Bash Self-Extracting Script

本文介绍如何创建自解压Bash脚本,包括构建脚本、压缩脚本和构建脚本三个部分。通过具体步骤和示例,读者可以学会如何自动化安装文件。

In this post I'll show you how to create a self extracting bash script to automate the installation of files on your system. This script requires coreutils (for cat, tail), awk, gzip, tar and bash. There are 3 parts to the Base Self-Extracting Script
  • The Payload
  • The Decompression Script
  • The Builder Script
Lets begin by creating our working directory and all the script files we will need.
jeff:~$ mkdir -vp installer/payload
mkdir: created directory `installer'
mkdir: created directory `installer/payload'
jeff:~$ cd installer/
jeff:~/installer$
The Payload The payload directory will contain....just that, the payload of your installer. This is the location where you'll put all your tar files, scripts, binaries, etc that you'll want installed onto the new system. For this example I have a tar file containing some text files that I'll want to install into a folder that I create into my home directory. Here is the listing of the tar file.
jeff:~$ tar tvf files.tar
-rw-r--r-- jeff/jeff        40 2007-12-06 07:53 ./File1.txt
-rw-r--r-- jeff/jeff        92 2007-12-06 07:55 ./File2.txt
jeff:~$
Now we must create the installation script that will handle the payload. This script contains any actions that you'd wish to be performed on the installation system, make directories, uncompress files, run system commands, etc. For the example I will create a directory and untar the files into it.
#!/bin/bash
echo "Running Installer"
mkdir $HOME/files
tar ./files.tar -C $HOME/files
Now that we have filled our payload directory with all the files we'd like to install and created the installation script to the the files in their correct location, our directory structure should look like this:
jeff:~$ find installer/
installer/
installer/payload
installer/payload/installer
installer/payload/files.tar
jeff:~$
The Decompression Script The Decompression Script does most of the work. The compressed archive of your payload directory will actually be appended onto this script. When ran, the script will remove the archive, decompress it and execute the install script we had created in the previous section.
#!/bin/bash
echo ""
echo "Self Extracting Installer"
echo ""

export TMPDIR=`mktemp -d /tmp/selfextract.XXXXXX`

ARCHIVE=`awk '/^__ARCHIVE_BELOW__/ {print NR + 1; exit 0; }' $0`

tail -n+$ARCHIVE $0 | tar xzv -C $TMPDIR

CDIR=`pwd`
cd $TMPDIR
./installer

cd $CDIR
rm -rf $TMPDIR

exit 0

__ARCHIVE_BELOW__
Ok, now lets go through this script step by step. After the bit of printout at the begining, the first real line of work creates a temporary directory for us to decompress our payload into initially before we install it.
 export TMPDIR=`mktemp -d /tmp/selfextrac.XXXXXX` 
The
-d
flag tells mktemp to create a directory rather than a file. The parameter at the end,
/tmp/selfextract.XXXXXX
is a template of the name of the directory we are going to create. The X's are replaced with random characters to generate a random name, just incase we happen to be installing two things at the same time. The next line in the script,
ARCHIVE=`awk '/^__ARCHIVE_BELOW__/ {print NR + 1; exit 0; }' $0`
find the line number where the archive starts in the script. The first parameter given to awk
/^__ARCHIVE_BELOW__/
tells it to search for a regular expression "A line starting with the characters '__ARCHIVE_BELOW__'". Each line is read and until the regular expression is satisfied. The next parameter
{print NR + 1; exit 0; }
tells awk to print out the number of records (number of lines read) plus 1, then quit. The third parameter
$0
is the first argument when running this script, which happens to be the script's name ($0 = ./decompress). We will now seperate the archive from the script and decompress it into the temporary directory we have created.
tail -n+$ARCHIVE $0 | tar xzv -C $TMPDIR
tail prints out the end of a file. The parameter
-n+$ARCHIVE
tells tail to start at line number we just read in the previous command, and print til the end of the file.
$0
again is the name of this script file. This output is then piped to tar where it is
z
ungzipped, and
x
unarchived into
-C $TMPDIR
the temporary directory. The next section, we remember our current directory,
CDIR=`pwd`
and step into the temporary directory
cd $TMPDIR
. From here we run the script we created in the Payload section. After the script has been executed, we revert back to our previous directory
cd $CDIR
and remove the temporary directory
rm -rf $TMPDIR
The last two lines in this script are very important. First the line
exit 0
causes the script to stop executing. If we forget this line BASH would try to execute the binary archive attached at the bottom and would cause problems. The very last line
__ARCHIVE_BELOW__
tells awk that the binary archive starts on the next line. Make sure that this is the last line, no extra empty lines below this one. Now that we have finished creating the Decompression script our directory should looke like this:
jeff:~$ find installer/
installer/
installer/build
installer/payload
installer/payload/installer
installer/payload/files.tar
installer/decompress
jeff:~$
The Builder Script The last section of this installer is the script that builds the self-extracting script. This script compresses the payload and then adds the decompresion script to the archive.
#!/bin/bash
cd payload
tar cf ../payload.tar ./*
cd ..

if [ -e "payload.tar" ]; then
    gzip payload.tar

    if [ -e "payload.tar.gz" ]; then
        cat decompress payload.tar.gz > selfextract.bsx
    else
        echo "payload.tar.gz does not exist"
        exit 1
    fi
else
    echo "payload.tar does not exist"
    exit 1
fi

echo "selfextract.bsx created"
exit 0
This script archives the payload directory
tar cf ../payload.tar ./*
and compresses it using gzip
gzip payload.tar
. Next the script concatenates the decompress script with the compressed payload
cat decompress payload.tar.gz > selfextract.bsx
. With all the scripts completed our directory should look like this:
jeff:~$ find installer/
installer/
installer/build
installer/payload
installer/payload/installer
installer/payload/files.tar
installer/decompress
jeff:~$
Test it out Now that we have created everything, we can run the scripts and test it all out. Firstly run the build script. Your output should look as follows:
jeff:~/installer$ ./build
selfextract.bsx created
jeff:~/installer$ ls
build  decompress  payload  payload.tar.gz  selfextract.bsx
jeff:~/installer$
Now we have our bash script with the archive attached (selfextract.bsx). Run this script and you should see the following output:
jeff:~/installer$ ./selfextract.bsx

