Difference between revisions of "Compiling Inkscape on Chrome OS"
(→Walkthrough: add libdouble-conversion-dev and libgdl-3-dev (see https://gitlab.com/inkscape/inkscape/issues/645)) |
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This walkthrough assumes you have some familiarity with Linux commands. | This walkthrough assumes you have some familiarity with Linux commands. | ||
* Modify the APT configuration to include source | * Modify the APT configuration to include source package repositories. This step is needed to use APT's <code>build-dep</code> command. Open the file <code>/etc/apt/sources.list</code> and duplicate both lines there, then change the first word from <code>deb</code> to <code>deb-src</code>. Example file content after modification: | ||
<pre><nowiki> | <pre><nowiki> | ||
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</nowiki></pre> | </nowiki></pre> | ||
* Install build dependencies for Inkscape and a few tools. | |||
* Install build dependencies for Inkscape. | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
sudo apt build-dep inkscape | sudo apt build-dep inkscape | ||
sudo apt install libsoup2.4-dev libgtkmm-3.0-dev libgtkspellmm-3.0-dev | sudo apt install git wget libdouble-conversion-dev libsoup2.4-dev libgtkmm-3.0-dev libgtkspellmm-3.0-dev libgdl-3-dev | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Latest revision as of 21:14, 6 January 2020
Chrome OS offers beta support for Linux apps on some Chromebook models starting with version 69. The Linux environment on Chrome OS is called Crostini and is basically a virtual machine that runs Debian with a few custom packages. It can be used to run and develop Inkscape.
Supported hardware
Inkscape can only be compiled on Chromebooks that support Linux apps. There is a list available on the Crostini subreddit's wiki. Pixelbook, Pixel Slate and several other premium Chromebook models are known to work and include both x86-64 and ARM64 models. 32-bit ARM and Intel Chromebooks are not supported.
You will need at least 4 GB of disk space for the Inkscape repository and the intermediate build files, plus some space for the Crostini installation, dependencies and tools. We recommend at least 6 GB of free space.
Walkthrough
This walkthrough assumes you have some familiarity with Linux commands.
- Modify the APT configuration to include source package repositories. This step is needed to use APT's
build-dep
command. Open the file/etc/apt/sources.list
and duplicate both lines there, then change the first word fromdeb
todeb-src
. Example file content after modification:
deb https://deb.debian.org/debian stretch main deb-src https://deb.debian.org/debian stretch main deb https://deb.debian.org/debian-security stretch/updates main deb-src https://deb.debian.org/debian-security stretch/updates main
- Install build dependencies for Inkscape and a few tools.
sudo apt build-dep inkscape sudo apt install git wget libdouble-conversion-dev libsoup2.4-dev libgtkmm-3.0-dev libgtkspellmm-3.0-dev libgdl-3-dev
- Create a new default SSH key:
ssh-keygen
(you can just hit Enter for every question) - Add the newly generated public key to your GitLab account. One way is to use the command
cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
, select the text (it is automatically copied to the clipboard) and paste it into the text box on the website. - Check out the source in a directory of your choice:
git clone git@gitlab.com:inkscape/inkscape.git
- This will take some time, because the Inkscape repo is multiple gigabytes.
- Run the GTest download script:
./download-gtest.sh
- Run CMake:
mkdir build && cd build && cmake ..
- Compile Inkscape:
make -j4
- Install Inkscape:
sudo make install
- Run Inkscape:
inkscape
- Currently, Inkscape will crash when run if it was never installed, but running the binary from the build directory should work after installing it once; you don't need to perform the installation after every build, unless you make significant changes to the installed files.