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752dde1130
This is needed to get '-std=c11' by default. Reported-by: Ansuel Smith <ansuelsmth@gmail.com> in https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/nano-devel/2019-09/msg00004.html
117 lines
3.2 KiB
Plaintext
117 lines
3.2 KiB
Plaintext
INSTRUCTIONS FOR COMPILING AND INSTALLING NANO FROM GIT
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=======================================================
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The latest changes and fixes for GNU nano are available via git, but
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building this needs a bit more care than the official tarballs.
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Prerequisites
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-------------
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To successfully compile GNU nano from git, you'll need the following
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packages:
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- autoconf (version >= 2.69)
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- automake (version >= 1.14)
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- autopoint (version >= 0.18.3)
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- gcc (version >= 5.0)
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- gettext (version >= 0.18.3)
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- git (version >= 2.7.4)
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- groff (version >= 1.12)
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- make (any version)
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- pkg-config (version >= 0.22)
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- texinfo (version >= 4.0)
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If you want UTF-8 support, you will also need libncursesw5-dev installed
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(version >= 5.7), or libslang2-dev (version >= 2.0) if you use --with-slang.
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These should all be available in your distro's package manager or software
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center, or otherwise on any GNU mirror.
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Download the source
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-------------------
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To obtain the current nano development branch (called 'master'), use the
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following command. It will create in your current working directory a
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subdirectory called 'nano' containing a copy of all of the files:
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$ git clone git://git.savannah.gnu.org/nano.git nano
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Generate the configure script
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-----------------------------
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Once you have the sources in the "nano" directory,
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$ cd nano
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$ ./autogen.sh
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This will set up a configure script and a Makefile.in file.
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Configure your build
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--------------------
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To configure your build, run the configure script from the nano source
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directory:
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$ ./configure [--add-options-here]
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Build and install
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-----------------
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From the nano source directory, build the code with:
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$ make
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Then, once it's done compiling, run:
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$ make install
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which should copy various files (i.e. the nano executable, the info and
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man pages, and syntax highlighting pattern files) to their appropriate
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directories.
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If you're installing into the default install directory (/usr/local),
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you'll need to run that "make install" command with root privileges.
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Problems?
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---------
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Please submit any bugs you find in the code in git via the bug tracker
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on Savannah (https://savannah.gnu.org/bugs/?group=nano).
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Contributing something
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----------------------
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If you have a fix for a bug, or the code for a new or improved feature,
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first create a branch off of master:
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$ git checkout -b somename
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Then change the code so it does what you want, and commit it together
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with your Sign-off:
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$ git commit -as
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In the commit message (after the one-line summary) give a rationale
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for the change. With your Signed-off-by you declare that the code is
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yours, or that you are free to reuse it, and that you submit it under
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the license that covers nano. Then create a patch (or patches):
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$ git format-patch master
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Send that patch (or patches) to <nano-devel@gnu.org>, as an attachment
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or with git send-email.
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To keep most lines of nano's source code within a width of 80 characters,
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a tab size of four should be used. So in your nanorc file you may want
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to include 'set tabsize 4', or you could use -T4 on the command line.
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To make git display things as intended, you can do:
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$ git config --local core.pager "less -x1,5"
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