Self Extracting Installer

./files.tar
./installer
Running Installer
./File1.txt
./File2.txt
jeff:~/installer$ find /home/jeff/files
/home/jeff/files
/home/jeff/files/File1.txt
/home/jeff/files/File2.txt
jeff:~/installer$
If you would like the installer to install something else, just place the files in the payload directory and modify the installer script to perform the proper action.
______________________

Software Engineer in Marshalltown, IA BB PIN: 21C3344D www.biffengineering.com

 

http://hi.baidu.com/vzomik/blog/item/8ee7fa85128d513367096ebe.html

有趣的dotRUN自解压脚本
2010年06月16日 星期三 20:07
不知道有没有人发现,用 Windows 下载 Linux 的 nVidia 显卡驱动时,会打开一个网页,上半部分都是纯文本,
而下半部分是乱码??呵呵,其实呀,这是一个 Shell 脚本而已!不信的话可以用 GVim 打开那个 .run 文件。

现在我们来学习做一个 .run 文件,当然,没有那个显卡驱动那么夸张,只是一个很简单的自解压脚本,准备的文件:
.ZiJieYa-dir
|-- this-is-directory
|   |-- and-this-is-dir-too
|   |   `-- html-document.html
|   |-- this-is-7z-file.7z
|   `-- this-is-txt-file
|-- this-is-odt-word-file.odt
`-- this-is-py-script.py

把上面的 ZiJieYa-dir 压缩成 archive.tar.gz 文件,然后再来写一个脚本,脚本内容如下:
#!/bin/sh
#Project self-extracting.run by vzomik
mkdir ./self-extracting
tail -n +7 $0 | tar zxvf - -C ./self-extracting && ls ./self-extracting
exit
__ARCHIVE__FILE__BELOW__

很容易明白,不是么?上面的脚本就是把 $0 的第7行及以下的内容用管道传送给 tar 解压的意思,$0 就是自身。

好!再来将压缩包文件 archive.tar.gz 与脚本文件 self-extracting.run 合并:
cat archive.tar.gz >>self-extracting.run

呵呵,这样的话,这个有趣的dotRUN自解压脚本就做成了,试试在 Bash 中运行:
chmod +x self-extracting.run
./self-extracting.run

就可以在当前目录发现 self-extracting 目录,里面乖乖的躺着 archive.tar.gz 解压后的文件!

