diff --git a/installation.php b/installation.php index d18e59c..0ffcbf0 100644 --- a/installation.php +++ b/installation.php @@ -1,159 +1,159 @@
Umbrello is part of KDE Software Compilation which means it comes with all GNU/Linux distributions. You will be able to install it using your normal software installation app (Muon, Software Centre, Yast etc) or command line package manager (yum, up2date, yast, zypper, apt-get, emerge etc).
The package will be called umbrello, some older distros will package it as kdesdk.
At least on fedora 20 it is also required to install the package oxygen-icon-theme, otherwise umbrello will not show any icons.
Umbrello is available from FreeBSD ports.
Umbrello is available on Linux as snap package.
Umbrello installer and portable packages for 32bit and 64 bit Windows are available at the KDE download mirror network.
Umbrello on Windows is also part of the KDE on Windows distribution installed with the KDE-Installer. Please note that the KDE on Windows distribution does not contain the latest umbrello releases.
Umbrello is available for Mac OS X on MacPorts.
The program has no platform specific code code, so should compile on any system with KDE.
Here are the packages required for building Umbrello:
sudo zypper in kio-devel libQt5PrintSupport-devel libqt5-qttools-devel \ libqt5-qtsvg-devel libQt5WebKitWidgets-devel kdoctools-devel \ kiconthemes-devel kdelibs4support-devel ktexteditor-devel
To install from source out of git, enter the following commands in a shell:
mkdir -p $HOME/src cd $HOME/src git clone git://anongit.kde.org/umbrello cd umbrello mkdir build cd build
for building with Qt5/KF5 run:
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$HOME/umbrello -DBUILD_KF5=1 -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ../
and on building for KDE4
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$HOME/umbrello -DBUILD_KF5=0 -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ../
Check the cmake output for missing build requirements and install them
make make install
running umbrello KF5 build in a KF5 environment requires to use the following commands.
$HOME/umbrello/bin/umbrello5 &
If someone wants to add a desktop entry:
[Desktop Entry] Categories=Application;Development; Comment[es_ES]=Umbrello - UML Modeller Comment=Umbrello - UML Modeller Exec=$HOME/umbrello/bin/umbrello5 GenericName[es_ES]=Umbrello GenericName=Umbrello Icon=/home/<USER HOME>/umbrello/share/icons/hicolor/scalable/apps/umbrello.svgz Name=Umbrello StartupNotify=true Terminal=false X-KDE-SubstituteUID=false
running umbrello KF5 build in a KDE4 environment requires to use the following commands.
eval `dbus-launch` kdeinit5 $HOME/umbrello/bin/umbrello &
Before running umbrello, you need set the KDEDIRS environment variable with:
export KDEDIRS=$HOME/umbrello:$KDEDIRS kbuildsycoca4
Run the following command from a shell:
$HOME/umbrello/bin/umbrello &
You may add the following commands to your .bashrc or similar login shell config file to have umbrello in the users system path:
export KDEDIRS=$HOME/umbrello:$KDEDIRS export PATH=$HOME/umbrello/bin:$PATH
With that you can run umbrello simply by typing:
umbrello
Note: There are reports that there may be no tool bar icons after installing umbrello/KDE4 in a non default location. If this happens to you, please install an official umbrello/KDE4 version with your package manager; then start you just created umbrello.
Umbrello could be build on windows from source with the emerge build system.
Umbrello could be cross compiled for Windows from source with the help of the openSUSE Build Service (OBS) provided by the package mingw32-umbrello for 32bit builds and mingw64-umbrello for 64bit builds.
-Windows installer and portable packages are provided with mingw32-umbrello-installer -and mingw64-umbrello-installer.
+Windows installer and portable packages are provided with mingw32-umbrello-installer +and mingw64-umbrello-installer.
The mentioned obs packages provide remote builds by default. Local builds are possible on any Linux system with the help of the OpenSuse command line build client and are useful to inspect and fix hidden issues happening with remote builds like non visible compiler or linker errors.