diff --git a/3rdparty/README.md b/3rdparty/README.md index dc983329c6..b747d7b77b 100644 --- a/3rdparty/README.md +++ b/3rdparty/README.md @@ -1,283 +1,289 @@ # CMake external projects to build krita's dependencies on Linux, Windows or OSX If you need to build Krita's dependencies for the following reasons: * you develop on Windows and aren't using build-tools/windows/build.cmd or KDE's craft * you develop on OSX and aren't using the scripts in krita/packaging/osx or Homebrew * you want to build a generic, distro-agnostic version of Krita for Linux and aren't using the scripts in packaging/linux/appimage * you develop on Linux, but some dependencies aren't available for your distribution and aren't using the scripts in packaging/linux/appimage and you know what you're doing, you can use the following guide to build the dependencies that Krita needs. Using the scripts mentioned above is strongly preferred because that's what the Krita team uses to build the binaries on the binary factory (https://binary-factory.kde.org/). If you develop on Linux and your distribution has all dependencies available, YOU DO NOT NEED THIS GUIDE AND YOU SHOULD STOP READING NOW Otherwise you risk major confusion. ## Prerequisites Note: on all operating systems the entire procedure is done in a terminal window. 1. git: https://git-scm.com/downloads. Make sure git is in your path 2. CMake 3.3.2 or later: https://cmake.org/download/. Make sure cmake is in your path. * CMake 3.9 does not build Krita properly at the moment, please use 3.8 or 3.10 instead. 3. Make sure you have a compiler: * Linux: gcc, minimum version 4.8 * OSX: clang, you need to install xcode for this * Windows: mingw-w64 7.3 (by mingw-builds): https://files.kde.org/krita/build/x86_64-7.3.0-release-posix-seh-rt_v5-rev0.7z * For threading, select posix. * For exceptions, select seh (64-bit) or dwarf (32-bit). * Install mingw to something like C:\mingw; the full path must not contain any spaces. * Make sure mingw's bin folder is in your path. It might be a good idea to create a batch file which sets the path and start cmd. * MSVC is *not* supported at the moment. 4. On Windows, you will also need a release of Python 3.9: https://www.python.org. Make sure to have that version of python.exe in your path. This version of Python will be used for two things: to configure Qt and to build the Python scripting module. Make sure that this version of Python comes first in your path. Do not set PYTHONHOME or PYTHONPATH. * Make sure that your Python will have the correct architecture for the version you are trying to build. If building for 32-bit target, you need the 32-bit release of Python. -5. On Windows, if you want to compile Qt with ANGLE support, you will need to install Windows 10 SDK and have the environment variable `WindowsSdkDir` set to it (typically `C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\10`) +5. On Windows, if you want to compile Qt with ANGLE support, you will need to install Windows 10 SDK and have 2 environment variables set: + * `WindowsSdkDir` (typically set to `C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\10`) + * `WindowsSdkVerBinPath` (typically set to `C:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\10\bin\10.0.18362.0`) where 10.0.18362.0 is the version of the Window 10 SDK. + + * Example: + set "WindowsSdkDir=%ProgramFiles(x86)%\Windows Kits\10" + set "WindowsSdkVerBinPath=%ProgramFiles(x86)%\Windows Kits\10\bin\10.0.18362.0" THIS IS ALSO NEEDED IF YOU USE THE build.cmd script. ## Setup your environment ## Prepare your directory layout 1. Make a toplevel build directory, say $HOME/dev or c:\dev. We'll refer to this directory as BUILDROOT. You can use a variable for this, on WINDOWS %BUILDROOT%, on OSX and Linux $BUILDROOT. You will have to replace a bare BUILDROOT with $BUILDROOT or %BUILDROOT% whenever you copy and paste a command, depending on your operating system. 2. Checkout krita in BUILDROOT ``` cd BUILDROOT git clone git://anongit.kde.org/krita.git ``` 3. Create the build directory ``` mkdir BUILDROOT/b ``` 4. Create the downloads directory ``` mkdir BUILDROOT/d ``` 5. Create the install directory ``` mkdir BUILDROOT/i ``` ## Prepare the externals build 1. Enter the BUILDROOT/b directory 2. Run cmake: * Linux: ``` export PATH=$BUILDROOT/i/bin:$PATH export PYTHONHOME=$BUILDROOT/i (only if you want to build your own python) cmake ../krita/3rdparty \ -DINSTALL_ROOT=$BUILDROOT/i \ -DEXTERNALS_DOWNLOAD_DIR=$BUILDROOT/d \ -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=BUILDROOT/i ``` * OSX: ``` export PATH=$BUILDROOT/i/bin:$PATH export PYTHONHOME=$BUILDROOT/i (only if you want to build your own python) cmake ../krita/3rdparty/ \ -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$BUILDROOT/i \ -DEXTERNALS_DOWNLOAD_DIR=$BUILDROOT/d \ -DINSTALL_ROOT=$BUILDROOT/i ``` * Windows 32-bit / 64-bit: Note that the cmake command needs to point to your BUILDROOT like /dev/d, not c:\dev\d. ``` set PATH=%BUILDROOT%\i\bin\;%BUILDROOT%\i\lib;%PATH% cmake ..