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BUILDING.txt 17KB

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  1. *******************************************************************************
  2. ** Building TigerVNC
  3. *******************************************************************************
  4. ================================
  5. Build Requirements (All Systems)
  6. ================================
  7. -- CMake (http://www.cmake.org) v2.8 or later
  8. -- zlib
  9. -- FLTK 1.3.3 or later
  10. -- If building TLS support:
  11. * GnuTLS 3.x
  12. * See "Building TLS Support" below.
  13. -- If building native language support (NLS):
  14. * Gnu gettext 0.14.4 or later
  15. * See "Building Native Language Support" below.
  16. -- libjpeg-turbo
  17. * "Normal" libjpegv6 is also supported, although it is not
  18. recommended as it is much slower.
  19. =========================
  20. Build Requirements (Unix)
  21. =========================
  22. -- Non-Mac platforms:
  23. * X11 development kit
  24. -- If building Xvnc/libvnc.so:
  25. * Xorg server source code, 1.7 or never
  26. * All build requirements Xorg imposes (see its documentation)
  27. ============================
  28. Build Requirements (Windows)
  29. ============================
  30. -- MinGW or MinGW-w64
  31. -- Inno Setup (needed to build the TigerVNC installer)
  32. Inno Setup can be downloaded from http://www.jrsoftware.org/isinfo.php.
  33. You also need the Inno Setup Preprocessor, which is available in the
  34. Inno Setup QuickStart Pack.
  35. Add the directory containing iscc.exe (for instance,
  36. C:\Program Files\Inno Setup 5) to the system or user PATH environment
  37. variable prior to building TigerVNC.
  38. =========================
  39. Build Requirements (Java)
  40. =========================
  41. -- Sun/Oracle JDK 1.7 or later or OpenJDK 7 or later
  42. -- See "Building Java Support" below.
  43. ==================
  44. Out-of-Tree Builds
  45. ==================
  46. Binary objects, libraries, and executables are generated in the same directory
  47. from which cmake was executed (the "binary directory"), and this directory need
  48. not necessarily be the same as the TigerVNC source directory. You can create
  49. multiple independent binary directories, in which different versions of
  50. TigerVNC can be built from the same source tree using different compilers or
  51. settings. In the sections below, {build_directory} refers to the binary
  52. directory, whereas {source_directory} refers to the TigerVNC source directory.
  53. For in-tree builds, these directories are the same.
  54. =================
  55. Building TigerVNC
  56. =================
  57. Building the TigerVNC Viewer on Unix/Mac Systems
  58. ------------------------------------------------
  59. The following procedure will build the TigerVNC Viewer on Linux and Unix
  60. systems. On 64-bit systems, this will build a 64-bit version of TigerVNC. See
  61. "Build Recipes" for specific build instructions for building a 32-bit version
  62. of TigerVNC on 64-bit systems.
  63. cd {build_directory}
  64. cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" [additional CMake flags] {source_directory}
  65. make
  66. Building the TigerVNC Server on Modern Unix/Linux Systems
  67. ---------------------------------------------------------
  68. Building the TigerVNC Server (Xvnc) is a bit trickier. On newer systems
  69. containing Xorg 7.4 or later (such as Fedora), Xvnc is typically built to use
  70. the X11 shared libraries provided with the system. The procedure for this is
  71. system-specific, since it requires specifying such things as font directories,
  72. but the general outline is as follows (this procedure assumes that the viewer
  73. has already been built, per above.)
  74. > cd {build_directory}
  75. If performing an out-of-tree build:
  76. > mkdir unix
  77. > cp -R {source_directory}/unix/xserver unix/
  78. > cp -R {xorg_source}/* unix/xserver/
  79. (NOTE: {xorg_source} is the directory containing the Xorg source for the
  80. machine on which you are building TigerVNC. The most recent versions of
  81. Red Hat/CentOS/Fedora, for instance, provide an RPM called
  82. "xorg-x11-server-source", which installs the Xorg source under
  83. /usr/share/xorg-x11-server-source.)
