Version 78 (modified by 14 years ago) (diff) | ,
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Pidgin for Windows Build Instructions
Note: The instructions for versions prior to 2.7.0 are found here.
Set up your build environment
The easy way
- Install the Cygwin Bash shell. Make sure to select Unix file mode during setup.
Also make sure you install bash, bzip2, coreutils, gawk, grep, gzip, make, monotone, patch, sed, tar, unzip, wget, and zip (several of these are selected by default, those in bold are not). Be sure to add Cygwin versions of any programs you may use that require Cygwin path names (for example, if you want to use vim to edit monotone commit messages, you need to install the Cygwin version of vim -- native Win32 vim will be unable to read Cygwin-style paths).
You may prefer to use the native Windows monotone binary available here.
- Download the Build Environment Fetcher script. Follow the instructions on the website to fetch and install most of the needed build dependencies. The script can fetch Pidgin's source code distribution; you will be prompted to choose which version you'd like to use.
Note that this script is occasionally out of date, especially immediately following releases, in which case you will need to perform some of the manual steps in addition. The ChangeLog may clue you into which dependencies have changed.
- Skip the The manual way, Install Pidgin's build dependencies, and Get the Pidgin source code sections and go straight to Build Pidgin.
The manual way
- Install the Cygwin Bash shell.
Also make sure you install bash, bzip2, coreutils, gawk, grep, gzip, make, monotone, patch, sed, tar, unzip, wget, and zip (several of these are selected by default, those in bold are not).
You may prefer to use the native Windows monotone binary available here.
- Install the MinGW "current" packages from the MinGW site.
The easiest way to install these is to use the Automated MinGW Installer.
Specifically, you will needgcc-core 3.4.2
,binutils 2.15.91
,mingw-runtime 3.9
andwin32api 3.9
(or newer).
You will need to set MinGW's bin directory before Cygwin's in your PATH.
For Example (You can add the following to your~/.bashrc
file (create the file if it doesn't exist yet)):export PATH=/cygdrive/c/MinGW/bin:$PATH
You do not want to use any of Cygwin's build tools, with one exception; you need to use Cygwin's make utility. If typingwhich make
produces MinGW's make utility, then just rename themake.exe
in the MinGW bin directory to something else so that cygwin's make utility will be used instead. This shouldn't be a problem with recent versions of MinGW.
- The following instructions were written under the assumption that the Pidgin source will be extracted or checked out into
$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/pidgin-<version>
and that you install all of Pidgin's build dependencies under$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/win32-dev
(the point being that the pidgin source root andwin32-dev
directories should be on the same level). Some users may find the instructions for customizing their build environment useful.
You don't have to actually define an environment variable called
PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT
, it is simply used here as a placeholder.
Note: You should avoid using a
$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT
path that contains spaces as that can cause unnecessary complications.
People are sometimes confused about the directory structure, so here is an example structure after all the dependencies have been installed (
$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT
isc:/development/pidgin_dev
in this example):C:\development\pidgin_dev (The following is the source tree root, containing config.h.mingw and libpurple.) C:\development\pidgin_dev\pidgin-<version> C:\development\pidgin_dev\win32-dev (If the following file is present, your structure is probably correct.) C:\development\pidgin_dev\win32-dev\gtk_2_0\include\libintl.h
Install Pidgin's build dependencies
GTK+
Pidgin depends on GTK+ 2.14.7 (newer runtime versions can be used). The GTK+ All-in-one bundle contains all of GTK+'s dependencies in one zip file. Download gtk+-bundle_2.14.7-20090119_win32.zip into
$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/win32-dev/gtk_2_0
.
Visit the GTK+ website for official binary and source releases.
gettext
You'll need gettext to compile translations. Download gettext-0.14.4-dep.zip and gettext-0.14.4-bin.zip. Extract both to
win32-dev/gtk_2_0
.
Libxml2
Download and extract libxml2-dev_2.7.4-1_win32.zip to
win32-dev/libxml2-2.7.4
.
Download and extract libxml2_2.7.4-1_win32.zip towin32-dev/libxml2-2.7.4
(the same directory as the-dev
package above).
Perl 5.10
Install Perl 5.10 for Windows (I use ActivePerl), to
C:\Perl
. If you install Perl anywhere else, you will need to override thePERL
andEXTUTILS
variables in yourpidgin/local.mak
file. You will also need to install perl_5-10-0.tar.gz under$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/win32-dev
(Containing headers and import lib for mingw gcc).
Tcl 8.4.5
Download and extract tcl-8.4.5.tar.gz to
win32-dev
GtkSpell / Aspell
- Download the following development packages for GtkSpell and Aspell, and extract them under
win32-dev
:
Mozilla NSS
- Download and unzip the following under
$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/win32-dev
:
SILC Toolkit
Download and extract silc-toolkit-1.1.8.tar.gz to
win32-dev
.
Meanwhile
Download and extract meanwhile-1.0.2_daa2-win32.zip to
win32-dev
.
Bonjour SDK
Download the
Bonjour SDK for Windows
from the Apple developer website and install it towin32-dev/Bonjour_SDK
.
Cyrus SASL
Download and extract cyrus-sasl-2.1.22-daa1.zip to
win32-dev
.
(this also contains the MIT GSSAPI module)
Get the Pidgin source code
The source for Pidgin 2.6.6 is available here (use the latest release if this isn't updated yet).
The development source is available via monotone. See UsingPidginMonotone for more information.
Build Pidgin
Run the following:
$ cd $PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/pidgin-<version> $ make -f Makefile.mingw installNow just wait and let your compiler do its thing. When finished, Pidgin will be in
$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/pidgin-<version>/win32-install-dir
.