\krita\3rdparty -DEXTERNALS_DOWNLOAD_DIR=/dev/d -DINSTALL_ROOT=/dev/i -G "MinGW Makefiles" ``` - If you want to build Qt and some other dependencies with parallel jobs, add `-DSUBMAKE_JOBS=` to this cmake command where is the number of jobs to run (if your PC has 4 CPU cores, you might want to set it to 5). For other jobs, you might need to manually add a -- -j N option, where N is the number of jobs. - If you don't have Windows 10 SDK and don't want to build Qt with ANGLE, add `-DQT_ENABLE_DYNAMIC_OPENGL=OFF` to the CMake command line args. 3. Build the packages: On Windows: ``` cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_patch cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_png2ico ``` On OSX and Windows: ``` cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_gettext cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_openssl ``` On all operating systems: ``` cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_qt cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_zlib cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_boost Note about boost: check if the headers are installed into i/include/boost, but not into i/include/boost-1.61/boost cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_eigen3 cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_exiv2 cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_fftw3 cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_ilmbase cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_jpeg cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_lcms2 cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_ocio cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_openexr ``` OSX Note: You need to first build openexr; that will fail; then you need to set the rpath for the two utilities correctly, then try to build openexr again. ``` install_name_tool -add_rpath $BUILD_ROOT/i/lib $BUILD_ROOT/b/ext_openexr/ext_openexr-prefix/src/ext_openexr-build/IlmImf/./b44ExpLogTable install_name_tool -add_rpath $BUILD_ROOT/i/lib $BUILD_ROOT/b/ext_openexr/ext_openexr-prefix/src/ext_openexr-build/IlmImf/./dwaLookups ``` On All operating systems ``` cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_png cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_tiff cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_gsl cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_vc cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_libraw cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_giflib cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_openjpeg cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_quazip ``` On Linux (if you want to build your own SIP and PyQt instead of the system one) ``` cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_sip cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_pyqt ``` On Windows ``` cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_freetype cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_poppler ``` On Linux ``` cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_kcrash ``` On Windows (if you want to include DrMingw for dumping backtrace on crash) ``` cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_drmingw ``` On Windows (if you want to include Python scripting) ``` cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_python cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_sip cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_pyqt ``` Troubleshooting: if you have problems with 'install' step of ext_sip or ext_pyqt, make sure you install it in single thread only (`mingw32-make -j1 install`). Otherwise, a race condition may happen in the post-install script and metadata generation will be started before actual libraries are installed. On Windows and Linux (if you want to include gmic-qt) ``` cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_gmic ``` Linux Note: poppler should be buildable on Linux as well with a home-built freetype and fontconfig, but I don't know how to make fontconfig find freetype, and on Linux, fontconfig is needed for poppler. Poppler is needed for PDF import. OSX Note: In order to build fontconfig on macOS, you need to have pkg-config installed. You probably need homebrew for that... See http://macappstore.org/pkg-config/ . archives from: files.kde.org/krita/build/dependencies: On Windows and OSX ``` cmake --build . --config RelWithDebInfo --target ext_kwindowsystem ``` ## Build Krita 1. Make a krita build directory: mkdir BUILDROOT/build 2. Enter the BUILDROOT/build 3. Configure the build: On Windows ``` cmake ..\krita -G "MinGW Makefiles" -DBoost_DEBUG=OFF -DBOOST_INCLUDEDIR=c:\dev\i\include -DBOOST_DEBUG=ON -DBOOST_ROOT=c:\dev\i -DBOOST_LIBRARYDIR=c:\dev\i\lib -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=c:\dev\i -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=c:\dev\i -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo -DBUILD_TESTING=OFF -DKDE4_BUILD_TESTS=OFF -DHAVE_MEMORY_LEAK_TRACKER=OFF -Wno-dev -DDEFINE_NO_DEPRECATED=1 ``` On Linux ``` cmake ../krita -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=BUILDROOT/i -DDEFINE_NO_DEPRECATED=1 -DBUILD_TESTING=OFF -DKDE4_BUILD_TESTS=OFF -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo # Troubleshooting: if you built your own SIP and CMake fails to find it, please set # the following environment variable to the SIP installation directory: export PYTHONPATH=$BUILDROOT/i/sip/ # If you also have KIO installed in the system, don't forget to disable it by bassing to cmake: # cmake -DCMAKE_DISABLE_FIND_PACKAGE_KF5KIO=true . ``` On OSX ``` cmake ../krita -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$BUILDROOT/i -DDEFINE_NO_DEPRECATED=1 -DBUILD_TESTING=OFF -DKDE4_BUILD_TESTS=OFF -DBUNDLE_INSTALL_DIR=$BUILDROOT/i/bin -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo ``` 4. Run the build: On Linux and OSX ``` make make install ``` On Windows (replace 4 with the number of jobs to run in parallel) ``` cmake --build . --target install -- -j4 ``` 6. Run krita: On Linux ``` BUILDROOT/i/bin/krita ``` On Windows ``` BUILDROOT\i\bin\krita.exe ``` On OSX ``` BUILDROOT/i/bin/krita.app/Contents/MacOS/krita ``` ## Packaging a Windows Build If you want to create a stripped down version of Krita to distribute, after building everything just run the packaging/windows/package-complete.cmd script. That script will copy the necessary files into the specified folder and leave out developer related files. After the script runs there will be two new ZIP files that contain a small portable version of Krita and a separate portable debug version.