vae@vae-ASUS-TUF-Gaming-A15-FA507UU-FA507UU:~/toppra$ python3 setup.py install --user running install running bdist_egg running egg_info writing toppra.egg-info/PKG-INFO writing dependency_links to toppra.egg-info/dependency_links.txt writing requirements to toppra.egg-info/requires.txt writing top-level names to toppra.egg-info/top_level.txt reading manifest file 'toppra.egg-info/SOURCES.txt' writing manifest file 'toppra.egg-info/SOURCES.txt' installing library code to build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg running install_lib running build_py running build_ext skipping 'toppra/_CythonUtils.c' Cython extension (up-to-date) creating build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg creating build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra copying build/lib.linux-x86_64-3.8/toppra/utils.py -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra copying build/lib.linux-x86_64-3.8/toppra/interpolator.py -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra copying build/lib.linux-x86_64-3.8/toppra/TOPP.py -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra copying build/lib.linux-x86_64-3.8/toppra/postprocess.py -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra copying build/lib.linux-x86_64-3.8/toppra/__init__.py -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra copying build/lib.linux-x86_64-3.8/toppra/constraints.py -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra copying build/lib.linux-x86_64-3.8/toppra/_CythonUtils.cpython-38-x86_64-linux-gnu.so -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra byte-compiling build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra/utils.py to utils.cpython-38.pyc byte-compiling build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra/interpolator.py to interpolator.cpython-38.pyc byte-compiling build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra/TOPP.py to TOPP.cpython-38.pyc byte-compiling build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra/postprocess.py to postprocess.cpython-38.pyc byte-compiling build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra/__init__.py to __init__.cpython-38.pyc byte-compiling build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra/constraints.py to constraints.cpython-38.pyc creating stub loader for toppra/_CythonUtils.cpython-38-x86_64-linux-gnu.so byte-compiling build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/toppra/_CythonUtils.py to _CythonUtils.cpython-38.pyc creating build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/EGG-INFO copying toppra.egg-info/PKG-INFO -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/EGG-INFO copying toppra.egg-info/SOURCES.txt -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/EGG-INFO copying toppra.egg-info/dependency_links.txt -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/EGG-INFO copying toppra.egg-info/not-zip-safe -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/EGG-INFO copying toppra.egg-info/requires.txt -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/EGG-INFO copying toppra.egg-info/top_level.txt -> build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/EGG-INFO writing build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg/EGG-INFO/native_libs.txt creating 'dist/toppra-0.1-py3.8-linux-x86_64.egg' and adding 'build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg' to it removing 'build/bdist.linux-x86_64/egg' (and everything under it) Processing toppra-0.1-py3.8-linux-x86_64.egg removing '/home/vae/.local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/toppra-0.1-py3.8-linux-x86_64.egg' (and everything under it) creating /home/vae/.local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/toppra-0.1-py3.8-linux-x86_64.egg Extracting toppra-0.1-py3.8-linux-x86_64.egg to /home/vae/.local/lib/python3.8/site-packages toppra 0.1 is already the active version in easy-install.pth Installed /home/vae/.local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/toppra-0.1-py3.8-linux-x86_64.egg Processing dependencies for toppra==0.1 Searching for enum Reading https://pypi.org/simple/enum/ Downloading https://files.pythonhosted.org/packages/02/a0/32e1d5a21b703f600183e205aafc6773577e16429af5ad3c3f9b956b07ca/enum-0.4.7.tar.gz#sha256=8c7cf3587eda51008bcc1eed99ea2c331ccd265c231dbaa95ec5258d3dc03100 Best match: enum 0.4.7 Processing enum-0.4.7.tar.gz Writing /tmp/easy_install-20appbac/enum-0.4.7/setup.cfg Running enum-0.4.7/setup.py -q bdist_egg --dist-dir /tmp/easy_install-20appbac/enum-0.4.7/egg-dist-tmp-htsibeqh Traceback (most recent call last): File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 154, in save_modules yield saved File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 195, in setup_context yield File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 250, in run_setup _execfile(setup_script, ns) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 45, in _execfile exec(code, globals, locals) File "/tmp/easy_install-20appbac/enum-0.4.7/setup.py", line 24, in <module> AttributeError: module 'enum' has no attribute '__version__' During handling of the above exception, another exception occurred: Traceback (most recent call last): File "setup.py", line 28, in <module> setup(install_requires=REQUIRES, File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/__init__.py", line 144, in setup return distutils.core.setup(**attrs) File "/usr/lib/python3.8/distutils/core.py", line 148, in setup dist.run_commands() File "/usr/lib/python3.8/distutils/dist.py", line 966, in run_commands self.run_command(cmd) File "/usr/lib/python3.8/distutils/dist.py", line 985, in run_command cmd_obj.run() File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/command/install.py", line 67, in run self.do_egg_install() File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/command/install.py", line 117, in do_egg_install cmd.run(show_deprecation=False) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/command/easy_install.py", line 450, in run self.easy_install(spec, not self.no_deps) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/command/easy_install.py", line 693, in easy_install return self.install_item(None, spec, tmpdir, deps, True) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/command/easy_install.py", line 740, in install_item self.process_distribution(spec, dist, deps) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/command/easy_install.py", line 784, in process_distribution distros = WorkingSet([]).resolve( File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/pkg_resources/__init__.py", line 781, in resolve dist = best[req.key] = env.best_match( File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/pkg_resources/__init__.py", line 1066, in best_match return self.obtain(req, installer) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/pkg_resources/__init__.py", line 1078, in obtain return installer(requirement) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/command/easy_install.py", line 712, in easy_install return self.install_item(spec, dist.location, tmpdir, deps) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/command/easy_install.py", line 738, in install_item dists = self.install_eggs(spec, download, tmpdir) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/command/easy_install.py", line 923, in install_eggs return self.build_and_install(setup_script, setup_base) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/command/easy_install.py", line 1191, in build_and_install self.run_setup(setup_script, setup_base, args) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/command/easy_install.py", line 1177, in run_setup run_setup(setup_script, args) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 253, in run_setup raise File "/usr/lib/python3.8/contextlib.py", line 131, in __exit__ self.gen.throw(type, value, traceback) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 195, in setup_context yield File "/usr/lib/python3.8/contextlib.py", line 131, in __exit__ self.gen.throw(type, value, traceback) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 166, in save_modules saved_exc.resume() File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 141, in resume six.reraise(type, exc, self._tb) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/_vendor/six.py", line 685, in reraise raise value.with_traceback(tb) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 154, in save_modules yield saved File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 195, in setup_context yield File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 250, in run_setup _execfile(setup_script, ns) File "/usr/lib/python3/dist-packages/setuptools/sandbox.py", line 45, in _execfile exec(code, globals, locals) File "/tmp/easy_install-20appbac/enum-0.4.7/setup.py", line 24, in <module> AttributeError: module 'enum' has no attribute '__version__'
