Calligra/Building/Building Calligra
These instructions are for Unix and similar operating systems.
See also:
- Nightly Builds
- Developing With KDevelop
- Developing With QtCreator
- Pages about compiling KDE software for Windows
- Pages about compiling KDE software for Mac OS X
- Community HOWTO dedicated to building for Kubuntu
- kde's git infrastructure manual
- KDE and Git for developers
- git crash course
- script for building Calligra (build only krita by default, but easilly configurable)
Note: if you want to build FreOffice using the Nokia Qt SDK, please check out the build instructions on techbase.
Preparation
Recommended setup
Here is recommendation of a directory structure:
- $HOME/kde4/src/
- source code
- $HOME/kde4/build/calligra
- directory that Calligra will be built in
- $HOME/kde4/inst
- directory that Calligra will be installed in
The build directory is needed because you cannot (or should not) build Calligra inside the source directory; the source and build directory have to be separated.
Advantages of this setup:
- It is possible to have different builds (e.g. with different options out of the same source code)
- David Faure's scripts can be used to make development easier. With those scripts "make" can be typed in the source directory and building will happen in the right (build) directory automatically.
Also, check the Techbase instructions on setting up a build environment. That contains some useful scripts and functions.
Getting the source code
There are two options: to get the source code for the latest stable version or for the for the development version. The later option is needed to test, check and give feedback about features that is in development and have not been released yet. If unsure pick the stable version.
Getting the source code for the latest stable version
The latest stable Calligra version is 3.1.0.
- Visit download.kde.org for the latest source code: calligra-3.1.0.tar.bz2
- Check release notes on calligra.org
Get the source code for the development version
The latest development version of Calligra is 3.1.0 Alpha; developers always refer to it as to Master. Once tested and released, it will become the new current stable version 3.1.
XXX: Here we should explain local branches, staging and always-release-ready Master, if we have that setup. XXX
- Option 1: directly from git
To retrieve the source code from Git you have to use the following setup:
Add the following text to your ~/.gitconfig:
[url "git://anongit.kde.org/"] insteadOf = kde: [url "ssh://[email protected]/"] pushInsteadOf = kde:
Then execute
$ git clone kde:calligra
By using the kde: prefix, read access will automatically happen over Git, and authenticated SSH is only required for pushes.
Note that pushing your changes will only work if you have a KDE developer identity (https://identity.kde.org/register.php).
The $HOME/kde4/src/calligra directory will be created regardless of the way how the source code has been downloaded.
- Option 2: download a repository tarball
Go to https://projects.kde.org/projects/calligra/repository. Press the "Tarball" button. Copy the url text and paste it on your command line. It will look like:
wget -c http://anongit.kde.org/calligra/calligra-latest.tar.gz
Unpack and cd into directory, then run
$ ./initrepo.sh
From now on, you can run
$ git pull
to update, or
$ git rebase origin/master
if you have local changes
- Option 3: if beta or rc version was released, the source code for the latest beta can be found on KDE's ftp calligra-latest. Uncompress the code so that $HOME/kde4/src/calligra is created.
Build requirements
This section provides information about hard (required) and optional software packages needed to build the Calligra software.
Hard dependencies
Following are the general must-have dependencies for Calligra:
- Qt 4.6.0
- kdelibs, the minimal requirement is currently 4.3.0. But Calligra should build fine with either kdelibs from svn (see techbase for an explanation on how to compile kdelibs from svn), or any 4.3, 4.4 or 4.5 release packaged in your distribution (4.4.x is recommended) Parts of Calligra build with the Mobile Frameworks Profile of the KDE platform (kword, kspread, kpresenter, krita)
- kdebase/runtime 4.3 (4.4.x is recommended)
- cmake 2.6.2
- lcms 1.18
For KSpread:
- libeigen 2.0
For Krita:
- libeigen 2.0
- libexiv2 >= 0.16
- libqimageblitz
For KPresenter:
- boost
For Kexi:
- sqlite and sqlite-devel packages (package names can differ on various distributions), version >= 3.6.16
Optional dependencies
All optional dependencies are logged at the end of the cmake run, so it is easy to figure out what is missing. The buildsystem also reports what component will bot be built because given missing dependency.
Simplified installation of dependencies on various distributions
- deb-based distributions (Debian, Ubuntu...): All the dependencies used for the packages can be installed by running
apt-get build-dep {packagename}
for instance on Ubuntu:
sudo apt-get build-dep calligra
- OpenSuSE: All the dependencies used for building Calligra can be installed by running:
zypper si -d calligra
- Fedora: All the dependencies used for building Calligra can be installed by running:
yum-builddep calligra
- ArchLinux: All the dependencies used for building Calligra can be installed by running:
sudo pacman -S docbook-xml docbook-xsl exiv2 glew graphicsmagick gsl kdebase-runtime kdepimlibs lcms libwpd poppler-qt pstoedit qca qimageblitz shared-mime-info wv2 xdg-utils
Build Calligra
Type:
mkdir -p $HOME/kde4/build/calligra mkdir -p $HOME/kde4/inst cd $HOME/kde4/build/calligra cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$HOME/kde4/inst $HOME/kde4/src/calligra -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo
cmakekde tool can be used as explained on the build instructions for KDE4.
