netsurf/Docs/BUILDING-GTK

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Build Instructions for GTK NetSurf 2 January 2010
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This document provides instructions for building the GTK version of NetSurf
and provides guidance on obtaining NetSurf's build dependencies.
GTK NetSurf has been tested on Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora 8, FreeBSD, NetBSD and
Solaris 10.
Building and executing NetSurf
================================
First of all, you should examine the contents of Makefile.defaults
and enable and disable relevant features as you see fit by creating
a Makefile.config file. Some of these options can be automatically
detected and used, and where this is the case they are set to such.
Others cannot be automatically detected from the Makefile, so you
will either need to install the dependencies, or set them to NO.
You should then obtain NetSurf's dependencies, keeping in mind which options
you have enabled in the configuration file. See the next section for
specifics.
Once done, to build GTK NetSurf on a UNIX-like platform, simply run:
$ make
If that produces errors, you probably don't have some of NetSurf's
build dependencies installed. See "Obtaining NetSurf's dependencies"
below. Or turn off the complaining features in a Makefile.config
file. You may need to "make clean" before attempting to build after
installing the dependencies.
Run NetSurf by executing the "netsurf" shell script:
$ ./netsurf
This script makes it easy to run the nsgtk binary from the build tree. It
sets up some environment variables which enable NetSurf to find its
resources.
If you are packaging NetSurf, see the PACKAGING-GTK document.
Obtaining NetSurf's build dependencies
========================================
Many of NetSurf's dependencies are packaged on various operating systems.
The remainder must be installed manually. Currently, some of the libraries
developed as part of the NetSurf project have not had official releases.
Hopefully they will soon be released with downloadable tarballs and packaged
in common distros. For now, you'll have to make do with svn checkouts.
Some of NetSurf's own libraries will be installed in /usr/local/ by default.
Fedora, and perhaps some other distributions of Linux, do not ship a
pkg-config that will search here, so you will either need to change where
these libraries install, or do the following before building NetSurf itself;
$ PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/local/lib/pkgconfig
$ export PKG_CONFIG_PATH
Package installation
----------------------
Debian-like OS:
$ apt-get install libglade2-dev libcurl3-dev libxml2-dev libmng-dev
$ apt-get install librsvg2-dev
Recent OS versions might need libcurl4-dev instead of libcurl3-dev but
note that when it has not been built with OpenSSL, the SSL_CTX is not
available and results that certification details won't be presented in case
they are invalid. But as this is currently unimplemented in the GTK
flavour of NetSurf, this won't make a difference at all.
Fedora:
$ yum install libglade2-devel curl-devel libxml2-devel libmng-devel
$ yum install librsvg2-devel lcms-devel
Other:
You'll need to install the development resources for libglade2, libcurl3,
libxml2, libmng and librsvg.
Note that if you don't require MNG or JNG image support, NetSurf can be
configured to use libpng instead of libmng. If you wish to do this, install
the libpng development package instead.
The NetSurf project's libraries
---------------------------------
The NetSurf project has developed several libraries which are required by
the browser. These are:
LibParserUtils -- Parser building utility functions
LibWapcaplet -- String internment
Hubbub -- HTML5 compliant HTML parser
LibCSS -- CSS parser and selection engine
LibNSGIF -- GIF format image decoder
LibNSBMP -- BMP and ICO format image decoder
To fetch each of these libraries, run the following commands:
$ svn co svn://svn.netsurf-browser.org/trunk/libparserutils
$ svn co svn://svn.netsurf-browser.org/trunk/libwapcaplet
$ svn co svn://svn.netsurf-browser.org/trunk/hubbub
$ svn co svn://svn.netsurf-browser.org/trunk/libcss
$ svn co svn://svn.netsurf-browser.org/trunk/libnsgif
$ svn co svn://svn.netsurf-browser.org/trunk/libnsbmp
To build and install these libraries, simply enter each of their directories
and run:
$ sudo make install
| Note: We advise enabling ivonv() support in libparserutils, which vastly
| increases the number of supported character sets. To do this,
| create a file called Makefile.config.override in the libparserutils
| directory, containing the following line:
|
| CFLAGS += -DWITH_ICONV_FILTER
|
| For more information, consult the libparserutils README file.
Librosprite
-------------
NetSurf uses James Shaw's librosprite for rendering RISC OS Sprite
files on non-RISC OS platforms. The Makefile will automatically use
librosprite if it is installed. You can disable it entirely by
creating a Makefile.config file.
To build librosprite, check out from svn://svn.rjek.com/jshaw/libsprite/trunk
Build and install it:
$ sudo make install
Optionally, specify an install prefix:
$ PREFIX=/path/to/install make install
Libhpdf
---------
NetSurf can use Haru PDF to enable PDF export and printing in GTK. This
is currently enabled by default, and cannot be auto-detected by the Makefile.
If you wish to disable it, do so by creating a Makefile.config file.
Haru PDF can be obtained from http://libharu.org/, although we currently
depend on features that none of the official released versions does have.
The current development versions of libharu are fine and we anticipate
the libharu 2.2 release will be fine for NetSurf usage.
A recently taken snapshot of one of those libharu development versions can
be found at:
svn://svn.netsurf-browser.org/trunk/libharu
General requirements
----------------------
NetSurf requires at minimum GTK 2.12. Earlier versions will not work. It also
depends on Cairo for rendering, but you should have this already with
versions of GTK 2.12 or later.
This will pull in loads of things, like all the GTK dev libraries, the PNG
and JPEG libraries, colour management libraries, zlib, OpenSSL etc that
NetSurf also depends on.