07-10
2025-08-22 15:44:56 [INFO ] === STARTING QIK v1.0.167.0, PID 32724 =========================================================== 2025-08-22 15:44:56 [INFO ] This is a Self-extractable v2 package 2025-08-22 15:44:56 [INFO ] Command Line: C:\Users\lqadmin\Downloads\Qualcomm_Software_Center.1.17.1.Windows-x86.exe 2025-08-22 15:44:56 [INFO ] Exception occurred while Loading the LimeClient.dll, Please ignore if it is on a new machine 2025-08-22 15:44:56 [INFO ] Copying lime lib to app location: $C:\Users\lqadmin\Downloads\Qualcomm_Software_Center.1.17.1.Windows-x86.exe 2025-08-22 15:44:56 [INFO ] srcLimeLibLocation: C:\Program Files (x86)\Qualcomm\QIKTool\1.0.81.4\Lib\LimeClient.dll, destLimeLibLocation: C:\Users\lqadmin\Downloads\Lib\LimeClient.dll 2025-08-22 15:44:56 [INFO ] Copying lime lib to app location: $C:\Users\lqadmin\Downloads\Qualcomm_Software_Center.1.17.1.Windows-x86.exe 2025-08-22 15:44:56 [ERROR ] Cannot find dll to copy for installing sfx - LimeWebClient.dll at C:\Users\lqadmin\Downloads\Qualcomm_Software_Center.1.17.1.Windows-x86.exe 2025-08-22 15:44:56 [INFO ] Loading Package: C:\ProgramData\Qualcomm\QIK\Packages\Qualcomm_Software_Center.1.17.1.Windows-x86.exe 2025-08-22 15:44:56 [INFO ] Checking QIK package 2025-08-22 15:44:57 [INFO ] Processing package data 2025-08-22 15:44:57 [INFO ] Extracting setup resource files 2025-08-22 15:44:57 [INFO ] Extracting resource file [2]: C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\QIKCache\QIK_vrfpfhop.05y\EULA.txt 2025-08-22 15:44:57 [INFO ] Extracting resource file [3]: C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\QIKCache\QIK_vrfpfhop.05y\QPM-CLI.1.0.124.0.Windows-x86.exe 2025-08-22 15:44:57 [INFO ] Extracting resource file [137]: C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\QIKCache\QIK_vrfpfhop.05y\DownloadElectron.ps1 2025-08-22 15:44:57 [INFO ] Extracting resource file [138]: C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\QIKCache\QIK_vrfpfhop.05y\RenameLauncherDataFolder.ps1 2025-08-22 15:44:57 [INFO ] Extracting resource file [139]: C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\QIKCache\QIK_vrfpfhop.05y\CopyElectronLibs.ps1 2025-08-22 15:44:57 [INFO ] Extracting resource file [140]: C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\QIKCache\QIK_vrfpfhop.05y\APIGEE.crt 2025-08-22 15:44:57 [INFO ] 6 files extracted 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] Target root is C:\Program Files (x86)\Qualcomm\Qualcomm_Software_Center\1.17.1.0 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] [Progress] Prepare -1% [Info] : Step 1 of 9: Fetching user catalog 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] Init new session manager 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] Exception occurred while Loading the LimeWebClient.dll, Please ignore if it is on a new machine 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] SetCallback(): False 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] CheckCredentials 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [DEBUG ] Unable to load user credentials 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [ERROR ] No credentials found, user must login 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] QPM CheckLogin - user: , result: Failed 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [ERROR ] Unable to download catalog 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] Installing package: C:\ProgramData\Qualcomm\QIK\Packages\Qualcomm_Software_Center.1.17.1.Windows-x86.exe 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] byforce: False 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] [Progress] Prepare -1% [Info] : Step 2 of 9: Checking environment 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [DEBUG ] Skipping license check before installation 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] Checking environment 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] [Progress] Prepare -1% [Info] : Step 3 of 9: Checking previous version 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] [Progress] Download -1% [Info] : Step 4 of 9: Checking dependencies 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] Checking for framework dependencies 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [WARNING ] Unable to find atleast one installed VC Runtime 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] Need Installation is True, framework name is VC Runtime x64 2025-08-22 15:45:02 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Installing VC Runtime x64 2025-08-22 15:45:03 [INFO ] Running command (wait=True): C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\VCRuntimex64.exe /q /norestart 2025-08-22 15:45:33 [INFO ] Command exitcode is 3010 2025-08-22 15:45:33 [INFO ] Need Installation is False, framework name is VC Runtime x86 2025-08-22 15:45:33 [INFO ] Processing required components 2025-08-22 15:45:33 [INFO ] Component name=QPM-CLI, install option=Always, installed version=, semInstalled version=0.0, required min version=, required max version=, selectedVersion = , IsEmbedded=True, EmbedFilename=QPM-CLI.1.0.124.0.Windows-x86.exe, DisplayName=QPM-CLI 2025-08-22 15:45:34 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : ------------------------------------------------------ 2025-08-22 15:45:34 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Installing package QPM-CLI.1.0.124.0.Windows-x86.exe 2025-08-22 15:45:34 [INFO ] Running command: C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\QIKCache\QIK_vrfpfhop.05y\QPM-CLI.1.0.124.0.Windows-x86.exe -silent -console 2025-08-22 15:45:35 [INFO ] Waiting for the process to exit in executeWithOutput method 2025-08-22 15:45:39 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 1 of 9: Fetching user catalog 2025-08-22 15:45:39 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 2 of 9: Checking environment 2025-08-22 15:45:39 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 3 of 9: Checking previous version 2025-08-22 15:45:39 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 4 of 9: Checking dependencies 2025-08-22 15:45:40 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : ------------------------------------------------------ 2025-08-22 15:45:40 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Installing package QIKTool.1.0.167.0.Windows-x86.exe 2025-08-22 15:45:45 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 1 of 9: Fetching user catalog 2025-08-22 15:45:45 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 2 of 9: Checking environment 2025-08-22 15:45:45 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 3 of 9: Checking previous version 2025-08-22 15:45:45 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 4 of 9: Checking dependencies 2025-08-22 15:45:45 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 5 of 9: Checking package compatibility 2025-08-22 15:45:45 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 6 of 9: Preparing system 2025-08-22 15:45:53 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 7 of 9: Extracting files 2025-08-22 15:45:53 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 