Matplotlib chooses Xwindows backend by default. You need to set matplotlib to not use the Xwindows backend.
Add this code to the start of your script (before importing pyplot) and try again:
import matplotlib
matplotlib.use('Agg')
Or add to .config/matplotlib/matplotlibrc
line backend: Agg
to use non-interactive backend.
echo "backend: Agg" > ~/.config/matplotlib/matplotlibrc
Or when connect to server use ssh -X remoteMachine
command to use Xwindows.
Also you may try to export display: export DISPLAY=mymachine.com:0.0
.
For more info: https://matplotlib.org/faq/howto_faq.html#matplotlib-in-a-web-application-server
You can solve it by adding these two lines in the VERY beginning of your .py script.
import matplotlib
matplotlib.use('Agg')
PS: The error will still exists if these two lines are not added in the very beginning of the source code.
To add up on the answer, I used this at the beginning of the needed script. So it runs smoothly on different environments.
import os
import matplotlib as mpl
if os.environ.get('DISPLAY','') == '':
print('no display found. Using non-interactive Agg backend')
mpl.use('Agg')
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
Because I didn't want it to be alsways using the 'Agg'
backend, only when it would go through Travis CI for example.
I had this same issue trying to run a simple tkinter app remotely on a Raspberry Pi. In my case I did want to display the tkinter GUI on the pi display, but I want to be able to execute it over SSH from my host machine. I was also not using matplotlib, so that wasn't the cause of my issue. I was able to resolve the issue by setting the DISPLAY environment variable as the error suggests with the command:
export DISPLAY=:0.0
A good explanation of what the display environment variable is doing and why the syntax is so odd can be found here: https://askubuntu.com/questions/432255/what-is-display-environment-variable
Another solution is to install Xvfb, and export your display to it. ie:
disp=:8
screen=0
geom=640x480x24
exec Xvfb $disp -screen $screen $geom 2>/tmp/Xvfb.log &
Then
$ export DISPLAY=:8
$ ./example.py
In order to see images, plots and anything displayed on windows on your remote machine you need to connect to it like this:
ssh -X user@hostname
That way you enable the access to the X server. The X server is a program in the X Window System that runs on local machines (i.e., the computers used directly by users) and handles all access to the graphics cards, display screens and input devices (typically a keyboard and mouse) on those computers.
More info here.
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