Talk:Installing third party softwares in terminal/Build/KDE4

From KDE TechBase

cs and cb versus cd

If you're reading the article and wondering who in their right mind would misspell the cd command as cs so many times, you need to read the article about setting up your .bashrc. Both cs and cb are bash functions, used to change to the KDE source directory and KDE build directory respectively. Make sure it's actually a mistake before 'fixing' the article by changing cs or cb to cd. Otherwise it'll just be reverted. --Mpyne 21:23, 28 February 2007 (CET)

Comment: I just fell into the same trap and then tried to correct this in the wiki. I think the main reason for the confusion regarding cs/cb vs. cd is that most users (myself included) just copy&paste the commands and then wonder when the commands fail due to missing src & build directories. My first guess was 'well, there's a typo in the cd command.' I suggest adding a "mkdir -p" for src and build to the .bashrc provided on the wiki page.

~/install

When installing KDE4, I strongly recommend installing all tools (like dbus and cmake) and kde packages into the same place, e.g. ~/install. Qt is the only exception.

The reason for this is because if you install some packages to ~/kde and some to /usr/local and maybe one in /usr then cmake will generate errors like:

-- It is impossible to order the include directories.

This is not a fatal error, so you will still be able to compile, but you will possibly be using the wrong versions of libraries and this will product problems that are very hard to diagnose.

You may not experience any problems when installed like I advise not to, however I have and you might too in some typical situations.

Please see:

http://developer.kde.org/build/trunk.html

Platform Independence

We should provide multiple versions of these instructions based on which OS the user wishes to compile on. Right now the windows instructions are on kdelibs.com and I don't know of any Mac instructions. Mattr 17:42, 26 December 2006 (CET)

Install CMake modules local

The CMake modules should be installed local into ~/install/cmake/modules or similar. When following the current instructions 6.1: Install additional CMake modules, it's impossible to do a non-root installation, because "kdelibs/cmake/modules/cmake_install.cmake" wants to install the modules to "/cmake/modules". (I didn't install CMake local, because my system already provided CMake > 2.4.3).

I've already tried to do this, fiddling around with CMAKE_MODULE_PATH and DATA_INSTALL_DIR but couldn't get it working.

Does anybody know how to do this properly?

--Eliasp 15:44, 4 January 2007 (CET)


KDElibs.com and developernew.kde.org coexistence

Regarding content from kdelibs.com, see User_talk:Jstaniek#KDElibs.com_and_developernew.kde.org_coexistence --jstaniek 18:10, 11 January 2007 (CET)

Install prefix

I don't know if I missed something but shouldn't the build instructions for kdelibs, kdepimlibs and kdebase be followed by make && make install? Furthermore, the cmake command should ideally be called with the -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$KDEDIR cmdline argument to let a user install into the local ~/kde directory so no root permissions are required and /usr/local doesn't get polluted.

Apidox

Can anybody please add instructions on how to build the apidox? I managed to do this for kdelibs, but not for kdepim or kdepimlibs.

TMG 16:12, 26 January 2007 (CET)

Set up D-Bus

Doesn't it have to be "--localstatedir=$HOME/var" instead of "--localstatedir=/var" when configuring Dbus? When i use the latter, i get a permission denied

Fixes needed

There are still some places where the code is not according to the explanation or the other way around:

  • d-bus: there is a 'cs' at the beginning, but the explanation says line 1 is the wget line
  • cmake: the code says 'cs' while the explanation says home directory
  • qt-copy: the code says 'cs' while the explanation says home directory

--141.35.185.149 17:34, 2 March 2007 (CET)

  • qt-copy: Should we pass the -debug flag? Doesn't Qt install debug information separately by default anyways? Or is that just in the snapshot? --Mpyne

Exclude building qt-copy examples

My system is mainly compiling the qt-copy examples, and I wonder if that is really needed. If not, is there a configure switch to prevent make to compile the examples?

--141.35.185.149 17:37, 2 March 2007 (CET)

Append the ./configure option: -nomake examples
--Dhaumann
Thanks - would it make sense to mention that in the build instrcutions? --141.35.185.149 21:26, 5 March 2007 (CET)
Done. BTW, do we pare down (remove) Talk entries when they are completed or leave them here so people know why the Wiki looks the way it does? --Mpyne 23:32, 5 March 2007 (CET)
Usually we delete them. We could switch this talk page over to a FAQ-like page, like Q: ..., A: ... Then we could leave the info (i.e. the whole thread is not needed) --10:38, 6 March 2007 (CET)