8 of 9: Configuring system 2025-08-22 15:46:20 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 9 of 9: Finishing installation 2025-08-22 15:46:20 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : SUCCESS: Installed QIKTool at C:\Program Files (x86)\Qualcomm\QIKTool\1.0.167.0 2025-08-22 15:46:20 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : ------------------------------------------------------ 2025-08-22 15:46:20 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : ------------------------------------------------------ 2025-08-22 15:46:20 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Installing package QIKToolV3.3.0.44.0.Windows-x86.exe 2025-08-22 15:46:25 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 1 of 9: Fetching user catalog 2025-08-22 15:46:25 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 2 of 9: Checking environment 2025-08-22 15:46:25 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 3 of 9: Checking previous version 2025-08-22 15:46:25 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 4 of 9: Checking dependencies 2025-08-22 15:46:25 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 5 of 9: Checking package compatibility 2025-08-22 15:46:25 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 6 of 9: Preparing system 2025-08-22 15:46:25 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 7 of 9: Extracting files 2025-08-22 15:46:26 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 8 of 9: Configuring system 2025-08-22 15:46:37 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 9 of 9: Finishing installation 2025-08-22 15:46:37 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : SUCCESS: Installed QIKToolV3 at C:\Program Files (x86)\Qualcomm\QIKToolV3\3.0.44.0 2025-08-22 15:46:37 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : ------------------------------------------------------ 2025-08-22 15:46:37 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : ------------------------------------------------------ 2025-08-22 15:46:37 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Installing package QIKService3.3.0.0.33.Windows-x64.exe 2025-08-22 15:46:42 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 1 of 9: Fetching user catalog 2025-08-22 15:46:42 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 2 of 9: Checking environment 2025-08-22 15:46:42 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 3 of 9: Checking previous version 2025-08-22 15:46:42 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 4 of 9: Checking dependencies 2025-08-22 15:46:42 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 5 of 9: Checking package compatibility 2025-08-22 15:46:42 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 6 of 9: Preparing system 2025-08-22 15:46:52 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 7 of 9: Extracting files 2025-08-22 15:46:53 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 8 of 9: Configuring system 2025-08-22 15:47:07 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 9 of 9: Finishing installation 2025-08-22 15:47:07 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : SUCCESS: Installed QIKService3 at C:\Program Files (x86)\Qualcomm\QIKService3\3.0.0.33 2025-08-22 15:47:07 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : ------------------------------------------------------ 2025-08-22 15:47:07 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 5 of 9: Checking package compatibility 2025-08-22 15:47:07 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 6 of 9: Preparing system 2025-08-22 15:47:07 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 7 of 9: Extracting files 2025-08-22 15:47:07 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 8 of 9: Configuring system 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : Step 9 of 9: Finishing installation 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : SUCCESS: Installed QPM-CLI at C:\Program Files (x86)\Qualcomm\QPM-CLI\1.0.124.0 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [ERROR ] Error from Console process 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [INFO ] Process exited in executeWithOutput method with exitcode 0 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [INFO ] [Progress] Install -1% [Info] : ------------------------------------------------------ 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [INFO ] [Progress] Prepare -1% [Info] : Step 5 of 9: Checking package compatibility 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [INFO ] Checking Package Compatibility 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [INFO ] [Progress] Prepare -1% [Info] : Step 6 of 9: Preparing system 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [INFO ] Running pre-install tasks 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [INFO ] execute script is True 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [INFO ] Executing script command: powershell powershell -EncodedCommand ([System.Convert]::ToBase64String([System.Text.Encoding]::Unicode.GetBytes([System.IO.File]::ReadAllText("'C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\QIKCache\QIK_vrfpfhop.05y\DownloadElectron.ps1'")))) 2025-08-22 15:47:09 [INFO ] Running command: C:\WINDOWS\System32\WindowsPowerShell\v1.0\powershell.exe powershell -EncodedCommand ([System.Convert]::ToBase64String([System.Text.Encoding]::Unicode.GetBytes([System.IO.File]::ReadAllText("'C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\QIKCache\QIK_vrfpfhop.05y\DownloadElectron.ps1'")))) 2025-08-22 16:06:57 [INFO ] Command output: #< CLIXML Failed to extract Electron package at C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\\electron-libs. The package may be corrupted or incomplete. Please retry the installation. <Objs Version="1.1.0.1" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/powershell/2004/04"><Obj S="progress" RefId="0"><TN RefId="0"><T>System.Management.Automation.PSCustomObject</T><T>System.Object</T></TN><MS><I64 N="SourceId">1</I64><PR N="Record"><AV>����׼���״�ʹ��ģ�顣</AV><AI>0</AI><Nil /><PI>-1</PI><PC>-1</PC><T>Completed</T><SR>-1</SR><SD> </SD></PR></MS></Obj><Obj S="progress" RefId="1"><TNRef RefId="0" /><MS><I64 N="SourceId">1</I64><PR N="Record"><AV>����׼���״�ʹ��ģ�顣</AV><AI>0</AI><Nil /><PI>-1</PI><PC>-1</PC><T>Completed</T><SR>-1</SR><SD> </SD></PR></MS></Obj><Obj S="progress" RefId="2"><TNRef RefId="0" /><MS><I64 N="SourceId">1</I64><PR N="Record"><AV>����׼���״�ʹ��ģ�顣</AV><AI>0</AI><Nil /><PI>-1</PI><PC>-1</PC><T>Completed</T><SR>-1</SR><SD> </SD></PR></MS></Obj><Obj S="progress" RefId="3"><TNRef RefId="0" /><MS><I64 N="SourceId">0</I64><PR N="Record"><AV>Expand-Archive</AV><AI>0</AI><Nil /><PI>-1</PI><PC>1</PC><T>Processing</T><SR>-1</SR><SD>����չ���浵�ļ���C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\\electron-libs��...</SD></PR></MS></Obj><Obj S="progress" RefId="4"><TNRef RefId="0" /><MS><I64 N="SourceId">0</I64><PR N="Record"><AV>Expand-Archive</AV><AI>0</AI><Nil /><PI>-1</PI><PC>-1</PC><T>Completed</T><SR>-1</SR><SD>���ڴ���</SD></PR></MS></Obj><Obj S="information" RefId="5"><TN RefId="1"><T>System.Management.Automation.InformationRecord</T><T>System.Object</T></TN><ToString>Failed to extract Electron package at C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\\electron-libs. The package may be corrupted or incomplete. Please retry the installation.</ToString><Props><Obj N="MessageData" RefId="6"><TN RefId="2"><T>System.Management.Automation.HostInformationMessage</T><T>System.Object</T></TN><ToString>Failed to extract Electron package at C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\\electron-libs. The package may be corrupted or incomplete. Please retry the installation.</ToString><Props><S N="Message">Failed to extract Electron package at C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\\electron-libs. The package may be corrupted or incomplete. Please retry the installation.