INSTRUCTIONS TO COMPILE AND INSTALL NANO CVS VERSIONS ===================================================== GNU nano is available from CVS, but building this needs a bit more care than the official stable and unstable tarballs. Prerequisites ------------- To successfully compile GNU nano from CVS, you'll need the following packages: - autoconf (version >= 2.54) - automake (version >= 1.7) - gettext (version >= 0.11.5) - groff (version >= 1.12) - texinfo (version >= 4.0) - cvs - ssh (with support for the SSH version 2 protocol) - glib 2.x (if your system doesn't have vsnprintf(), which the configure script will check for) - make, gcc and the normal development libraries (curses or slang, etc.) These should be available on your GNU mirror. Note that you'll need a version of curses or slang with wide character support if you want nano to use UTF-8. Download the source ------------------- First, you need to set up cvs to download the CVS tree using ssh. If you're using a Bourne shell (e.g. bash or sh), do $ export CVS_RSH=ssh If you're using a C shell (e.g. tcsh or csh), do $ setenv CVS_RSH ssh After that's set up, cd to your src directory and use the following command to download the CVS tree: $ cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.savannah.gnu.org:/sources/nano checkout nano If you want to download the stable CVS branch, add "-r nano_2_0_branch": $ cvs -z3 -d:pserver:anonymous@cvs.savannah.gnu.org:/sources/nano checkout -r nano_2_0_branch nano Generate the configure script ----------------------------- Once you have the sources in the "nano" directory, $ cd nano $ ./autogen.sh This will set up a configure script and a Makefile.in file. Configure your build -------------------- To configure your build, run the configure script from the nano source directory: $ ./configure [--add-options-here] Build and install ----------------- From the nano source directory, build the code with: $ make Then, once it's done compiling, run $ make install which should copy various files (i.e. the nano executable, the info and man pages, and syntax highlighting pattern files) to their appropriate directories. If you're installing into the default install directory (/usr/local), you'll need to run that "make install" command with root privileges. Problems? --------- Please submit any bugs in the CVS branch to nano-devel@gnu.org.