Projects/KDE on Solaris/OpenSolaris: Difference between revisions
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* Now fetch the repository containing the build information. The repository is approximately 8MB large at this point.<code>hg clone http://solaris.bionicmutton.org/hg/kde4-specs-460</code> | * Now fetch the repository containing the build information. The repository is approximately 8MB large at this point.<code>hg clone http://solaris.bionicmutton.org/hg/kde4-specs-460</code> | ||
* Set-up a configuration file. Usually it's enough to just | * Set-up a configuration file. Usually it's enough to just | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash">cd kde4-specs-460/specs/ ; cp tools/build/config.template tools/build/config </code> | ||
* Let a script install all the dependencies and the build environment. <code> sh tools/install-be --osol</code> | * Let a script install all the dependencies and the build environment. <code> sh tools/install-be --osol</code> | ||
* Go for a walk, sleep, enjoy the life, as pkg is quite slow and has a lot to do (~1 hour)<br> | * Go for a walk, sleep, enjoy the life, as pkg is quite slow and has a lot to do (~1 hour)<br> | ||
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To add the kde ips repository: | To add the kde ips repository: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash">pfexec pkg set-publisher -p http://solaris.bionicmutton.org/pkg/4.5.3</code> | ||
Remember that KDE includes setuid code. Remember that installing packages from untrusted and unsigned third parties is insecure. Remember that the KDE codebase is huge and not extensively tested on OpenSolaris yet. Consider whether you really want to install KDE4 on the machine you're working on. Then decide to do it anyway. You will need KDEbase-apps for things like Konqueror and Konsole, and KDEgdm-integration to be able to choose KDE as a session; other KDE packages may be installed as you need them (such as KDEpim, KDEgames, etc.). There is a KDEconsolidation package as well that pulls in everything we know of. | Remember that KDE includes setuid code. Remember that installing packages from untrusted and unsigned third parties is insecure. Remember that the KDE codebase is huge and not extensively tested on OpenSolaris yet. Consider whether you really want to install KDE4 on the machine you're working on. Then decide to do it anyway. You will need KDEbase-apps for things like Konqueror and Konsole, and KDEgdm-integration to be able to choose KDE as a session; other KDE packages may be installed as you need them (such as KDEpim, KDEgames, etc.). There is a KDEconsolidation package as well that pulls in everything we know of. | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash">pfexec pkg install KDEgdm-integration</code> | ||
After installing KDEgdm-integration, you should be able to log out and choose KDE as a session type from the login manager. Then you get a full KDE4 desktop. On my machine with Radeon graphics it is very slow to start up and launch applications, but fairly fast after that. There is a discussion on performance tweaking on [email protected]. | After installing KDEgdm-integration, you should be able to log out and choose KDE as a session type from the login manager. Then you get a full KDE4 desktop. On my machine with Radeon graphics it is very slow to start up and launch applications, but fairly fast after that. There is a discussion on performance tweaking on [email protected]. | ||
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You will also need to install more development tools with the following package installation command: | You will also need to install more development tools with the following package installation command: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
pfexec pkg install SUNWmercurial \ | pfexec pkg install SUNWmercurial \ | ||
SUNWgmake \ | SUNWgmake \ | ||
Line 57: | Line 57: | ||
And now you need more bits and pieces. The easiest way I've found it to install Studio Express because it drags in whatever it is, and then uninstall Studio Express because you don't really want it. | And now you need more bits and pieces. The easiest way I've found it to install Studio Express because it drags in whatever it is, and then uninstall Studio Express because you don't really want it. | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
pfexec pkg install sunstudioexpress | pfexec pkg install sunstudioexpress | ||
pfexec pkg uninstall sunstudioexpress | pfexec pkg uninstall sunstudioexpress | ||
Line 65: | Line 65: | ||
OpenSolaris ships without many of the headers you will need, instead packaging them separately (like the -devel packages in Linux, but with less-consistent naming). You will need at least the following: | OpenSolaris ships without many of the headers you will need, instead packaging them separately (like the -devel packages in Linux, but with less-consistent naming). You will need at least the following: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash">pfexec pkg install SUNWhea \ | ||
SUNWaudh \ | SUNWaudh \ | ||
SUNWsfwhea \ | SUNWsfwhea \ | ||
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Although the build will warn you about them much later, you should install the following dependencies (which will also pull in headers) now. | Although the build will warn you about them much later, you should install the following dependencies (which will also pull in headers) now. | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