Then type:
make
Note that on dual-core machines compilation can be greatly speed up with the -j parameter of the make program, for example for dual-core:
make -j4
and for quad-core:
make -j8
Then type this command to install the software:
make install
Debugging options. Instead of setting CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE to "RelWithDebInfo" for cmake which gives an optimized Calligra with debug information, useful for bug reporting, one can set CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE to "Debug" to get a slower Calligra but with even more interesting debuggong (backtrace) information. For this replace -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo in the above cmake command with -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug.
Please follow the Running Calligra Applications instructions before trying to run an application.
Updating the already built software
If the source code has been checked out Subversion from trunk or a branch, it is possible to update the source code with newly added changes and build again. Usually only changing parts will be built, so this operation would be faster than building the source code from scratch.
Type:
cd $HOME/kde4/src/calligra git pull cd $HOME/kde4/build/calligra make make install
Build only selected applications from Calligra
CMake comes with a command-line tool ccmake that lets you configure build options. You can use it after executing cmake and before executing make. To use it, go to the build directory and issue the following commands:
cd $HOME/kde4/build/calligra ccmake .
ccmake is a text user interface application. Simple usage: move the selection using up/don arrow keys. Press Enter to set option ON/OFF (for text options, you enter the text). When you're done with setting the options, press c key to configure the source code to apply your changes. When done, press e key to exit. At any time you can press Ctrl+C to stop the application without saving your changes. Any change is saved to $HOME/kde4/build/calligra/CMakeCache.txt file. You can remove this file to get back to the default configuration (in this case you have to re-execute cmake first.
For applications that you do not want to compile, set the corresponding BUILD_{application} variable to "off", replacing {application} by the app's name. For instance, setting BUILD_krita to off will prevent Krita from being built.
Alternatively you can run "-DBUILD_{application}=off" from the cmake command line.
Running Calligra applications
There are two options to make the Calligra applications available for running.
- Option 1: Being able to run Calligra applications from the command line. If you have installed Calligra in a different prefix than KDElibs (which was recommended in this document), you may want to set the following environment variable:
export KDEDIRS=/path/to/install:$KDEDIRS export PATH=/path/to/install/bin:$PATH export KDEHOME=/path/to/a/config/dir
And then you need to execute:
kbuildsycoca4
For example for the recommended directory structure:
export KDEDIRS=$HOME/kde4/inst:$KDEDIRS export PATH=$HOME/kde4/inst/bin:$PATH export KDEHOME=$HOME/kde4/.kde
It is important to set KDEHOME to a directory different of $HOME/.kde, and if the directory does not exist, it will be created automatically.
- Option 2: Being able to run Calligra applications from the menu or by clicking on desktop icons. Instead of using KDEDIRS, you can add these lines to $HOME/.kde/share/config/kdeglobals file using text editor:
[Directories] prefixes=/path/to/install
And then you need to execute:
kbuildsycoca4
The advantage of this is that KDE4 will always look for the services where Calligra is installed. For example for the recommended directory structure:
[Directories] prefixes=$HOME/kde4/inst.
Executing unit tests
To be able to execute unit tests, you need to explicitely enable them in the build configuration. To do so, set the KDE4_BUILD_TESTS variable to "ON", either by issuing the command cmake -DKDE4_BUILD_TESTS=ON
, or by running ccmake .
. Both commands must be executed in the build directory.
You can then run the test by executing:
make test
or individually in the tests directories.
It is recommended to execute
make install
before running tests.
CMake Build Options
When you enter your build directory, you can type "ccmake ." to see many build options, e.g. you can turn off compilation of apps you don't want - you can save time when compiling.
Here is list for Krita related options:
- HAVE_MEMORY_LEAK_TRACKER [On/Off] - You can turn on compilation of the tool in krita which detects memory leak. If you want to help debug Krita memory usage, it is useful. Otherwise you just slow down your Krita.
- HAVE_BACKTRACE_SUPPORT [On/Off] - It is related to the memory leak tool. If you activate, you will be able to see code path which leads to memory leak.
Resources
- Useful hints for who wants to hack on Calligra
- opengtl debugging, or turning it off
- Status of Calligra build on Windows (msvc 2008, mingw)
Possible issues
If you get errors when running an application like:
krita(8565)/calligra (lib komain) KoPluginLoader::load: Loading plugin "Animation Tool" failed, "Cannot load library /home/michael/kde4/inst/lib/kde4/kpresentertoolanimation.so: (/home/michael/kde4/inst/lib/libkopageapp.so.7: undefined symbol: _ZN28KoShapeContainerDefaultModel3addEP7KoShape)" ( 1 )
or crashes when starting an application, then you very likely have a version of Calligra installed through your package manager. As emphasized earlier in this document, you can only have one version of Calligra, and you should uninstall your packaged Calligra.