  84. > cd unix/xserver/
  85. > patch -p1 < {source_directory}/unix/xserver{version}.patch
  86. (where {version} matches the X server version you are building, such as
  87. "17" for version 1.7.x.)
  88. > autoreconf -fiv
  89. > ./configure --with-pic --without-dtrace --disable-static --disable-dri \
  90. --disable-xinerama --disable-xvfb --disable-xnest --disable-xorg \
  91. --disable-dmx --disable-xwin --disable-xephyr --disable-kdrive \
  92. --disable-config-dbus --disable-config-hal --disable-config-udev \
  93. --disable-dri2 --enable-install-libxf86config --enable-glx \
  94. --with-default-font-path="catalogue:/etc/X11/fontpath.d,built-ins" \
  95. --with-fontdir=/usr/share/X11/fonts \
  96. --with-xkb-path=/usr/share/X11/xkb \
  97. --with-xkb-output=/var/lib/xkb \
  98. --with-xkb-bin-directory=/usr/bin \
  99. --with-serverconfig-path=/usr/lib[64]/xorg \
  100. --with-dri-driver-path=/usr/lib[64]/dri \
  101. {additional configure options}
  102. (NOTE: This is merely an example that works with Red Hat Enterprise/CentOS
  103. 6 and recent Fedora releases. You should customize it for your particular
  104. system. In particular, it will be necessary to customize the font, XKB,
  105. and DRI directories.)
  106. > make TIGERVNC_SRCDIR={source_directory}
  107. Building the TigerVNC Server on Legacy Unix/Linux Systems
  108. ---------------------------------------------------------
  109. Those using systems with older versions of Xorg must build a "legacy-friendly"
  110. version of the TigerVNC Server. This is accomplished by downloading and
  111. building the more recent Xorg modules in a local directory and then building
  112. Xvnc such that it links against the local build of these libraries, not the X11
  113. libraries installed on the system. The "build-xorg" script in the TigerVNC
  114. source distribution (located under contrib/xorg/) automates this process.
  115. The following procedure will build both the TigerVNC Viewer and a
  116. "legacy-friendly" version of the TigerVNC Server:
  117. cd {build_directory}
  118. bash {source_directory}/contrib/xorg/build-xorg init
  119. bash {source_directory}/contrib/xorg/build-xorg build [additional CMake flags]
  120. build-xorg generates a version of Xvnc that has no external dependencies on the
  121. X11 shared libraries or any other distribution-specific shared libraries. This
  122. version of Xvnc should be transportable across multiple O/S distributions.
  123. build-xorg should work on Red Hat Enterprise 4, its contemporaries, and later
  124. systems. It probably will not work on older systems. It has not been tested
  125. on non-Linux systems (yet).
  126. build-xorg can also be used to rebuild just the TigerVNC Server and Viewer,
  127. once the X11 modules and other dependencies have been built for the first time.
  128. This is convenient for testing changes that just apply to the TigerVNC source
  129. code. To accomplish this, run:
  130. sh {source_directory}/contrib/xorg/build-xorg rebuild [additional make flags]
  131. For instance,
  132. sh {source_directory}/contrib/xorg/build-xorg rebuild clean
  133. will clean both the Xvnc and vncviewer builds without destroying any of the
  134. build configuration or module dependencies.
  135. Building the Windows TigerVNC Viewer with MinGW
  136. -----------------------------------------------
  137. If building the Windows version of TigerVNC on a Windows build system, use
  138. the following procedure.
  139. cd {build_directory}
  140. cmake -G "MSYS Makefiles" [additional CMake flags] {source_directory}
  141. make
  142. If cross-compiling on a Unix/Linux system, then see the "Build Recipes" section
  143. below.
  144. Debug Build
  145. -----------
  146. Add "-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug" to the CMake command line.
  147. Portable (semi-static) Build
  148. ----------------------------
  149. TigerVNC can under favourble circumstances be built in a way that allows
  150. the resulting binaries to run on any system without having to also install
  151. all the dynamic libraries it depends on. Enable this mode by adding:
  152. -DBUILD_STATIC=1
  153. to the CMake command line.