pfexec pkg install SUNWmysql51 \ | pfexec pkg install SUNWmysql51 \ | ||
SUNWmysql51lib \ | SUNWmysql51lib \ | ||
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For consistency, let's set up some standard directories in your home directory. Then we need to set up your build environment -- in this example by adding to your .bash_profile, but you may want to do that differently. | For consistency, let's set up some standard directories in your home directory. Then we need to set up your build environment -- in this example by adding to your .bash_profile, but you may want to do that differently. | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
mkdir ~/src ~/bin ~/packages | mkdir ~/src ~/bin ~/packages | ||
mkdir ~/packages/SOURCES | mkdir ~/packages/SOURCES | ||
Line 117: | Line 117: | ||
Next, we'll fetch sources for pkgtool and build it. The pkgtool program is used to build SysV packages and is part of the CBE (Common Build Environment). We won't be building all of the CBE, though. | Next, we'll fetch sources for pkgtool and build it. The pkgtool program is used to build SysV packages and is part of the CBE (Common Build Environment). We won't be building all of the CBE, though. | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash">cd ~/src | ||
wget http://dlc.sun.com/osol/jds/downloads/cbe/test/desktop-cbe-1.7.0-rc1-x86.tar.bz2 | wget http://dlc.sun.com/osol/jds/downloads/cbe/test/desktop-cbe-1.7.0-rc1-x86.tar.bz2 | ||
gtar xvjf desktop-cbe-1.7.0-rc1-x86.tar.bz2 | gtar xvjf desktop-cbe-1.7.0-rc1-x86.tar.bz2 | ||
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Next up we will install some other CBE components, using KDE's copy of their specfiles. We need to get the KDE specfile repository for this, though: | Next up we will install some other CBE components, using KDE's copy of their specfiles. We need to get the KDE specfile repository for this, though: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash">cd ~/src | ||
pfexec pkgrm CBEcmake | pfexec pkgrm CBEcmake | ||
pfexec pkgrm CBEyasm | pfexec pkgrm CBEyasm | ||
Line 151: | Line 151: | ||
You will need to put some symlinks into your ~/bin (or switch around your PATH, but I think using symlinks is safer). There is a target check-version that will check the versions of installed components and what's in your path and print out a report. Something like this: | You will need to put some symlinks into your ~/bin (or switch around your PATH, but I think using symlinks is safer). There is a target check-version that will check the versions of installed components and what's in your path and print out a report. Something like this: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
$ make check-version | $ make check-version | ||
! $AUTOMAKE is unset and automake is not in your PATH. | ! $AUTOMAKE is unset and automake is not in your PATH. | ||
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It's a good idea to listen to what check-version prints, because it will save you from mysterious compile failures much later. To solve typical problems, we add symlinks in ~/bin as follows: | It's a good idea to listen to what check-version prints, because it will save you from mysterious compile failures much later. To solve typical problems, we add symlinks in ~/bin as follows: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
cd ~/bin | cd ~/bin | ||
ln -s `which automake-1.10` automake | ln -s `which automake-1.10` automake | ||
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To configure for OSOL, do the following: | To configure for OSOL, do the following: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
cd ~/src/kde4-specs-dev/specs | cd ~/src/kde4-specs-dev/specs | ||
cat > Makefile.config | cat > Makefile.config | ||
Line 190: | Line 190: | ||
Now do a test build of a single package, to see if things work a little: | Now do a test build of a single package, to see if things work a little: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
make FOSShier | make FOSShier | ||
</code> | </code> | ||
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To break down the build into a few somewhat manageable steps, we distinguish | To break down the build into a few somewhat manageable steps, we distinguish | ||
Qt, KDEgdm-integration, BOOST and KDEconsolidation. Build them in turn: | Qt, KDEgdm-integration, BOOST and KDEconsolidation. Build them in turn: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
cd ~/src/kde4-specs-dev/specs | cd ~/src/kde4-specs-dev/specs | ||
make FOSSqt | make FOSSqt | ||
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You will need a IPS repository running in your machine up & running: | You will need a IPS repository running in your machine up & running: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
pfexec svccfg -s pkg/server "setprop pkg/port=10000" | pfexec svccfg -s pkg/server "setprop pkg/port=10000" | ||
pfexec svcadm refresh pkg/server | pfexec svcadm refresh pkg/server | ||
Line 220: | Line 220: | ||
</code> | </code> | ||
