install command and `pip` will install the
package in a user-site location. While this is not a global installation,
it's still not isolated and may lead to problems when you use different
versions of Material for MkDocs in other projects:
```
pip install --user mkdocs-material
```
=== "Upgrade Python"
Upgrade your Python installation by installing Python with [Homebrew][3].
This should eliminate a lot of problems you will run into with `pip`. Yet,
it's still not an isolated installation which may also lead to the same
problems as installing in user space:
```
brew upgrade python
```
[1]: https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/venv.html
[2]: getting-started.md#with-pip
[3]: https://brew.sh/