Compiling From Repository Sources To reduce bandwidth and needless updates, the source code repository does not contain automatically-generated files, even when these are normally present in the distribution tarballs. Therefore, to build GNU Wget from the sources in the repository, you'll need to have one or more of the following (note that gettext, OpenSSL, libidn and libiconv are not absolutely required): * [20]autoconf (currently, GNU Wget requires version 2.61). This is needed to generate the configure script from configure.in. This is not required when building from a tarball distribution; only when building from repository sources. * [21]automake (currently, GNU Wget requires version 1.10.1). This is needed for generating the Makefile.in templates that the configure script uses to generate the Makefiles. As with autoconf, it is not required when building from a tarball distribution; only when building from repository sources. * [22]flex is needed to generate the CSS-parsing code. * [23]Perl, if you wish to generate the wget(1) manpage, or run the tests in the tests/ sub directory. Tarball distributions include an already-generated wget.1 manual. The command "make check" runs the test suite written in perl. To execute all the tests you need [24]libwww-perl perl library. If "perl -MCPAN -e 'install Bundle::LWP'" fails then you most likely don't have cpan module installed. First download [25]CPAN and [26]install it. Then execute "perl -MCPAN -e 'install Bundle::LWP'". Now "make check" should pass most of the tests in the test suite. * [27]texinfo in order to generate Info, PostScript and/or HTML documentation. You don't need texinfo in order to generate the wget(1) manpage; however, note that the manpage does not include the full documentation. Tarball distributions include the already-generated documentation in these formats. * [28]gettext, if you wish to compile with NLS (Native Language Support), which is enabled by default. If you do not have gettext, you can compile without it by specifying --disable-nls to the ./configure script. This is true regardless of where you obtained the source you're building. NOTE: if you get errors about AM_GNU_GETTEXT and/or AM_INTL_SUBDIR, you probably have a buggy version of GNU m4. Upgrade to the latest version. You may also need to export M4=, to be sure that autoconf/automake use it instead of the old one. * [29]OpenSSL to handle encrypted web sessions. You almost certainly want this. It is not enough to have the library installed; you need to have the header files available to compile against as well. For GNU/Linux systems, this usually means installing a "developer" package for openssl (for example, [30]Debian systems require installation of the libssl-dev package). Alternatively, you can compile GNU Wget against the [31]GNUTLS library instead, by specifying --with-ssl=gnutls to the ./configure script; however, building against GNUTLS is currently experimental, and not officially supported. If you have OpenSSL and its development headers installed, but don't want to build Wget with it, specify --without-ssl to the ./configure script. * [32]libidn is required for IDN/IRI support (non-ASCII characters within what would otherwise be URLs). * [33]libiconv is required on non-GNU systems, for IDN/IRI support. On GNU systems, the functionality provided by libiconv is already present in the system libraries. * [34]git is used to fetch gnulib files trough the bootstrap.sh script. For those who might be confused as to what to do once they check out the source code, considering configure and Makefile do not yet exist at that point, a shell script called bootstrap.sh has been provided. After calling ./bootstrap.sh you're ready to build GNU Wget in the normal fashion, with ./configure and make. So, to sum up, after checking out the source code as described above, you may proceed as follows: 1. Change to the topmost GNU Wget directory: $ cd wget # assumes you've cloned a repository to "./wget" 2. Generate all the automatically-generated files required prior to configuring the package: $ ./bootstrap.sh 3. Configure the package and compile it: $ ./configure [some_parameters] $ make 4. Hack, compile, test, hack, compile, test... $ src/wget --version GNU Wget 1.12-devel (9cb2563197bc) Copyright © 2008,2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc. License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or later . This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted by law. Originally written by Hrvoje Niksic . * [35]Edit * [36]Comments * [37]Info * [38]Attachments * More Actions: [Raw Text................] Do * [39]MoinMoin Powered * [40]Python Powered * [41]GPL licensed * [42]Valid HTML 4.01 __________________________________________________________________ All content © 2007 Free Software Foundation. For terms of use, redistribution, and modification, please see the [43]WikiLicense page. References 20. http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/ 21. http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/ 22. http://flex.sourceforge.net/ 23. http://www.perl.org/ 24. http://search.cpan.org/dist/libwww-perl/lib/Bundle/LWP.pm 25. http://search.cpan.org/CPAN/authors/id/A/AN/ANDK/CPAN-1.9402.tar.gz 26. http://apthorpe.cynistar.net/code/configuring_cpan.html 27. http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/ 28. http://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/ 29. http://www.openssl.org/ 30. http://www.debian.org/ 31. http://www.gnu.org/software/gnutls/ 32. http://www.gnu.org/software/libidn/ 33. http://www.gnu.org/software/libiconv/ 34. http://git-scm.com/ 35. http://wget.addictivecode.org/CompilingRepoSources?action=edit&editor=text 36. http://wget.addictivecode.org/CompilingRepoSources 37. http://wget.addictivecode.org/CompilingRepoSources?action=info 38. http://wget.addictivecode.org/CompilingRepoSources?action=AttachFile 39. http://moinmo.in/ 40. http://moinmo.in/Python 41. http://moinmo.in/GPL 42. http://validator.w3.org/check?uri=referer 43. http://wget.addictivecode.org/WikiLicense