Once you have your own IPS repo listening in localhost, you will need to recognize it as a valid authority from where to install packages: | Once you have your own IPS repo listening in localhost, you will need to recognize it as a valid authority from where to install packages: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
pfexec pkg set-authority -O http://localhost:10000 localrepo | pfexec pkg set-authority -O http://localhost:10000 localrepo | ||
</code> | </code> | ||
You can check that it's configured properly if it appears as a valid IPS repo: | You can check that it's configured properly if it appears as a valid IPS repo: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
pkg authority | pkg authority | ||
# Some other repos | # Some other repos | ||
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To create the IPS packages, you can use the ips-$PACKAGE target of make, using the following format (for the case of FOSShier): | To create the IPS packages, you can use the ips-$PACKAGE target of make, using the following format (for the case of FOSShier): | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
make ips-FOSShier | make ips-FOSShier | ||
</code> | </code> | ||
One tool you can use to find out what the direct or indirect dependencies are | One tool you can use to find out what the direct or indirect dependencies are | ||
for a package is 'show-missing' which is a target in tools/Makefile.admin: | for a package is 'show-missing' which is a target in tools/Makefile.admin: | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
make -f tools/Makefile.admin show-missing TARGET=KDElibs | make -f tools/Makefile.admin show-missing TARGET=KDElibs | ||
</code> | </code> | ||
Line 248: | Line 248: | ||
Swap - If the build dies claiming fbe is out of free space, it is likely that your swap is too small. About 1 Gb should be fine, but 2 Gb is recommended. To set your swap size to 2 Gb, execute the following as root, replacing 'rpool/swap' with the location of your swap partition, given by 'zfs list': | Swap - If the build dies claiming fbe is out of free space, it is likely that your swap is too small. About 1 Gb should be fine, but 2 Gb is recommended. To set your swap size to 2 Gb, execute the following as root, replacing 'rpool/swap' with the location of your swap partition, given by 'zfs list': | ||
< | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
pfexec zfs set volsize=2G rpool/swap | pfexec zfs set volsize=2G rpool/swap | ||
</code> | </code> |
Revision as of 20:42, 29 June 2011
KDE on OpenSolaris is like Projects/KDE on Solaris but with some extra setup steps. There are IPS packages available intermittently.
Status: For an overview of current issues, see the KDE4 on OpenSolaris status page.
At the moment 'Effortless building' is the only uptodate part of this page.
Effortless building of KDE 4
- Install a current Solaris (S11e. OpenIndiana is likely to work too).
Make sure you have enough memory (>=1GB) and swap (~2GB). - Make sure your user ("test" in this case) has privileges to install software etc.
# usermod -P "Primary Administrator" test
- Add the opensolaris.org repo so you can install Sun Studio 12.1
pfexec pkg set-publisher -g http://pkg.opensolaris.org/release opensolaris.org
- Install Mercurial, the version control system. You need this to keep up-to-date with the packaging information.
pfexec pkg install developer/versioning/mercurial text/gnu-sed file/gnu-coreutils
- Now fetch the repository containing the build information. The repository is approximately 8MB large at this point.
hg clone http://solaris.bionicmutton.org/hg/kde4-specs-460
- Set-up a configuration file. Usually it's enough to just
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">cd kde4-specs-460/specs/ ; cp tools/build/config.template tools/build/config
- Let a script install all the dependencies and the build environment.
sh tools/install-be --osol
- Go for a walk, sleep, enjoy the life, as pkg is quite slow and has a lot to do (~1 hour)
- When it's finished, do:
bash
so that the new .bashrc is used - Run
cd ~/src/kde4-specs-460/specs/; make KDEgdm-integration
to start the build (build time may grow up to 24 hours on a decent machine). - Logout and login to your brand new KDE4.x session
- Check KDE4 on OpenSolaris status page for workarounds for some known issues.
Installing KDE4 IPS packages
The current KDE4 IPS package server is at http://solaris.bionicmutton.org/pkg/4.5.3 This is a fairly standard IPS setup. The bionicmutton domain is Adriaan's and has been previously used to serve up SysV packages as well. The URL is changing over time, always check the forum (http://www.opensolaris.org/jive/forum.jspa?forumID=187) or IRC (#kde4-solaris) for the latest news.
To add the kde ips repository: <syntaxhighlight lang="bash">pfexec pkg set-publisher -p http://solaris.bionicmutton.org/pkg/4.5.3
Remember that KDE includes setuid code. Remember that installing packages from untrusted and unsigned third parties is insecure. Remember that the KDE codebase is huge and not extensively tested on OpenSolaris yet. Consider whether you really want to install KDE4 on the machine you're working on. Then decide to do it anyway. You will need KDEbase-apps for things like Konqueror and Konsole, and KDEgdm-integration to be able to choose KDE as a session; other KDE packages may be installed as you need them (such as KDEpim, KDEgames, etc.). There is a KDEconsolidation package as well that pulls in everything we know of.