  154. Note that the method used to achieve this is very fragile and it may be
  155. necessary to tweak cmake/StaticBuild.cmake to make things work on your
  156. specific system.
  157. =====================
  158. Building Java Support
  159. =====================
  160. TigerVNC includes a Java version of the TigerVNC Viewer, which can be used on
  161. any platform that has a Java Runtime Environment (JRE) installed. The Java
  162. viewer works similarly to the native viewer, but with lower performance.
  163. To build the Java TigerVNC Viewer, add
  164. -DBUILD_JAVA=1
  165. to the CMake or build-xorg command line. The build system will attempt to find
  166. an installed Java Development Kit (JDK) and determine the appropriate paths for
  167. the Java compiler (javac) and the JAR creation utility (jar). You can override
  168. these paths by setting the Java_JAVAC_EXECUTABLE and Java_JAR_EXECUTABLE CMake
  169. variables. You can also override the default flags that are passed to javac
  170. by setting the JAVACFLAGS CMake variable. The build system will look for
  171. keytool and jarsigner in the same directory as Java_JAR_EXECUTABLE. These
  172. tools are needed to sign the JAR file, which is necessary to enable certain
  173. functionality (such as clipboard transfers) when the Java viewer is used as an
  174. applet.
  175. If the Java viewer is built along with the Windows TigerVNC Server (WinVNC),
  176. then the build system will embed the Java viewer into WinVNC4.exe so that it
  177. will automatically be served up using WinVNC's built-in HTTP server.
  178. Similarly, if the Java viewer is built along with the Unix TigerVNC Server
  179. (Xvnc), then the build system will include the Java viewer in the server
  180. tarball.
  181. By default, a self-signed certificate will be generated and used to sign the
  182. jar file. By specifying the following command line arguments to the CMake
  183. command line, an alternate certificate may be used for signing.
  184. -DJAVA_KEYSTORE=${keystore_location_or_url}
  185. -DJAVA_KEYSTORE_TYPE=${keystore_type} (Default: "jks")
  186. -DJAVA_KEY_ALIAS=${keytore_key_alias}
  187. -DJAVA_STOREPASS=${keystore_password}
  188. -DJAVA_KEYPASS=${keystore_entry_password}
  189. -DJAVA_TSA_URL=${url_of_timestamping_authority}
  190. The values of the JAVA_STOREPASS and JAVA_KEYPASS arguments may optionally be
  191. read from file or environment variables by prefixing the value with ":env "
  192. or ":file " (see the jarsigner documentation for more info):
  193. export StorePass=tigervnc
  194. export KeyPass=tigervnc
  195. cmake \
  196. ...
  197. -DJAVA_STOREPASS=":env StorePass"
  198. -DJAVA_KEYPASS=":env KeyPass"
  199. ======================================
  200. Building TLS Support
  201. ======================================
  202. TLS requires GnuTLS, which is supplied with most Linux distributions and
  203. with MinGW for Windows and can be built from source on OS X and other
  204. Unix variants. However, GnuTLS versions > 2.12.x && < 3.3.x should be
  205. avoided because of potential incompatibilities during initial handshaking.
  206. You can override the GNUTLS_LIBRARY and GNUTLS_INCLUDE_DIR CMake variables
  207. to specify the locations of libgnutls and any dependencies. For instance,
  208. adding
  209. -DGNUTLS_INCLUDE_DIR=/usr/local/include \
  210. -DGNUTLS_LIBRARY=/usr/local/lib/libgnutls.a
  211. to the CMake command line would link TigerVNC against a static version of
  212. libgnutls located under /usr/local.
  213. ======================================
  214. Building Native Language Support (NLS)
  215. ======================================
  216. NLS requires gettext, which is supplied with most Linux distributions and
  217. with MinGW for Windows and which can easily be built from source on OS X and
  218. other Unix variants.