</S><B N="NoNewLine">false</B><S N="ForegroundColor">DarkYellow</S><S N="BackgroundColor">DarkMagenta</S></Props></Obj><S N="Source">Write-Host</S><DT N="TimeGenerated">2025-08-22T16:06:57.2542989+08:00</DT><Obj N="Tags" RefId="7"><TN RefId="3"><T>System.Collections.Generic.List`1[[System.String, mscorlib, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089]]</T><T>System.Object</T></TN><LST><S>PSHOST</S></LST></Obj><S N="User">DESKTOP-LJ8VPAM\lqadmin</S><S N="Computer">DESKTOP-LJ8VPAM</S><U32 N="ProcessId">14524</U32><U32 N="NativeThreadId">32752</U32><U32 N="ManagedThreadId">9</U32></Props></Obj></Objs> 2025-08-22 16:06:57 [INFO ] Command execution OK, exitcode = 1, canFail=False 2025-08-22 16:06:57 [DEBUG ] Report results for code = ScriptRunError 2025-08-22 16:06:57 [ERROR ] [Progress] Done -1% [Error] : Pre-install step failed. Cause: #< CLIXML Failed to extract Electron package at C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\\electron-libs. The package may be corrupted or incomplete. Please retry the installation. <Objs Version="1.1.0.1" xmlns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/powershell/2004/04"><Obj S="progress" RefId="0"><TN RefId="0"><T>System.Management.Automation.PSCustomObject</T><T>System.Object</T></TN><MS><I64 N="SourceId">1</I64><PR N="Record"><AV>����׼���״�ʹ��ģ�顣</AV><AI>0</AI><Nil /><PI>-1</PI><PC>-1</PC><T>Completed</T><SR>-1</SR><SD> </SD></PR></MS></Obj><Obj S="progress" RefId="1"><TNRef RefId="0" /><MS><I64 N="SourceId">1</I64><PR N="Record"><AV>����׼���״�ʹ��ģ�顣</AV><AI>0</AI><Nil /><PI>-1</PI><PC>-1</PC><T>Completed</T><SR>-1</SR><SD> </SD></PR></MS></Obj><Obj S="progress" RefId="2"><TNRef RefId="0" /><MS><I64 N="SourceId">1</I64><PR N="Record"><AV>����׼���״�ʹ��ģ�顣</AV><AI>0</AI><Nil /><PI>-1</PI><PC>-1</PC><T>Completed</T><SR>-1</SR><SD> </SD></PR></MS></Obj><Obj S="progress" RefId="3"><TNRef RefId="0" /><MS><I64 N="SourceId">0</I64><PR N="Record"><AV>Expand-Archive</AV><AI>0</AI><Nil /><PI>-1</PI><PC>1</PC><T>Processing</T><SR>-1</SR><SD>����չ���浵�ļ���C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\\electron-libs��...</SD></PR></MS></Obj><Obj S="progress" RefId="4"><TNRef RefId="0" /><MS><I64 N="SourceId">0</I64><PR N="Record"><AV>Expand-Archive</AV><AI>0</AI><Nil /><PI>-1</PI><PC>-1</PC><T>Completed</T><SR>-1</SR><SD>���ڴ���</SD></PR></MS></Obj><Obj S="information" RefId="5"><TN RefId="1"><T>System.Management.Automation.InformationRecord</T><T>System.Object</T></TN><ToString>Failed to extract Electron package at C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\\electron-libs. The package may be corrupted or incomplete. Please retry the installation.</ToString><Props><Obj N="MessageData" RefId="6"><TN RefId="2"><T>System.Management.Automation.HostInformationMessage</T><T>System.Object</T></TN><ToString>Failed to extract Electron package at C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\\electron-libs. The package may be corrupted or incomplete. Please retry the installation.</ToString><Props><S N="Message">Failed to extract Electron package at C:\Users\lqadmin\AppData\Local\Temp\\electron-libs. The package may be corrupted or incomplete. Please retry the installation.</S><B N="NoNewLine">false</B><S N="ForegroundColor">DarkYellow</S><S N="BackgroundColor">DarkMagenta</S></Props></Obj><S N="Source">Write-Host</S><DT N="TimeGenerated">2025-08-22T16:06:57.2542989+08:00</DT><Obj N="Tags" RefId="7"><TN RefId="3"><T>System.Collections.Generic.List`1[[System.String, mscorlib, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089]]</T><T>System.Object</T></TN><LST><S>PSHOST</S></LST></Obj><S N="User">DESKTOP-LJ8VPAM\lqadmin</S><S N="Computer">DESKTOP-LJ8VPAM</S><U32 N="ProcessId">14524</U32><U32 N="NativeThreadId">32752</U32><U32 N="ManagedThreadId">9</U32></Props></Obj></Objs> 高通工具安装失败
最新发布
08-23
翻译, ====================================== INSTALLING SUBVERSION A Quick Guide ====================================== $LastChangedDate$ Contents: I. INTRODUCTION A. Audience B. Dependency Overview C. Dependencies in Detail D. Documentation II. INSTALLATION A. Building from a Tarball B. Building the Latest Source under Unix C. Building under Unix in Different Directories D. Installing from a Zip or Installer File under Windows E. Building the Latest Source under Windows F. Building using CMake III. BUILDING A SUBVERSION SERVER A. Setting Up Apache Httpd B. Making and Installing the Subversion Apache Server Module C. Configuring Apache Httpd for Subversion D. Running and Testing E. Alternative: 'svnserve' and ra_svn IV. PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE BINDINGS (PYTHON, PERL, RUBY, JAVA) I. INTRODUCTION ============ A. Audience This document is written for people who intend to build Subversion from source code. Normally, the only people who do this are Subversion developers and package maintainers. If neither of these labels fits you, we recommend you find an appropriate binary package of Subversion and install that. While the Subversion project doesn't officially release binary packages, a number of volunteers have made such packages available for different operating systems. Most Linux and BSD distributions already have Subversion packages ready to go via standard packaging channels, and other volunteers have built 'installers' for both Windows and OS X. Visit this page for package links: https://subversion.apache.org/packages.html For those of you who still wish to build from source, Subversion follows the Unix convention of "./configure && make", but it has a number of dependencies. B. Dependency Overview You'll need the following build tools to compile Subversion: * autoconf 2.59 or later (Unix only) * libtool 1.4 or later (Unix only) * a reasonable C compiler (gcc, Visual Studio, etc.) Subversion also depends on the following third-party libraries: * libapr and libapr-util (REQUIRED for client and server) The Apache Portable Runtime (APR) library provides an abstraction of operating-system level services such as file and network I/O, memory management, and so on. It also provides convenience routines for things like hashtables, checksums, and argument processing. While it was originally developed for the Apache HTTP server, APR is a standalone library used by Subversion and other products. It is a critical dependency for all of Subversion; it's the layer that allows Subversion clients and servers to run on different operating systems. * SQLite (REQUIRED for client and server) Subversion uses SQLite to manage some internal databases. * libz (REQUIRED for client and server) Subversion uses zlib for compressing binary differences. These diff streams are used everywhere -- over the network, in the repository, and in the client's working copy. * utf8proc (REQUIRED for client and server) Subversion uses utf8proc for UTF-8 support, including Unicode normalization. * Apache Serf (OPTIONAL for client) The Apache Serf library allows the Subversion client to send HTTP requests. This is necessary if you want your client to access a repository served by the Apache HTTP server. There is an alternate 'svnserve' server as well, though, and clients automatically know how to speak the svnserve protocol. Thus it's not strictly necessary for your client to be able to speak HTTP... though we still recommend that your client be built to speak both HTTP and svnserve protocols. * OpenSSL (OPTIONAL for client and server) OpenSSL enables your client to access SSL-encrypted https:// URLs (using Apache Serf) in addition to unencrypted http:// URLs. To use SSL with Subversion's WebDAV server, Apache needs to be compiled with OpenSSL as well. * Netwide Assembler (OPTIONAL for client and server) The Netwide Assembler (NASM) is used to build the (optional) assembler modules of OpenSSL. As of OpenSSL 1.1.0 NASM is the only supported assembler. * Berkeley DB (DEPRECATED and OPTIONAL for client and server) When you create a repository, you have the option of specifying a storage 'back-end' implementation. Currently, there are two options. The newer and recommended one, known as FSFS, does not require Berkeley DB. FSFS stores data