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">pfexec pkg install KDEgdm-integration
After installing KDEgdm-integration, you should be able to log out and choose KDE as a session type from the login manager. Then you get a full KDE4 desktop. On my machine with Radeon graphics it is very slow to start up and launch applications, but fairly fast after that. There is a discussion on performance tweaking on [email protected].
Please report problems to KDE bug tracker with Operating System set to "Solaris". Please check for duplicates [1] first.
Building KDE4 on OpenSolaris
Installing Tools
Set up SunStudio 12 (not Studio Express) and patch it up as described on the Projects/KDE on Solaris page. Tar that up and then extract it on your OpenSolaris machine. This will give you /opt/SUNWspro. Leave that alone.
You will also need to install more development tools with the following package installation command: <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> pfexec pkg install SUNWmercurial \
SUNWgmake \ SUNWcurl \ SUNWgnu-automake-110 \ SUNWaconf \ SUNWgnome-common-devel
And now you need more bits and pieces. The easiest way I've found it to install Studio Express because it drags in whatever it is, and then uninstall Studio Express because you don't really want it. <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> pfexec pkg install sunstudioexpress pfexec pkg uninstall sunstudioexpress
Installing Headers
OpenSolaris ships without many of the headers you will need, instead packaging them separately (like the -devel packages in Linux, but with less-consistent naming). You will need at least the following: <syntaxhighlight lang="bash">pfexec pkg install SUNWhea \
SUNWaudh \ SUNWsfwhea \ SUNWxorg-headers
Installing Other Dependencies
Although the build will warn you about them much later, you should install the following dependencies (which will also pull in headers) now. <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> pfexec pkg install SUNWmysql51 \
SUNWmysql51lib \ SUNWlibmng \ SUNWgnu-gettext \ SUNWgnu-libiconv \ SUNWiconv-unicode \ SUNWperl-xml-parser \ SUNWGtk \ SUNWicu \ SUNWgnome-media-mp3 \ SUNWpostgr-83-libs \ SUNWpostgr-83-devel \ SUNWcups \ SUNWlibtool \ SUNWsvn \ SUNWbison \ SUNWflexlex \ SUNWdoxygen \ SUNWPython25
Configuring Paths
For consistency, let's set up some standard directories in your home directory. Then we need to set up your build environment -- in this example by adding to your .bash_profile, but you may want to do that differently.
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> mkdir ~/src ~/bin ~/packages mkdir ~/packages/SOURCES cat >> ~/.bashrc PATH=/opt/SUNWspro/bin:/opt/dtbld/bin:$HOME/bin:$PATH:/usr/sbin:/opt/foss/bin:/opt/kde4/bin CC=/opt/SUNWspro/bin/cc CXX=/opt/SUNWspro/bin/CC MAKE=/usr/bin/gmake JAVA_HOME=/usr/jdk/latest export CC CXX MAKE PATH JAVA_HOME (note: on Nevada, you need /usr/gnu/bin somewhere in the front of the PATH)
Don't worry that /opt/dtbld doesn't exist yet. We'll create it shortly. Note that we are adding the Studio12 paths to your environment and also ~/bin, which we will use to override some of the system path defaults.
Installing CBE Components
Next, we'll fetch sources for pkgtool and build it. The pkgtool program is used to build SysV packages and is part of the CBE (Common Build Environment). We won't be building all of the CBE, though. <syntaxhighlight lang="bash">cd ~/src wget http://dlc.sun.com/osol/jds/downloads/cbe/test/desktop-cbe-1.7.0-rc1-x86.tar.bz2 gtar xvjf desktop-cbe-1.7.0-rc1-x86.tar.bz2 cd desktop-cbe-1.7.0-rc1 ./cbe-install -k -g -s -o
wget http://kent.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/pkgbuild/pkgbuild-1.3.101.tar.bz2 gtar xvjf pkgbuild-1.3.101.tar.bz2 cd pkgbuild-1.3.101 ./configure --prefix=/opt/dtbld
- Lots of output snipped
gmake
- Not much output snipped
pfexec gmake install
- More output snipped
pfexec chgrp bin /opt/dtbld/{bin,lib} Check if /opt/dtbld/bin/pkgtool will run; for instance pkgtool --help should do the trick. You can remove ~/src/pkgbuild-1.3.101* now. You need to fix up the groups on bin and lib or the next installations will fail -- suspended for administrative reasons.
Next up we will install some other CBE components, using KDE's copy of their specfiles. We need to get the KDE specfile repository for this, though: <syntaxhighlight lang="bash">cd ~/src pfexec pkgrm CBEcmake pfexec pkgrm CBEyasm
hg clone http://solaris.bionicmutton.org/hg/kde4-specs-dev cd kde4-specs-dev/specs gmake CBEcmake CBEyasm This will build and install cmake 2.6.2 and yasm into /opt/dtbld. The cmake is newer than what CBE 1.7.0 will deliver; yasm is the same as CBE yasm.