Build the Pidgin Installer
- If you want to build the Pidgin installer, do the following (skip to the
make
command below if you chose to use the Build Environment Fetcher):- Download and install NSIS. Include NSIS to your PATH.
- For information on the NSIS installer, visit the NSIS website.
- For information on the NSIS installer, visit the NSIS website.
- Download the nsisunz plugin, and extract
nsisunz.dll
into thePlugins
directory of your NSIS installation. - Download gtk-2.14.7-rev-a-installer.tar.gz
and extract it to
$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/
. From within the newgtk_installer directory
, run. build.sh
(this builds the GTK+ runtime installer, which the Pidgin installer will include). Please see note below if building on Ubuntu/Debian? about modification of the build.sh file. - Download pidgin-inst-deps-20100223.tar.gz and extract under
$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/win32-dev
.
- Download and install NSIS. Include NSIS to your PATH.
- Now you can actually build the installer.
There are 2 different installers, an "Offline" installer that includes all dependencies (except spellchecking dictionaries) and the debug symbols and an "Online" installer that includes only Pidgin itself and will download the various dependencies if necessary. TheMakefile.mingw
targets for these areinstaller_offline
, andinstaller
respectively. To build both, use theinstallers
target.$ cd $PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/pidgin-<version> $ make -f Makefile.mingw installers
When it finishes, your installer(s) should be in$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/pidgin-<version>/
.
Customizing the Build Environment
Most people will find that the standard build evironment directory is completely adequate. It is, however, possible to override the locations of the various dependencies and target directories. This is often useful to test against a development version of a library dependency or to override compiler flags.
This done is by overriding the various Makefile variables in a
local.mak
file in the$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/pidgin-<version>
directory. This file does not exist by default.
Most of the variables that can be overridden with this method are defined in the libpurple/win32/global.mak file. For example, to install Pidgin over
C:\Program Files\Pidgin
instead of$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/pidgin/win32-install-dir
, create a$PIDGIN_DEV_ROOT/pidgin/local.mak
containing:#Override the install location PIDGIN_INSTALL_DIR = /cygdrive/c/Program\ Files/Pidgin PURPLE_INSTALL_DIR = /cygdrive/c/Program\ Files/Pidgin
One nice use of the
local.mak
file is for cross compiling, there is an additional example in the section below.
Debugging
There is a quite good Just In Time debugger for MinGW: drmingw. You can download it here.
There is also a version ofgdb
available from MinGW, if you prefer.
Cross Compiling
It is quite easy to cross compile Pidgin for Windows on a Linux machine. Note that cross-compiling does not currently work properly on Debian Sid on amd64 (also called x86_64 or x64) systems--the most common failure is that the linker will die with a segmentation fault at various points. You may have differing success or failure on other 64-bit Linux distributions.
To begin, you'll need to install MinGW. On Debian/Ubuntu?, this involves installing packages
mingw32
,mingw32-binutils
, andmingw32-runtime
. On other distributions, the packages may be named differently.
Set up a build environment as described above, skipping steps 1 and 2.
Create a
local.mak
file in the source directory root to override the Makefile variables - mine looks like this:SHELL := /bin/bash CC := /usr/bin/i586-mingw32msvc-cc GMSGFMT := msgfmt MAKENSIS := /usr/bin/makensis MAKENSISOPT := - PERL := /usr/bin/perl EXTUTILS := /usr/share/perl/5.8/ExtUtils WINDRES := /usr/bin/i586-mingw32msvc-windres STRIP := /usr/bin/i586-mingw32msvc-strip INCLUDE_PATHS := -I$(PIDGIN_TREE_TOP)/../win32-dev/w32api/include LIB_PATHS := -L$(PIDGIN_TREE_TOP)/../win32-dev/w32api/lib
If your distribution doesn't include a recent enough win32api, you can download it from the MinGW site, extract it into your
win32-dev
directory, and override theINCLUDE_PATHS
andLIB_PATHS
variables in yourlocal.mak
as I have done.
If you want to build the installers, you'll need to install NSIS. On Debian and Ubuntu, the package name is
nsis
; this will likely be different elsewhere. In order to build the GTK+ installer as mentioned above, thebuild.sh
script referenced above needs to be changed. The line starting withmakensis.exe
needs to be changed to read:makensis -V3 -DGTK_VERSION=$gtk_version -DGTK_REVISION=$gtk_revision gtk-installer.nsi
NSIS version 2.46 or greater is required to cross-compile. If compiling NSIS from source, the scons package is a dependency. This can usually be installed through your linux distribution's package archive. An example of how to install the NSIS package is given below (Assuming use of the NSIS 2.46 version):
.tar.bz2
file contains latest source
.zip
file contains libraries$ mkdir nsis;cd nsis $ wget http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/nsis/nsis-2.46-src.tar.bz2?download $ wget http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/nsis/nsis-2.46.zip?download $ tar -jxvf nsis-2.46-src.tar.bz2 $ cd nsis-2.46 $ scons SKIPSTUBS=all SKIPPLUGINS=all SKIPUTILS=all SKIPMISC=all NSIS_CONFIG_CONST_DATA_PATH=no $ sudo scons install-compiler $ cd .. $ sudo unzip nsis-2.46 -d /usr/local/share $ sudo mv /usr/local/share/nsis-2.46/ /usr/local/share/nsisIf following the above instructions, the local.mak file (listed below) should be modified
MAKENSIS := /usr/local/bin/makensis
Once this is all set up, you should be able to follow the building instructions above.