  219. You can override the ICONV_LIBRARIES and LIBINTL_LIBRARY CMake variables to
  220. specify the locations of libiconv and libintl, respectively. For instance,
  221. adding
  222. -DLIBINTL_LIBRARY=/opt/gettext/lib/libintl.a
  223. to the CMake command line would link TigerVNC against a static version of
  224. libintl located under /opt/gettext. Adding
  225. -DICONV_INCLUDE_DIR=/mingw/include \
  226. -DICONV_LIBRARIES=/mingw/lib/libiconv.a \
  227. -DGETTEXT_INCLUDE_DIR=/mingw/include \
  228. -DLIBINTL_LIBRARY=/mingw/lib/libintl.a
  229. to the CMake command line would link TigerVNC against the static versions of
  230. libiconv and libintl included in the MinGW Developer Toolkit.
  231. ===================
  232. Installing TigerVNC
  233. ===================
  234. You can use the build system to install TigerVNC into a directory of your
  235. choosing. To do this, add:
  236. -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX={install_directory}
  237. to the CMake command line. Then, you can run 'make install' to build and
  238. install it.
  239. If you don't specify CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX, then the default is
  240. c:\Program Files\TigerVNC on Windows and /usr/local on Unix.
  241. =========================
  242. Creating Release Packages
  243. =========================
  244. The following commands can be used to create various types of release packages:
  245. Unix
  246. ----
  247. make tarball
  248. Create a binary tarball containing the TigerVNC Viewer
  249. make servertarball
  250. Create a binary tarball containing both the TigerVNC Server and Viewer
  251. make dmg
  252. Create Macintosh disk image file that contains an application bundle of the
  253. TigerVNC Viewer
  254. make udmg
  255. On 64-bit OS X systems, this creates a version of the Macintosh package and
  256. disk image which contains universal i386/x86-64 binaries. You should first
  257. configure a 32-bit out-of-tree build of TigerVNC, then configure a 64-bit
  258. out-of-tree build, then run 'make udmg' from the 64-bit build directory. The
  259. build system will look for the 32-bit build under {source_directory}/osxx86
  260. by default, but you can override this by setting the OSX_X86_BUILD CMake
  261. variable to the directory containing your configured 32-bit build. Either
  262. the 64-bit or 32-bit build can be configured to be backward compatible by
  263. using the instructions in the "Build Recipes" section.
  264. Windows
  265. -------
  266. make installer
  267. Create a Windows installer using Inno Setup. The installer package
  268. (TigerVNC[64].exe) will be located under {build_directory}.
  269. =============
  270. Build Recipes
  271. =============
  272. 32-bit Build on 64-bit Linux/Unix (including OS X)
  273. --------------------------------------------------
  274. Set the following environment variables before building TigerVNC.
  275. CFLAGS='-O3 -m32'
  276. CXXFLAGS='-O3 -m32'
  277. LDFLAGS=-m32
  278. If you are building the TigerVNC Server on a modern Unix/Linux system, then
  279. you will also need to pass the appropriate --host argument when configuring the
  280. X server source (for instance, --host=i686-pc-linux-gnu).
  281. 64-bit Backward-Compatible Build on 64-bit OS X
  282. -----------------------------------------------
  283. Add
  284. -DCMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT=/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.5.sdk \
  285. -DCMAKE_OSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=10.5
  286. to the CMake command line. The OS X 10.5 SDK must be installed.
  287. 32-bit Backward-Compatible Build on 64-bit OS X
  288. -----------------------------------------------
  289. Set the following environment variables:
  290. CC=gcc-4.0
  291. CXX=g++-4.0
  292. CFLAGS='-O3 -m32'
  293. CXXFLAGS='-O3 -m32'
  294. LDFLAGS=-m32
  295. and add
  296. -DCMAKE_OSX_SYSROOT=/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.4u.sdk \
  297. -DCMAKE_OSX_DEPLOYMENT_TARGET=10.4
  298. to the CMake command line. The OS X 10.4 SDK must be installed.
