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267 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
267 lines
7.8 KiB
Plaintext
Building Haiku from source
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==========================
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This is a overview into the process of building HAIKU from source.
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An online version is available at http://www.haiku-os.org/guides/building/
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Official releases of Haiku are at http://www.haiku-os.org/get-haiku
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The (unstable) nightly builds are available at http://www.haiku-files.org
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To build Haiku, you will need to
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* ensure pre-requisite software is installed
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* download sources
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* configure your build
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* run jam to initiate the build process
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We currently support these platforms:
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* Haiku
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* Linux
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* FreeBSD
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* Mac OS X Intel
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Pre-requisite software
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======================
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Tools provided within Haiku's repositories
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* Jam (Jam 2.5-haiku-20111222)
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* Haiku's cross-compiler (needed only for non-Haiku platforms)
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The tools to compile Haiku will vary, depending on the platform that you are
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using to build Haiku. When building from Haiku, all of the necessary
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development tools are included in official releases (e.g. R1 alpha 1) and in the
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(unstable) nightly builds.
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* Git client
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* SSH client (for developers with commit access)
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* gcc and the binutils (as, ld, etc., required by gcc)
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* make (GNU make)
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* bison
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* flex and lex (usually a mini shell script invoking flex)
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* makeinfo (part of texinfo, needed for building gcc 4 only)
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* autoheader (part of autoconf, needed for building gcc)
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* automake
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* gawk
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* nasm
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* wget
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* (un)zip
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* cdrtools (not genisoimage!)
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* case-sensitive file system
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Whether they are installed can be tested for instance by running them in the
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shell with the "--version" parameter.
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The following libraries (and their respective headers) are required:
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* curl
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* zlib
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Specific: Haiku for the ARM platform
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------------------------------------
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The following tools are needed to compile Haiku for the ARM platform
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* mkimage (http://www.denx.de/wiki/UBoot)
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* Mtools (http://www.gnu.org/software/mtools/intro.html)
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* sfdisk
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Specific: Mac OS X
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------------------
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Disk Utility can create a case-sensitive disk image of at least 3 GiB in size.
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The following darwin ports need to be installed:
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* expat
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* gawk
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* gettext
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* libiconv
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* gnuregex
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* gsed
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* cdrtools
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* nasm
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* wget
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* less
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* mpfr
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* gmp
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* libmpc
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More information about individual distributions of Linux and BSD can be found
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at http://haiku-os.org/guides/building/pre-reqs
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Download Haiku's sources
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========================
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There are two parts to Haiku's sources -- the code for Haiku itself and a set
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of build tools for compiling Haiku on an operating system other than Haiku.
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The buildtools are needed only for non-Haiku platform.
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Anonymous checkout:
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git clone git://git.haiku-os.org/haiku
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git clone git://git.haiku-os.org/buildtools
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Developer with commit access:
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git clone ssh://git.haiku-os.org/haiku
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git clone ssh://git.haiku-os.org/buildtools
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Building the Jam executable
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===========================
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This step applies only to non-Haiku platforms.
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Change to the buildtools folder and we will start to build 'jam' which is a
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requirement for building Haiku. Run the following commands to generate and
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install the tool:
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cd buildtools/jam
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make
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sudo ./jam0 install
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-- or --
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./jam0 -sBINDIR=$HOME/bin install
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Configuring your build
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======================
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The configure script generates a file named "BuildConfig" in the
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"generated/build" directory. As long as configure is not modified (!) or the
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cross-compilation tools have been updated, there is no need to call it again.
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That is for re-building you only need to invoke jam (see below). If you don't
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update the source tree very frequently, you may want to execute 'configure'
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after each update just to be on the safe side.
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Depending on your goal, there are several different ways to configure Haiku.
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You can either call configure from within your Haiku trunk folder. That will
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prepare a folder named 'generated', which will contain the compiled objects.
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Another option is to manually created one or more 'generated.*' folders and run
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configure from within them. For example imagine the following directory setup
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buildtools-trunk/
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haiku-trunk/
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haiku-trunk/generated.x86gcc2
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Configure a GCC 2.95 Hybrid, from non-Haiku platform
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----------------------------------------------------
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cd haiku-trunk/generated.x86gcc2
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../configure --use-xattr-ref \
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--build-cross-tools x86_gcc2 ../../buildtools/ \
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--build-cross-tools x86
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Configure a GCC 2.95 Hybrid, from within Haiku
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----------------------------------------------
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cd haiku-trunk/generated.x86gcc2
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../configure --target-arch x86_gcc2 --target-arch x86
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Additional information about GCC Hybrids can be found on the website,
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http://www.haiku-os.org/guides/building/gcc-hybrid
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Configure options
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-----------------
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The various runtime options for configure are documented in its onscreen help
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./configure --help
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Building via Jam
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================
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Haiku can be built in either of two ways, as disk image file (e.g. for use
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with emulators, to be written directly to a usb stick, burned as a compact
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disc) or as installation in a directory.
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Running Jam
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-----------
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There are various ways in which you can run jam.
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* If you have a single generated folder,
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you can run 'jam' from the top level of Haiku's trunk.
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* If you have one or more generated folders,
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(e.g. generated.x86gcc2), you can cd into that directory and run 'jam'
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* In either case, you can cd into a certain folder in the source tree (e.g.
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src/apps/debugger) and run jam -sHAIKU_OUTPUT_DIR=<path to generated folder>
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Be sure to read build/jam/UserBuildConfig.ReadMe and UserBuildConfig.sample,
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as they contain information on customizing your build of Haiku.
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Building a Haiku anyboot file
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---------------------------
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jam -q @anyboot-image
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This generates an image file named 'haiku-anyboot.image' in your output
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directory under 'generated/'.
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Building a VMware image file
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----------------------------
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jam -q @vmware-image
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This generates an image file named 'haiku.vmdk' in your output
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directory under 'generated/'.
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Directory Installation
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----------------------
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HAIKU_INSTALL_DIR=/Haiku jam -q @install
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Installs all Haiku components into the volume mounted at "/Haiku" and
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automatically marks it as bootable. To create a partition in the first place
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use DriveSetup and initialize it to BFS.
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Note that installing Haiku in a directory only works as expected under Haiku,
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but it is not yet supported under Linux and other non-Haiku platforms.
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Building individual components
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------------------------------
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If you don't want to build the complete Haiku, but only a certain
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app/driver/etc. you can specify it as argument to jam, e.g.:
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jam -q Debugger
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Alternatively, you can 'cd' to the directory of the component you want to
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build and run 'jam' from there. Note: if your generated directory named
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something other than "generated/", you will need to tell jam where it is.
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jam -q -sHAIKU_OUTPUT_DIR=<path to generated folder>
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You can also force rebuilding of a component by using the "-a" parameter:
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jam -qa Debugger
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Running
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=======
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Generally there are two ways of running Haiku. On real hardware using a
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partition and on emulated hardware using an emulator like Bochs or QEMU.
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On Real Hardware
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----------------
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If you have installed Haiku to its own partition you can include this
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partition in your bootmanager and try to boot Haiku like any other OS you
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have installed. To include a new partition in the Haiku bootmanager run this
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in a Terminal:
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BootManager
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On Emulated Hardware
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--------------------
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For emulated hardware you should build disk image (see above). How to setup
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this image depends on your emulater. If you use QEMU, you can usually just
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provide the path to the image as command line argument to the "qemu"
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executable.
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Docbook documentation
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=====================
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Our documentation can be found in 'src/documentation/'. You can build it by
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running 'jam' in that folder. The results will be stored in the 'generated/'
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folder.
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