in a flat filesystem. The older implementation, known as BDB, has been deprecated and is not recommended for new repositories, but is still available. BDB stores data in a Berkeley DB database. This back-end will only be available if the BDB libraries are discovered at compile time. * libsasl (OPTIONAL for client and server) If the Cyrus SASL library is detected at compile time, then the svn client (and svnserve server) will be able to utilize SASL to do various forms of authentication when speaking the svnserve protocol. * Python, Perl, Java, Ruby (OPTIONAL) Subversion is mostly a collection of C libraries with well-defined APIs, with a small collection of programs that use the APIs. If you want to build Subversion API bindings for other languages, you need to have those languages available at build time. * py3c (OPTIONAL, but REQUIRED for Python bindings) The Python 3 Compatibility Layer for C Extensions is required to build the Python language bindings. * KDE Framework 5, libsecret, GNOME Keyring (OPTIONAL for client) Subversion contains optional support for storing passwords in KWallet via KDE Framework 5 libraries (preferred) or kdelibs4, and GNOME Keyring via libsecret (preferred) or GNOME APIs. * libmagic (OPTIONAL) If the libmagic library is detected at compile time, it will be used to determine mime-types of binary files which are added to version control. Note that mime-types configured via auto-props or the mime-types-file option take precedence. C. Dependencies in Detail Subversion depends on a number of third party tools and libraries. Some of them are only required to run a Subversion server; others are necessary just for a Subversion client. This section explains what other tools and libraries will be required so that Subversion can be built with the set of features you want. On Unix systems, the './configure' script will tell you if you are missing the correct version of any of the required libraries or tools, so if you are in a real hurry to get building, you can skip straight to section II. If you want to gather the pieces you will need before starting out, however, you should read the following. If you're just installing a Subversion client, the Subversion team has created a script that downloads the minimal prerequisite libraries (Apache Portable Runtime, Sqlite, and Zlib). The script, 'get-deps.sh', is available in the same directory as this file. When run, it will place 'apr', 'apr-util', 'serf', 'zlib', and 'sqlite-amalgamation' directories directly into your unpacked Subversion distribution. With the exception of sqlite-amalgamation, they will still need to be configured, built and installed explicitly, and Subversion's own configure script may need to be told where to find them, if they were not installed in standard system locations. Note: there are optional dependencies (such as OpenSSL, swig, and httpd) which get-deps.sh does not download. Note: Because previous builds of Subversion may have installed older versions of these libraries, you may want to run some of the cleanup commands described in section II.B before installing the following. 1. Apache Portable Runtime 1.4 or newer (REQUIRED) Whenever you want to build any part of Subversion, you need the Apache Portable Runtime (APR) and the APR Utility (APR-util) libraries. If you do not have a pre-installed APR and APR-util, you will need to get these yourself: https://apr.apache.org/download.cgi On Unix systems, if you already have the APR libraries compiled and do not wish to regenerate them from source code, then Subversion needs to be able to find them. There are a couple of options to "./configure" that tell it where to look for the APR and APR-util libraries. By default it will try to locate the libraries using apr-config and apu-config scripts. These scripts provide all the relevant information for the APR and APR-util installations. If you want to specify the location of the APR library, you can use the "--with-apr=" option of "./configure". It should be able to find the apr-config script in the standard location under that directory (e.g. ${prefix}/bin). Similarly, you can specify the location of APR-util using the "--with-apr-util=" option to "./configure". It will look for the apu-config script relative to that directory. For example, if you want to use the APR libraries you built with the Apache httpd server, you could run: $ ./configure --with-apr=/usr/local/apache2 \ --with-apr-util=/usr/local/apache2 ... Notes on Windows platforms: * Do not use APR version 1.7.3 as that release contains a bug that makes it impossible for Subversion to use it properly. This issue only affects APR builds on Windows. This issue was fixed in APR version 1.7.4. See: https://lists.apache.org/thread/xd5t922jvb9423ph4j84rsp5fxks1k0z * If you check out APR and APR-util sources from their Subversion repository, be sure to use a native Windows SVN client (as opposed to Cygwin's version) so that the .dsp files get carriage-returns at the ends of their lines. Otherwise Visual Studio will complain that it doesn't recognize the .dsp files. Notes on Unix platforms: * If you check out APR and APR-util sources from their Subversion repository, you need to run the 'buildconf' script in each library's directory to regenerate the configure scripts and other files required for compiling the libraries. Afterwards, configure, build, and install both libraries before running Subversion's configure script. For example: $ cd apr $ ./buildconf $ ./configure <options...> $ make $ make install $ cd .. $ cd apr-util $ ./buildconf $ ./configure <options...> $ make $ make install $ cd .. 2. SQLite (REQUIRED) Subversion requires SQLite version 3.24.0 or above. You can meet this dependency several ways: * Use an SQLite amalgamation file. * Specify an SQLite installation to use. * Let Subversion find an installed SQLite. To use an SQLite-provided amalgamation, just drop sqlite3.c into Subversion's sqlite-amalgamation/ directory, or point to it with the --with-sqlite configure option. This file also ships with the Subversion dependencies distribution, or you can download it from SQLite: https://www.sqlite.org/download.html 3. Zlib (REQUIRED) Subversion's binary-differencing engine depends on zlib for compression. Most Unix systems have libz pre-installed, but if you need it, you can get it from http://www.zlib.net/ 4. utf8proc (REQUIRED) Subversion uses utf8proc for UTF-8 support. Configure will attempt to locate utf8proc by default using pkg-config and known paths. If it is installed in a non-standard location, then use: --with-utf8proc=/path/to/libutf8proc Alternatively, a copy of utf8proc comes bundled with the Subversion sources. If configure should use the bundled copy, use: --with-utf8proc=internal 5. autoconf 2.59 or newer (Unix only) This is required only if you plan to build from the latest source (see section II.B). Generally only developers would be doing this. 6. libtool 1.4 or newer (Unix only) This is required only if you plan to build from the latest source (see section II.B). Note: Some systems (Solaris, for example) require libtool 1.4.3 or newer. The autogen.sh script knows about that. 7. Apache Serf library 1.3.4 or newer (OPTIONAL) If you want your client to be able to speak to an Apache server (via a http:// or https:// URL), you must link against Apache Serf. Though optional, we strongly recommend this. In order to use ra_serf, you must install serf, and run Subversion's ./configure with the argument --with-serf. If serf is installed in a non-standard place, you should use --with-serf=/path/to/serf/install instead. Apache Serf can be obtained via your system's package distribution system or directly from https://serf.apache.org/. For more information on Apache Serf and Subversion's ra_serf, see the file subversion/libsvn_ra_serf/README. 