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elinks/INSTALL
Petr Baudis 0f6d4310ad Initial commit of the HEAD branch of the ELinks CVS repository, as of
Thu Sep 15 15:57:07 CEST 2005. The previous history can be added to this
by grafting.
2005-09-15 15:58:31 +02:00

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Elinks installation guidelines
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Quick guide for the impatient:
./configure && make && make install
Check out the bottom of this file if you're upgrading from Links or an older
ELinks! And be sure to look at doc/ecmascript.txt if you want ECMAScript
(that's JavaScript) support.
##########
In order to check out the latest tree from CVS:
$ export CVSROOT=check_file_SITES_for_value_of_this
$ cvs login
(empty password)
$ cvs -z3 co elinks
$ cd elinks
...
To update your existing tree to the latest CVS version, do:
$ cvs -z3 update -dP
If you downloaded a nightly snapshot, it already contains CVS/ directories
etc. Thus, you should be able to update your tree with the above command as if
you had previously done a full cvs checkout.
Note that if you obtained the sources directly from CVS, you NEED to run
./autogen.sh! (It should be enough to do it once, automake should be smart
enough to rerun itself when needed - however, if you have build problems, try
running this first.) Also, you obviously need automake and autoconf installed
on your system (note that autoconf-2.13 a automake-1.4p5 are supported, newer
ones may cause problems thanks to the auto* developers who don't know how to
maintain backwards compatibility). Otherwise, you have to use the nightly CVS
snapshot - you don't need to do this there.
##########
If you want to compile elinks, first check the directory named contrib/, it
may contain patches that are of use to you. If you're interested in any of
them, try to apply them by doing (for each one):
$ patch -p0 < contrib/that-patch
They may not apply - I don't update patches in contrib/ regularly - if you
want, feel free to go ahead and update the patch for the current tree and send
me the newer version.
Usually, even after strip, the ELinks binary can grow a lot these days; I plan
on spawning various external files optionally, containing boring stuff like
various translations etc; later, even DSO modules may come, etc. But even
nowadays, you can reduce the resulting binary size by throwing out stuff you
don't like. First, if you want better performance and a smaller binary, don't
compile it with debug. It won't hurt if you do, though, and ELinks will tell
you about any memory leaks, incorrect memory manipulation etc, which may be
helpful to us if you report it. Next, disable any optional features you are not
going to use, they can make the resulting binary smaller (although it'll probably
have no non-marginal performance impact) - especially go through the
features.conf file in the project root directory. Also, you may try to override
the build system to build a dynamically linked binary, which can be a lot
smaller as well. Lastly, you can go to the Unicode/ and intl/ directories, then
edit index.txt and remove any codepages or translations you don't like;
especially for translations, it can significantly reduce the resulting binary
size as well.
!BEWARE! If you _distribute_ a binary of ELinks with OpenSSL linked to it,
and the OpenSSL library is not part of your base system, you are VIOLATING THE
GPL (although I believe that for this absurd case no ELinks copyright holder
will sue you, and it's not a problem for the OpenSSL people as well, as they
have explicitly told me). So, people who are making ELinks binaries for systems
with no OpenSSL in the base system and who decided to link OpenSSL against the
ELinks binary may wish NOT to publish or distribute such a binary, as it's
breaking GPL 2(b), if they like to have everything legally perfect (like Debian
people ;). As a semi-solution to this for those people, GNUTLS support was
introduced; if you want to distribute ELinks binaries with HTTPS support,
compile ELinks with the --with-gnutls configure option (assuming that you have
GNUTLS 0.5.0 or later [tested with 0.5.4] installed). However, as GNUTLS is not
yet 100% stable and its support in ELinks is not so well tested yet, it's
recommended for users to give a strong preference to OpenSSL whenever possible.
Good luck!
The basic compilation looks like:
Unix - just doing:
$ ./configure
$ make
should be enough. However, in some FreeBSD 3 distributions you have to
set CFLAGS=-aout before running ./configure. Also, you may want to
adjust some compile-time options through ./configure - do
./configure --help and it'll print out a list of them. You can more
finely control what's going to be included in the binary in the
features.conf file, and some really detailed tuning can be performed in
the src/setup.h.
Also, a nice idea is to compile ELinks outside of the source tree.
Make another directory and run path_to_source_tree/configure from it.
Typically, it looks like:
$ mkdir ../elinks-build
$ cd ../elinks-build
$ ../elinks/configure
$ make
OS/2 - you can use ./configure.
The only supported compiler is EMX, you probably won't be able to
compile it with anything else.
Configure under OS/2 needs to know paths to gcc, make and bash.
Set (for example):
SET HOSTTYPE=i586
SET MACHTYPE=i586-pc-os2
SET CONFIG_SHELL=d:/prg/gnu/bin/bash.exe
SET CC=d:/prg/emx/bin/gcc.exe
SET MAKE=d:/prg/emx/bin/make.exe
SET EMXOPT=-h100
Dos, Windows - port it by yourself.
##########
Ok, now let's install it:
Unix - # make install
OS/2 -
Copy file links.exe somewhere to your path or create CMD file that runs
links.
WARNING: EMX has a nasty limit on open files. Links will work badly or
won't work with the default settings. Set the variable EMXOPT=-h100
before you run links.
Now, check the contrib/ directory again. There may be some useful config
file examples there, along with a few support tools and some Lua scripts - you
probably want them ;) so just copy the hooks.lua to ~/.elinks, and edit the
configuration part - it adds various functionality to ELinks, like
decompression of gzipped files or user-defined protocols.
##########
If you're upgrading from Links or older ELinks (0.4pre7 or older), you will
notice that several things have changed. First, the binary name is elinks, not
links, now; however, the basic usage is almost the same and it still looks like
the old (E)Links, so you probably want to make a links symlink pointing to
elinks.
Then, note that configuration files were moved from /etc to /etc/elinks and
from ~/.links to ~/.elinks, because the name and format of parts of them were
changed:
links.cfg became elinks.conf and you need to convert it with
contrib/conv/conf-links2elinks.pl; html.cfg was merged into elinks.conf
bookmarks are still bookmarks, but you need to convert it with
old_to_new_bookmarks.sh.
links.his became gotohist and the format is the same.
history became globhist and the format is the same.
cookies are still cookies, but you need to convert it with tr " " "\t"
##########
$Id: INSTALL,v 1.29 2004/09/22 16:17:23 pasky Exp $
vim: textwidth=80