Amarok/Development/Development HowTo: Difference between revisions
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Note: this might not be necessary for most of the cases | Note: this might not be necessary for most of the cases | ||
Now you are ready to run Amarok 2.x by typing “amarok” in the shell. We strongly recommend you run amarok with the -d and | Now you are ready to run Amarok 2.x by typing “amarok” in the shell. We strongly recommend you run amarok with the -d and --nofork option, so you will have debugging enabled and can get a valid backtrace if Amarok crashes. | ||
==== Updating your Amarok build ==== | ==== Updating your Amarok build ==== |
Revision as of 18:15, 8 December 2014
Development Environment
See the README for a complete list of dependencies.
More: Getting Started/Sources/Amarok Git Tutorial
Building Amarok
Building Locally
Installing Amarok locally will put it in your $HOME folder, making everything much easier to maintain. Source Please refer to the source if something doesn't work as it should despite you having followed each step. Also be aware that sometimes upstream changes can cause problems, but we try our best to keep this page updated. In case of problems you can also ask in #amarok on irc.freenode.net. Please be patient and don't leave after a few minutes, we are often busy with real life :)
Install git, the compiler and KDE 4 development packages
In Kubuntu, Debian, and all their derivatives:
sudo apt-get install git-core build-essential kdesdk kdelibs5-dev libkonq5-dev kdebase-workspace-dev
As well as a basic KDE installation, formerly provided by the now defunct kde-minimal metapackage:
* kdebase-runtime * kdebase-workspace * kdebase-apps * plasma-desktop
I also highly recommend to install the oxygen-icon-theme and oxygen-icon-theme-complete, so you don’t have missing icons if you do not run KDE.
In Archlinux:
sudo pacman -Sy git base-devel kdelibs kdebase-runtime
In Gentoo:
sudo emerge -av dev-util/git kdelibs plasma-workspace
In OpenSuSE:
sudo zypper install git
In Fedora:
sudo yum install git kdelibs-devel
Install ccache to speed up compilation (optional, recommended)
ccache is a very nice tool that can speed up your compilation. It speeds up re-compilation of C/C++ code by caching previous compiles and detecting when the same compile is being done again. Install the package from your distribution (for those on Debian distros: sudo apt-get install ccache) and set the size of the cache to 2 GB with the command
ccache -M 2G
This will take 2Gb of space in your local directory, but the gain of time is really impressive. Enable the use of ccache by adding it to your local .bashrc, described below:
Using a text editor of your choice, open $HOME/.bashrc and append the following:
export PATH=$HOME/kde/bin:$PATH export PATH=/usr/lib/ccache:$PATH export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/kde/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH
Reload your edited .bashrc:
source $HOME/.bashrc
NOTE: if you are not using the bash shell, edit your proper shell config file (~/.zshrc or ~/.tcshrc or whatever it may be).
Make KDE aware of Amarok’s plugin location
mkdir ~/.kde/env # okay if it exists echo 'export KDEDIR=$HOME/kde' >> $HOME/.kde/env/myenv.sh echo 'export KDEDIRS=$KDEDIR' >> $HOME/.kde/env/myenv.sh
Beware, some distributions call the above folder $HOME/.kde4/… (OpenSuSE in particular).
Make sure you have all the necessary dependencies
sudo apt-get build-dep amarok
For OpenSuSE users this would be
sudo zypper si -d amarok
For Fedora
yum-builddep amarok
The README file in the source is the reference for the dependency version, please refer to it in case of doubt.
Various dependencies that might cause compile errors and have to be installed
(these are rather specific to Kubuntu, might have other names in other distributions and/or are already installed)
- libstrigiqtdbusclient-dev
- libsearchclient-dev
- libmysqlclient
- libmysqlclient-dev
- libmysqld-dev
- libmysqld-pic
- libwrap0-dev, needed as a dependency for MySQL. For OpenSuSE users, the package to install is tcpd-devel
Create folders
mkdir -p $HOME/kde/build/amarok mkdir $HOME/kde/src
Checking out and Building
Now you need a source checkout from git.kde.org. In the folder ~/kde/src/, type the following command:
git clone git://anongit.kde.org/amarok.git
this will drag approx. 55-60Mb of data, depending on the moment you actually make this checkout.
Everything is now ready to build:
cd $HOME/kde/build/amarok cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$HOME/kde -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=debugfull $HOME/kde/src/amarok make install
NOTE: if you want MP4 and ASF support you need to build with the following cmake line instead
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$HOME/kde -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=debugfull -DWITH_MP4=ON -DWITH_ASF=ON $HOME/kde/src/amarok
NOTE: if you previously used the git URL rather than anongit, run this command:
git remote set-url origin git://anongit.kde.org/amarok
This will reset your git config file.
Updating KDE Config
kbuildsycoca4 --noincremental
Note: this might not be necessary for most of the cases
Now you are ready to run Amarok 2.x by typing “amarok” in the shell. We strongly recommend you run amarok with the -d and --nofork option, so you will have debugging enabled and can get a valid backtrace if Amarok crashes.
Updating your Amarok build
Since the development is quite fast with git, you should update your Amarok build regularly, and a daily checkout is not too much. This is made easy with the following command:
cd $HOME/kde/src/amarok git pull
This will update your local git branch.
NOTE: if you previously used the git URL rather than anongit, run this command:
git remote set-url origin git://anongit.kde.org/amarok
This will reset your git config file.
If you have done modifications to your local branch you would like to keep, make sure you update with the --rebase option. See also the git tutorial for KDE in section 10.
You can now simply build again with
cd $HOME/kde/build/amarok make install
Since you have installed ccache, a full build will speed up over time. To have an idea about the build time, just type time make install when building. If you have several CPU cores, you can speed up even more with the -j[n] option, where [n] is the number of CPU cores +1. Of course, the more CPU you use for building, the less you will have available for other tasks
More information and useful links
Don’t forget: running a development version also means that it is not stable and can break anytime ! This is especially true after a feature freeze, when the developers merge their personal git branches to the master branch.
Note: To be notified about major changes you definitely should subscribe to our mailing list [email protected] at https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/amarok-devel.
Of course you will also find help in our #amarok channel on irc.freenode.net, but reading the mailing list is mandatory and spares us a lot of time.
Since you don’t want to repeat all this completely when you upgrade to a newer version of your preferred distribution, you should consider installing your /home directory on a separate partition from the start, it will spare you quite some time and hassle in the future.
Important information for code contributors
Amarok uses a unit test infrastructure that allows us to test the builds. If you consider contributing code to Amarok, you need to install Google Mock and you should build Amarok with the following cmake flag:
KDE4_BUILD_TESTS=ON
For more information about the test infrastructure, read the Qtestlib Manual
Globally
A global install that puts Amarok in your main system directories which is fine unless something goes wrong and you want to get rid of it easily.
To build from source you need to install git on your computer, then download the sources with the following command:
git clone git://anongit.kde.org/amarok.git
For updates you can then just use the command
git pull --rebase
in the amarok source folder. Then follow the instructions below.
cd amarok mkdir build cd build cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=`kde4-config --prefix` -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=debugfull -DKDE4_BUILD_TESTS=ON .. && make && make install
Note that your cmake preferences are saved in CMakeCache.txt, so you don't have to have the -D options every time you run cmake.
ccmake .
will give you a nice ncurses interface