Help:Installing
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DanaJansens (Talk | contribs) m (Reverted edits by Dzeksonniki489 (Talk); changed back to last version by Benedictus) |
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− | If you do ''not'' want to install to <code>/usr</code>, then you | + | If you do ''not'' want to install to <code>/usr</code>, then you should use <code>./configure --prefix=<whatever you want> --sysconfdir=/etc --datarootdir=/usr/share</code>. If you don't do this, the Openbox log in options will not be available, because they need to be installed to <code>/usr/share/xsessions</code>. |
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If the configure command fails and the reason is not obvious, you should look in the generated <code>config.log</code> file to discover the cause of the problem. | If the configure command fails and the reason is not obvious, you should look in the generated <code>config.log</code> file to discover the cause of the problem. | ||
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<code><pre> | <code><pre> | ||
# yum install automake autoconf glib2-devel pango-devel startup-notification-devel libXcursor-devel libXfixes-devel libSM-devel libxml2-devel gcc-c++.i386 gcc.i386 | # yum install automake autoconf glib2-devel pango-devel startup-notification-devel libXcursor-devel libXfixes-devel libSM-devel libxml2-devel gcc-c++.i386 gcc.i386 | ||
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# ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc | # ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc | ||
Revision as of 18:39, 30 September 2011
Contents |
Dependencies
Compiling Openbox should be a relatively painless experience. You will need the following packages:
- C compiler (such as GCC)
- Libc library and headers (development package)
- Xlib library and headers (development package)
- Xext and Xrandr library and headers (development package) - optional but recommended
- Glib-2 library and headers (development package)
- LibXML-2 library and headers (development package)
- Pango library and headers (development package)
- Startup-notification library and headers (development package) - optional but recommended
- XCursor library and headers (development package) - optional but recommended
- Pkg-config
These should all be available through your distribution.
Dependencies in Ubuntu and Debian
In Ubuntu and Debian, install the following packages:
- build-essential
- pkg-config
- libpango1.0-dev
- libglib2.0-dev
- libxml2-dev
- libxcursor-dev
- libstartup-notification0-dev
- xlibs-dev
- libxext-dev
- x11proto-randr-dev
Note: 'xlibs-dev' is no longer available in in Ubuntu 8.04 LTS 'Hardy' repositories, but 'xlibs-static-dev' is.
If you want to hook in the Debian menu, you'll also want:
- menu
- menu-xdg
Dependencies in Fedora
In Fedora Core 6 or Fedora 7, install the following packages:
- gcc
- autoconf
- automake
- glib2-devel
- pango-devel
- startup-notification-devel
- libXcursor-devel
- libXfixes-devel
- libSM-devel
- libxml2-devel
Building and installing the program
Once you have the above dependancies installed, you are ready to build Openbox. Untar the Openbox archive and from inside the source tree, run:
% ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc
...configure detects the build evironment...
% make
...openbox builds...
% sudo make install
...openbox installs...
If you do not want to install to /usr
, then you should use ./configure --prefix=<whatever you want> --sysconfdir=/etc --datarootdir=/usr/share
. If you don't do this, the Openbox log in options will not be available, because they need to be installed to /usr/share/xsessions
.
If the configure command fails and the reason is not obvious, you should look in the generated config.log
file to discover the cause of the problem.
For 64-bit distributions
When building Openbox on the 64-bit versions of Debian, Ubuntu or Fedora, use:
% ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --libdir=/usr/lib64
% make
% sudo make install
For CentOS 5.3
# yum install automake autoconf glib2-devel pango-devel startup-notification-devel libXcursor-devel libXfixes-devel libSM-devel libxml2-devel gcc-c++.i386 gcc.i386
# ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc
# make
# make install