OBSOLETE
These instructions have been superseded by Building Rosegarden from Source.
OBSOLETE
These instructions show how to install a development version of Rosegarden to use along with the version installed through your distro. Many of these operations can be performed using graphical utilities, but it is much harder to describe point here click that across many different package managers and desktop environments, so these instructions assume you have some familiarity with the Linux command line. You will want to go into a terminal using xterm, Konsole, GNOME Terminal or the like to enter these commands.
These instructions were tested with Ubuntu 12.04, but the same general process should work on all .deb-based distros, with some minor variations.
First, install your distro's version of Rosegarden. It will be out of date, but this is a quick and easy way to pull in all the run-time dependencies that Rosegarden needs.
sudo apt-get install rosegarden subversion
Have a look to make sure you have source packages enabled in /etc/sources.list
Lines that start with #
are comments. Lines that start with deb
are for packages, and lines that start with deb-src
are for source packages. If you see lines starting with #deb-src
you should remove the #
to enable source repositories. You should be left with a number of entries that resemble this short sample:
deb http://us.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ precise multiverse deb-src http://us.archive.ubuntu.com/ubuntu/ precise multiverse
If you changed sources.list
then you'll need to do an update to pull in all the new information:
sudo apt-get update
Having done that, the next step is to use apt-get buid-dep
to install all the build dependencies. These rarely change, and the build dependencies for any version of Rosegarden within the last couple of years should be good enough to get the current development source up and running.
sudo apt-get build-dep rosegarden
Now you need to decide where you want to build Rosegarden. Michael always creates a ~/SVN
directory for this purpose, but you can put it anywhere you have write and execute permissions, and if you intend to use Eclipse there may be special naming considerations. I assume you have no better ideas but to follow my lead, so:
mkdir ~/SVN
With that done you will want to change to your build directory. I assume ~/SVN; please adjust to suit your local situation, and check out the source:
cd ~/SVN
If you have a SourceForge account and think you might want to contribute patches, check out the source using your SourceForge ID:
svn checkout --username=[YOUR USERID] https://svn.code.sf.net/p/rosegarden/code/trunk/rosegarden rosegarden-svn
Otherwise, just check out a read-only copy:
svn checkout svn://svn.code.sf.net/p/rosegarden/code/trunk/rosegarden rosegarden-svn
Once you've got the source to rosegarden-svn
under the directory of your choice, move into it, and create a build directory:
cd rosegarden-svn mkdir build
Now you need to run CMake:
cmake .. -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=[PREFIX] [-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug]
-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX sets the installation prefix, such as /usr If you set the -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug then you will compile a debug build instead of the default release build.
Finally, you are ready to compile:
make
Since you have a system version of Rosegarden installed, there is probably no need to install the one you just compiled. Run it out of the directory where you just compiled it. All the install target does is set up system icons and MIME types and so forth, and these change very infrequently.
Now that you've gotten the source bootstrapped and configured, the next step is to build and run.
make && ./rosegarden
If all went well, your computer bogged down pretty hard for 10-15 minutes, and then your shiny new development version of Rosegarden started up. You can help us test bug fixes and new features ahead of releases, and we are happy to have the help! (In the future, you can run with ./rosegarden
or you can modify an icon on your desktop to run ~/SVN/rosegarden-svn/rosegarden
instead of the usual /usr/bin/rosegarden
.)
If something went wrong, don't hesitate to send an email to Michael and ask for help. He will be glad to help you along, and will usually reply within three days.
Good luck!
You will need to keep your development source refreshed, and compile it from time to time. If a developer fixes a bug or adds a feature, you will need to update in order to obtain the newest code:
svn update make && ./rosegarden
Occasionally an update may break things. Let's just cross that bridge when we come to it.
Nothing here yet. I've been using Ubuntu since 2005 or so, and I'm very satisfied with it. Other people can write the instructions for other distros. Sorry.
(Note, due to high amounts of spamming, it is necessary to ask Michael for a wiki account. He will be happy to get one set up for you in a day or two.)