This file contains build instructions for Nautilus, the GNOME shell and file manager. At some point we probably should move these to INSTALL or HACKING and put an explanation of what Nautilus is here in README instead. ==================== 0: Table of contents ==================== 0: Table of contents 1: Hacking 2: Introduction 3: Distribution-specific notes 4: Compiling 5: Issues when running Nautilus 6: Mozilla support 7: FreeType issues ========== 1: Hacking ========== If you would like to hack on Nautilus, or have patches, please send mail to the Nautilus maintainer: Darin Adler . Patches should also be sent to the Nautilus mailing list: The HACKING file contains other things you should know when hacking on Nautilus and when contributing code. Please, make sure you check the coding style document in docs/style-guide.html and other documents found in the "docs" directory. =============== 2: Introduction =============== To build Nautilus without interfering with an existing GNOME install, you will need to build several components either from CVS or from tarballs into a separate prefix. Detailed instructions on how to accomplish this are available in section 4. ============================== 3: Distribution-specific notes ============================== The following describes the libraries that Nautilus hackers use for development and what we have tested with. At the moment, we make no guarantees one way or another about whether Nautilus will work with other versions. You will also need the library package that is associated with each development package, these versions are for Red Hat 6.2 and Debian "potato": library Red Hat Debian approx. version -------------- ------------------------ ------------------------------ ------------------ audiofile audiofile-devel-0.1.9-3 libaudiofile-dev (0.1.9-0.1) 0.1.9 esound esound-0.2.20 ? 0.2 libc glibc-devel-2.1.3-15 libc6-dev (2.1.3-10) 2.1.3 libc++ egcs-c++-1.1.2-30 libstdc++2.10-dev (2.95.2-12) 2.9.0, 2.10 libjpeg libjpeg-devel-6b-10 libjpeg62-dev (6b-1.2) 6b 1.0-1.2 libpng libpng-devel-1.0.5-3 libpng2-dev (1.0.5-1) 1.0.5 libtiff libtiff-devel-3.5.4-5 libtiff3g-dev (3.5.4-5) 3.5.4 libungif libungif-devel-4.1.0-4 libungif3g-dev (3.0-3) 3.0 or 4.1.0 Xlib XFree86-devel-3.3.6-20 xlib6g-dev (3.3.6-7) 3.3.6 zlib zlib-devel-1.1.3-6 zlib1g-dev (1.1.3-5) 1.1.3 freetype2 freetype2-devel-1.0beta8 ? 1.0beta8 Other modules for Red Hat users: - For most modules, the versions in Red Hat 6.1 or 6.2 will do (listed above). - ORBit requires popt-1.5, which can be fetched from: ftp://ftp.valinux.com/pub/mirrors/redhat/rawhide/i386/RedHat/RPMS/popt-1.5-0.45.i386.rpm ftp://ftp.valinux.com/pub/mirrors/redhat/redhat/redhat-6.2/i386/RedHat/RPMS/popt-1.5-0.48.i386.rpm - FreeType packages are available here: http://developer.eazel.com/eazel-hacking/updates/redhat62/freetype2/freetype-2.0.1-4.i386.rpm http://developer.eazel.com/eazel-hacking/updates/redhat62/freetype2/freetype-devel-2.0.1-4.i386.rpm Replace "redhat62" with "redhat70" if you are using RedHat Linux 7.0. Other modules for Debian users: using potato, or possibly woody If you need to get a copy of popt from source: CVSROOT=:pserver:anonymous@cvs.rpm.org:/cvs/devel The default password is a carriage return. You should do a cvs co popt Which RPM version you need depends on your distribution. If you have Red Hat 6.2, you need at least 3.0.4. If you have Red Hat 7.0, you need 4.0. Unfortunately, the released rpms from RedHat have bug (a header file is missing), so for Red Hat 7.0 you will need the Eazel Hacking rpm's for RPM, available from: http://developer.eazel.com/eazel-hacking/updates/redhat70/rpm/ ===================== 4: Compiling from cvs ===================== NOTE: Instructions on compiling from tarballs should be extracted from the copy of Nautilus inside the tarball, not here in CVS. Compiling from cvs a lot of work, and some packages may not compile at any given moment when you check them out. First, make sure you have installed the packages detailed below. If you are running GNOME from binaries (Helix Code or your native distribution binaries), please make sure you have installed the corresponding development packages. (i.e.: the *-devel packages which provide the necessary C header files. Then, make sure you have no old version of the packages nautilus depends on on your system. You can check the version of the relevant packages by trying to execute "package-config --version" (ie: gnome-config --version will report gnome-libs version, gconf-config --version will report gconf's version). The following lists the packages and the versions that are required. module branch configure options ------ ------ ----------------- popt: <1.5, not from GNOME CVS, see above> rpm glib: glib-1-2 gtk+: gtk-1-2 imlib: HEAD gnome-xml: LIB_XML_1_BRANCH ORBit: orbit-stable-0-5 gnome-libs: gnome-libs-1-0 --enable-prefer-db1 gnome-http: HEAD xml-i18n-tools: xml-i18n-tools-stable-1-x oaf: oaf-stable-0-6 gconf: gconf-1-0 --disable-debug gdk-pixbuf: HEAD --enable-canvas-pixbuf gnome-print: GNOME_PRINT_0_25 control-center control-center-1-0 gnome-vfs: gnome-vfs-1 bonobo: HEAD ammonite HEAD medusa: HEAD nautilus: HEAD One difference between tarball and cvs compilation is that when you get stuff from cvs, you don't get a configure script. This script has to be generated. This script is usually generated with the help of another script available from cvs named "autogen.sh". For those interested, "autogen.sh" will run in turn aclocal, automake, autoconf and configure. You thus need versions of the GNU tools for the following packages: package version command ------- ------- ------- automake 1.4 automake --version autoconf 2.13 autoconf --version Earlier versions might work but no one has tested them. You will need to create the ${prefix}/share/aclocal directory before compiling any package and setup the following environment variable: export ACLOCAL_FLAGS="$ACLOCAL_FLAGS -I ${prefix}/share/aclocal" We assume you want to install these packages in another prefix than /usr since you want to keep a working system. For the following, we assume you are installing in /usr/local. ie: ${prefix}=/usr/local Redefine your PATH environment variable: export PATH=$PATH:${prefix}/bin Redefine your LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable: export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$LD_LIBRARY_PATH:${prefix}/lib Redefine your GNOME_PATH environment variable: export GNOME_PATH=$GNOME_PATH:${prefix} In the order defined above and with the specific options detailed above for each package, you should run the autogen scripts: ./autogen.sh --prefix=${prefix} Then: make Then get root and: make install. =============================== 5: Issues when running Nautilus =============================== There's a script named nautilus-clean.sh, at the top level of the Nautilus sources. If OAF or GConf changes, you may need to run this script to get Nautilus to work properly. One way to invoke it is like this: ./nautilus-clean.sh -x ================== 6: Mozilla support ================== Nautilus includes support for browsing HTML content on the local computer as well as remote web servers. HTML content is handled by the Nautilus Mozilla component. This component can be optionally built with Nautilus. It is automatically enabled at configure time if Mozilla development libraries are detected on your system. The latest Mozilla RPMs that we require can be found here: RedHat 6.x: http://developer.eazel.com/eazel-hacking/updates/redhat62/mozilla RedHat 7.x: http://developer.eazel.com/eazel-hacking/updates/redhat70/mozilla The minimum Mozilla version required is Mozilla 0.7. Mozilla M18, the 0.7 predecessor, no longer works. Nautilus will work even better with Mozilla 0.8. Cookies, cache and other Mozilla "profiles" features will work only with 0.8. After installing these rpms, you can build nautilus with Mozilla support as follows: cd nautilus rm -f config.cache config.status ./configure The configure script should automatically detect and use the Mozilla development libraries. Alternatively, you can build Mozilla from source and use that. Lets say that you built Mozilla in /foo/bar. You can build nautilus with support for that Mozilla build as follows: cd nautilus rm -f config.cache config.status ./configure --with-mozilla-lib-place=/foo/bar/mozilla/dist/bin --with-mozilla-include-place=/foo/bar/mozilla/dist/include NOTE: The above configure command should be issued in one line. It is split into two lines in this document for readability. NOTE: If you are building mozilla from source (NOT from the rpm), you need to do some environment setup for the Mozilla component: export MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME=/foo/bar/mozilla/dist/bin export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/foo/bar/mozilla/dist/bin:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH If you experience linking problems (e.g. undefined reference to `nsString type_info node'), please note that both applications (mozilla and nautilus) must be compiled not only with the same version of compiler, but also with the same compiler flags. Download the right mozilla package for your distribution (see upper). If you have built Mozilla from source, Mozilla by default adds CXXFLAGS -fno-rtti and -fno-exceptions or -fno-handle-exceptions (depends on gcc version). You have two chances to make things in sync: 1) Compile mozilla with this .mozconfig script: (You must place it in your home directory): # sh # Build configuration script # # See http://www.mozilla.org/build/unix.html for build instructions. # # Options for 'configure' (same as command-line options). ac_add_options --disable-tests ac_add_options --disable-debug ac_add_options --enable-strip-libs ac_add_options --enable-cpp-rtti ac_add_options --disable-mailnews ac_add_options --enable-optimize 2) Configure mozilla with standard configure script and compile it. Before configuring Nautilus set proper CXXFLAGS. For example with latest gcc it means: CXXFLAGS='-fno-rtti -fno-exceptions' export CXXFLAGS For more, see configure.in in mozilla source. You can save some space by disabling RTTI. As an alternative, if you don't want to use the Nautilus web page viewer that uses Mozilla, you can disable the Mozilla component (even if Mozilla development libraries are installed in your system) as follows: ./configure --disable-mozilla-component ================== 7: FreeType issues ================== Nautilus includes support for rendering anti aliased text (smooth mode).For smooth mode to work, Nautilus needs to detect and use FreeType2 in your system. To learn more about FreeType2, please see: http://freetype.sourceforge.net/ If you are using a RedHat 6.x or greater system, then you can easily add FreeType2 support by installing the rpms found here: http://developer.eazel.com/eazel-hacking/updates/redhat62/freetype2 Replace "redhat62" with "redhat70" if you are using RedHat Linux 7.0. Originally, the Freetype 2 rpm that we used for Nautilus was called "freetype2". Now that RedHat 7.1 is is coming around, they have included freetype 2 in their distribution. They called the rpm "freetype-2" (Freetype Version 2). Their freetype-2 rpm contains both Freetype version 1 and Freetype version 2. In order to avoid naming conflicts, we have renamed our freetype2 rpm to freetype-2. This will cause problems for people upgrading from our old rpms to our new ones. To remove the old rpms, 1) su 2) rpm -e --nodeps freetype2 freetype2-devel 3) Install the new Freetype-2 rpms: rpm -Uvh freetype*2.0.1*.rpm