  299. 64-bit MinGW Build on Cygwin
  300. ----------------------------
  301. cd {build_directory}
  302. CC=/usr/bin/x86_64-w64-mingw32-gcc CXX=/usr/bin/x86_64-w64-mingw32-g++ \
  303. RC=/usr/bin/x86_64-w64-mingw32-windres \
  304. cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" -DCMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=Windows \
  305. -DCMAKE_AR=/usr/bin/x86_64-w64-mingw32-ar \
  306. -DCMAKE_RANLIB=/usr/bin/x86_64-w64-mingw32-ranlib {source_directory}
  307. make
  308. This produces a 64-bit build of TigerVNC that does not depend on cygwin1.dll or
  309. other Cygwin DLL's. The mingw64-x86_64-gcc-core and mingw64-x86_64-gcc-g++
  310. packages (and their dependencies) must be installed.
  311. 32-bit MinGW Build on Cygwin
  312. ----------------------------
  313. cd {build_directory}
  314. CC=/usr/bin/i686-w64-mingw32-gcc CXX=/usr/bin/i686-w64-mingw32-g++ \
  315. RC=/usr/bin/i686-w64-mingw32-windres \
  316. cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" -DCMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=Windows \
  317. -DDCMAKE_AR=/usr/bin/i686-w64-mingw32-ar \
  318. -DCMAKE_RANLIB=/usr/bin/i686-w64-mingw32-ranlib {source_directory}
  319. make
  320. This produces a 32-bit build of TigerVNC that does not depend on cygwin1.dll or
  321. other Cygwin DLL's. The mingw64-i686-gcc-core and mingw64-i686-gcc-g++
  322. packages (and their dependencies) must be installed.
  323. MinGW-w64 Build on Windows
  324. --------------------------
  325. This produces a 64-bit build of TigerVNC using the "native" MinGW-w64 toolchain
  326. (which is faster than the Cygwin version):
  327. cd {build_directory}
  328. CC={mingw-w64_binary_path}/x86_64-w64-mingw32-gcc \
  329. CXX={mingw-w64_binary_path}/x86_64-w64-mingw32-g++ \
  330. RC={mingw-w64_binary_path}/x86_64-w64-mingw32-windres \
  331. cmake -G "MSYS Makefiles" \
  332. -DCMAKE_AR={mingw-w64_binary_path}/x86_64-w64-mingw32-ar \
  333. -DCMAKE_RANLIB={mingw-w64_binary_path}/x86_64-w64-mingw32-ranlib \
  334. {source_directory}
  335. make
  336. MinGW Build on Linux
  337. --------------------
  338. cd {build_directory}
  339. CC={mingw_binary_path}/i386-mingw32-gcc \
  340. CXX={mingw_binary_path}/i386-mingw32-g++ \
  341. RC={mingw_binary_path}/i386-mingw32-windres \
  342. cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" -DCMAKE_SYSTEM_NAME=Windows \
  343. -DCMAKE_AR={mingw_binary_path}/i386-mingw32-ar \
  344. -DCMAKE_RANLIB={mingw_binary_path}/i386-mingw32-ranlib \
  345. {source_directory}
  346. make
  347. ===============================
  348. Distribution-Specific Packaging
  349. ===============================
  350. RPM Packages for RHEL / CentOS
  351. ------------------------------
  352. The RPM spec files and patches used to create the nightly builds
  353. and releases can be found in the "contrib/rpm/el{5,6}" directories
  354. of the TigerVNC subversion trunk. All external source tarballs
  355. must be fetched manually and placed into the 'SOURCES' directory
  356. under the rpmbuild root. Additionally, the following macros need
  357. to be defined:
  358. EL6:
  359. %debug_package %{nil}
  360. EL5:
  361. %dist .el5
  362. %_smp_mflags -j3
  363. %debug_package %{nil}
  364. %__arch_install_post /usr/lib/rpm/check-rpaths /usr/lib/rpm/check-buildroot
  365. Debian packages for Ubuntu 12.04LTS
  366. -----------------------------------
  367. The debian folder used to create the nightly builds and releases
  368. can be found in the "contrib/deb/ubuntu-precise" directory of the
  369. TigerVNC subversion trunk.