Difference between revisions of "CompilingAutopackage"

From Inkscape Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
m (Reverted edits by Ns9Dje (Talk); changed back to last version by GigaClon)
Line 5: Line 5:
* You may need to tweak the specfile (packaging/autopackage/default.apspec.in) to fit your own needs. eg. add your name as the packager. :)
* You may need to tweak the specfile (packaging/autopackage/default.apspec.in) to fit your own needs. eg. add your name as the packager. :)
* Collect static (*.a) versions of gtkmm, libgc and libpopt. It should be possible to obtain these libraries by installing the appropriate dev or devel packages for your distro.
* Collect static (*.a) versions of gtkmm, libgc and libpopt. It should be possible to obtain these libraries by installing the appropriate dev or devel packages for your distro.
* It might be best to built your own static copy of libgc (the [http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Hans_Boehm/gc/ Boehm Garbage Collector]) to ensure it was built with C   support and to increase binary portability by using apbuild (included with the autopackage developer tools).
* It might be best to built your own static copy of libgc (the [http://www.hpl.hp.com/personal/Hans_Boehm/gc/ Boehm Garbage Collector]) to ensure it was built with C++ support and to increase binary portability by using apbuild (included with the autopackage developer tools).
**export CC=apgcc
**export CC=apgcc
**export CXX=apg
**export CXX=apg++
**./configure --enable-cplusplus
**./configure --enable-cplusplus
**make
**make
Line 14: Line 14:
* Currently gtkspell must be disabled in configure.ac as below (this is a temporary fix that will be corrected in later versions)
* Currently gtkspell must be disabled in configure.ac as below (this is a temporary fix that will be corrected in later versions)
  -if pkg-conf --exists gtkspell-2.0; then
  -if pkg-conf --exists gtkspell-2.0; then
  if false
+if false && pkg-conf --exists gtkspell-2.0; then
* ./autogen.sh && ./configure && make clean
* makeinstaller packaging/autopackage/default.apspec
 
=== Recompiles ===
* You can skip configure and make for recompiles with:
    makeinstaller -c -m packaging/autopackage/default.apspec
 
 
=== Known issues ===
 
If you see crashes almost immediately on startup, you're seeing GCC bug 21405. This is triggered by having '''any''' C++ library from the users system linked into the running process image, even if it's not linked to directly.
 
A common problem is that GTKmm isn't being statically linked. The solution is to ensure you are statically linking GTKmm correctly (and any other C++ libraries that may be needed). You can see what libraries are dynamically linked to the binary by running
 
  objdump -x inkscape | grep NEEDED
 
If there are any C++ libraries in that list, statically link them.
 
=== Future work ===
 
Autopackage 1.2 will include a new type of C++ support based on binary deltas. By ensuring the user always has a binary of the right ABI for their system, it becomes safe to use system-installed C++ libraries again. This opens up the following possibilities:
 
* Not statically linking GTKmm, but rather using the autopackage depsolver. It might be more convenient to continue with the current approach though.
* dlopening/relaytooling GTKspell. This isn't safe currently, because libaspell is written in C++, so we hit GCC bug 21405 again.
 
Other work involves:
 
* Ensuring it's built with the latest autopackage version
* Migrating it to autopackage 1.2 when it comes out later this year
* Weak linking more dependencies, such as:
** GTKspell
** GNOME-VFS
** Any others?
 
[[Category:Developer Documentation]]

Revision as of 15:50, 20 April 2007

Autopackage is a set of tools for building low overhead, distribution-neutral packages, distributing them, and installing using with a variety of front-ends. Visit http://autopackage.org to learn more.

Prerequisites

  • Download and install the Autopackage developer tools from http://autopackage.org/download-tools.html
  • You may need to tweak the specfile (packaging/autopackage/default.apspec.in) to fit your own needs. eg. add your name as the packager. :)
  • Collect static (*.a) versions of gtkmm, libgc and libpopt. It should be possible to obtain these libraries by installing the appropriate dev or devel packages for your distro.
  • It might be best to built your own static copy of libgc (the Boehm Garbage Collector) to ensure it was built with C++ support and to increase binary portability by using apbuild (included with the autopackage developer tools).
    • export CC=apgcc
    • export CXX=apg++
    • ./configure --enable-cplusplus
    • make

Compile

  • ./autogen.sh
  • Currently gtkspell must be disabled in configure.ac as below (this is a temporary fix that will be corrected in later versions)
-if pkg-conf --exists gtkspell-2.0; then
+if false && pkg-conf --exists gtkspell-2.0; then
  • ./autogen.sh && ./configure && make clean
  • makeinstaller packaging/autopackage/default.apspec

Recompiles

  • You can skip configure and make for recompiles with:
    makeinstaller -c -m packaging/autopackage/default.apspec


Known issues

If you see crashes almost immediately on startup, you're seeing GCC bug 21405. This is triggered by having any C++ library from the users system linked into the running process image, even if it's not linked to directly.

A common problem is that GTKmm isn't being statically linked. The solution is to ensure you are statically linking GTKmm correctly (and any other C++ libraries that may be needed). You can see what libraries are dynamically linked to the binary by running

 objdump -x inkscape | grep NEEDED

If there are any C++ libraries in that list, statically link them.

Future work

Autopackage 1.2 will include a new type of C++ support based on binary deltas. By ensuring the user always has a binary of the right ABI for their system, it becomes safe to use system-installed C++ libraries again. This opens up the following possibilities:

  • Not statically linking GTKmm, but rather using the autopackage depsolver. It might be more convenient to continue with the current approach though.
  • dlopening/relaytooling GTKspell. This isn't safe currently, because libaspell is written in C++, so we hit GCC bug 21405 again.

Other work involves:

  • Ensuring it's built with the latest autopackage version
  • Migrating it to autopackage 1.2 when it comes out later this year
  • Weak linking more dependencies, such as:
    • GTKspell
    • GNOME-VFS
    • Any others?