Installing the Rest
You will need to put some symlinks into your ~/bin (or switch around your PATH, but I think using symlinks is safer). There is a target check-version that will check the versions of installed components and what's in your path and print out a report. Something like this:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> $ make check-version ! $AUTOMAKE is unset and automake is not in your PATH. ! Make sure an automake is available (CBEautomake). ! install is not GNU install; make sure GNU install ! is in your path and can be called as "install" ! System will probably not compile properly. ! hit ^C now to abort compilation.
It's a good idea to listen to what check-version prints, because it will save you from mysterious compile failures much later. To solve typical problems, we add symlinks in ~/bin as follows:
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> cd ~/bin ln -s `which automake-1.10` automake ln -s `which aclocal-1.10` aclocal ln -s `which ginstall` install ln -s `which gmake` make for i in autoconf autoheader autom4te autoreconf do
ln -s `which $i` $i
done
Configuring the Build
All of the build action happens in ~/src/kde4-specs-dev/specs, and packages and other build things happen in ~/packages; the latter is configurable through pkgtool's ~/.pkgtoolrc and the former is where you checked out the sources. You still need to configure the build to make it an OpenSolaris build instead of a regular one; the difference is: - A regular build builds all of the dependencies in /opt/foss, including many duplicates of packages already installed on the system. - An OSOL build uses as many of the installed system packages as is feasible.
To configure for OSOL, do the following: <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> cd ~/src/kde4-specs-dev/specs cat > Makefile.config PKGTOOL_ARGS=--without-64 --with-osol This suppresses 64-bit builds (of limited use if your interest is only KDE, which is going to be built in 32-bit mode anyway) and changes the dependencies to OSOL style. For documentation on what can go in Makefile.config, see the Makefile.
Now do a test build of a single package, to see if things work a little: <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> make FOSShier
Building KDE in Four Big Steps
To break down the build into a few somewhat manageable steps, we distinguish Qt, KDEgdm-integration, BOOST and KDEconsolidation. Build them in turn: <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> cd ~/src/kde4-specs-dev/specs make FOSSqt make KDEgdm-integration make FOSSboost make KDEconsolidation Those will pull in the dependencies they need one-by-one. It can take a long time to download and build it all; count on about a day on a modern desktop. Look in Makefile.templates for other interesting targets.
Creating KDE4 IPS packages
If you want to create your own IPS packages (in order to test them before contributing them to OpenSolaris contrib repo eventually, maybe), you will need to follow a series of steps:
Enabling your own IPS repo
You will need a IPS repository running in your machine up & running: <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> pfexec svccfg -s pkg/server "setprop pkg/port=10000" pfexec svcadm refresh pkg/server pfexec svcadm enable pkg/server Once you have your own IPS repo listening in localhost, you will need to recognize it as a valid authority from where to install packages: <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> pfexec pkg set-authority -O http://localhost:10000 localrepo You can check that it's configured properly if it appears as a valid IPS repo: <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> pkg authority
- Some other repos
localrepo http://localhost:10000/
Creating the IPS packages and commiting them to the repo
To create the IPS packages, you can use the ips-$PACKAGE target of make, using the following format (for the case of FOSShier): <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> make ips-FOSShier One tool you can use to find out what the direct or indirect dependencies are for a package is 'show-missing' which is a target in tools/Makefile.admin: <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> make -f tools/Makefile.admin show-missing TARGET=KDElibs
Troubleshooting
OSOL System Issues
Swap - If the build dies claiming fbe is out of free space, it is likely that your swap is too small. About 1 Gb should be fine, but 2 Gb is recommended. To set your swap size to 2 Gb, execute the following as root, replacing 'rpool/swap' with the location of your swap partition, given by 'zfs list':
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> pfexec zfs set volsize=2G rpool/swap
Reboot afterward, as the change may not register immediately with the kernel.
Qt Jambi
Ant - If the system claims it can't find ant, or CBEant then you need to install JDS-CBE from http://opensolaris.org/os/project/jds/contributing/building/ . The ANT_HOME is often not set for you, so set it to the following in your shell profile:
export ANT_HOME=/opt/jdsbld
java.lang.OutOfHeapSpaceError - Sometimes the given heap space for the XSLT generation at the beginning of the compile isn't enough and the build stops. Add the following to your .bashrc or shell profile to increase to a suitable size of 256m:
export ANT_OPTS=-Xmx256m