8. OpenSSL (OPTIONAL) ### needs some updates. I think Apache Serf automagically handles ### finding OpenSSL, but we may need more docco here. and w.r.t ### zlib. The Apache Serf library has support for SSL encryption by relying on the OpenSSL library. a. Using OpenSSL on the client through Apache Serf On Unix systems, to build Apache Serf with OpenSSL, you need OpenSSL installed on your system, and you must add "--with-ssl" as a "./configure" parameter. If your OpenSSL installation is hard for Apache Serf to find, you may need to use "--with-libs=/path/to/lib" in addition. In particular, on Red Hat (but not Fedora Core) it is necessary to specify "--with-libs=/usr/kerberos" for OpenSSL to be found. You can also specify a path to the zlib library using "--with-libs". Under Windows, you can specify the paths to these libraries by passing the options --with-zlib and --with-openssl to gen-make.py. b. Using OpenSSL on the Apache server You can also add support for these features to an Apache httpd server to be used for Subversion using the same support libraries. The Subversion build system will not provide them, however. You add them by specifying parameters to the "./configure" script of the Apache Server instead. For getting SSL on your server, you would add the "--enable-ssl" or "--with-ssl=/path/to/lib" option to Apache's "./configure" script. Apache enables zlib support by default, but you can specify a nonstandard location for the library with the "--with-z=/path/to/dir" option. Consult the Apache documentation for more details, and for other modules you may wish to install to enhance your Subversion server. If you don't already have it, you can get a copy of OpenSSL, including instructions for building and packaging on both Unix systems and Windows, at: https://www.openssl.org/ 9. Berkeley DB 4.X (DEPRECATED and OPTIONAL) You need the Berkeley DB libraries only if you are building a Subversion server that supports the older BDB repository storage back-end, or a Subversion client that can access local BDB repositories via the file:// URI scheme. The BDB back-end has been deprecated and is not recommended for new repositories. BDB may be removed in Subversion 2.0. We recommend the newer FSFS back-end for all new repositories. FSFS does not require the Berkeley DB libraries. If in doubt, the 'svnadmin info' command, added in Subversion 1.9, can identify whether an existing repository uses BDB or FSFS. The current recommended version of Berkeley DB is 4.4.20 or newer, which brings auto-recovery functionality to the Berkeley DB database environment. If you must use an older version of Berkeley DB, we *strongly* recommend using 4.3 or 4.2 over the 4.1 or 4.0 versions. Not only are these significantly faster and more stable, but they also enable Subversion repositories to automatically clean up database journal files to save disk space. You'll need Berkeley DB installed on your system. You can get it from: http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/database/database-technologies/berkeleydb/overview/index.html If you have Berkeley DB installed in a place not searched by default for includes and libraries, add something like this: --with-berkeley-db=db.h:/usr/local/include/db4.7:/usr/local/lib/db4.7:db-4.7 to your `configure' switches, and the build process will use the Berkeley DB header and library in the named directories. You may need to use a different path, of course. Note that in order for the detection to succeed, the dynamic linker must be able to find the libraries at configure time. 10. Cyrus SASL library (OPTIONAL) If the Simple Authentication and Security Layer (SASL) library is detected on your system, then the Subversion client and svnserve server can utilize its abilities for various forms of authentication. To learn more about SASL or to get the source code, visit: http://freshmeat.net/projects/cyrussasl/ 11. Apache Web Server 2.2.X or newer (OPTIONAL) (https://httpd.apache.org/download.cgi) The Apache httpd server is one of two methods to make your Subversion repository available over a network - the other is a custom server program called svnserve, which requires no extra software packages. Building Subversion, the Apache server, and the modules that Apache needs to communicate with Subversion are complicated enough that there is a whole section at the end of this document that describes how it is done: See section III for details. 12. Python 3.x or newer (https://www.python.org/) (OPTIONAL) Subversion does not require Python for its basic operation. However, Python is required for building and testing Subversion and for using Subversion's SWIG Python bindings or hook scripts coded in Python. The majority of Subversion's test suite is written in Python, as is part of Subversion's build system. In more detail, Python is required to do any of the following: * Use the SWIG Python bindings. * Use the ctypes Python bindings. * Use hook scripts coded in Python. * Build Subversion from a tarball on Unix-like systems and run Subversion's test suite as described in section II.B. * Build Subversion on Windows as described in section II.E. * Build Subversion from a working copy checked out from Subversion's own repository (whether or not running the test suite). * Build the SWIG Python bindings. * Build the ctypes Python bindings. * Testing as described in section III.D. The Python bindings are used by: * Third-party programs (e.g., ViewVC) * Scripts distributed with Subversion itself in the tools/ subdirectory. * Any in-house scripts you may have. Python is NOT required to do any of the following: * Use the core command-line binaries (svn, svnadmin, svnsync, etc.) * Use Subversion's C libraries. * Use any of Subversion's other language bindings. * Build Subversion from a tarball on Unix-like systems without running Subversion's test suite Although this section calls for Python 3.x, Subversion still technically works with Python 2.7. However, Support for Python 2.7 is being phased out. As of 1 January 2020, Python 2.7 has reached end of life. All users are strongly encouraged to move to Python 3. Note: If you are using a Subversion distribution tarball and want to build the Python bindings for Python 2, you should rebuild the build environment in non-release mode by running 'sh autogen.sh' before running the ./configure script; see section II.B for more about autogen.sh. 13. Perl 5.8 or newer (Windows only) (OPTIONAL) To build Subversion under any of the MS Windows platforms, you will also need Perl 5.8 or newer to run apr-util's w32locatedb.pl script. 14. pkg-config (Unix only, OPTIONAL) Subversion uses pkg-config to find appropriate options used at build time. 15. D-Bus (Unix only, OPTIONAL) D-Bus is a message bus system. D-Bus is required for support for KWallet and GNOME Keyring. pkg-config is needed to find D-Bus headers and library. 16. Qt 5 or Qt 4 (Unix only, OPTIONAL) Qt is a cross-platform application framework. QtCore, QtDBus and QtGui modules are required for support for KWallet. pkg-config is needed to find Qt headers and libraries. 17. KDE 5 Framework libraries or KDELibs 4 (Unix only, OPTIONAL) Subversion contains optional support for storing passwords in KWallet. Subversion will look for KF5Wallet, KF5CoreAddons, KF5I18n APIs by default, and needs kf5-config to find them. The KDELibs 4 api is also supported. KDELibs contains core KDE libraries. Subversion uses libkdecore and libkdeui libraries when support for KWallet is enabled. kde4-config is used to get some necessary options. pkg-config, D-Bus and Qt 4 are also required. If you want to build support for KWallet, then pass the '--with-kwallet' option to `configure`. If KDE is installed in a non-standard prefix, then use: --with-kwallet=/path/to/KDE/prefix 18. GLib 2 (Unix only, OPTIONAL) GLib is a general-purpose utility library. GLib is required for support for GNOME Keyring. pkg-config is needed to find GLib headers and library. 19. GNOME Keyring (Unix only, OPTIONAL) Subversion contains optional support for storing passwords in GNOME Keyring. pkg-config is needed to find GNOME Keyring headers and library. D-Bus and GLib are also required. If you want to build support for GNOME Keyring, then pass the '--with-gnome-keyring' option to `configure`. 20. Ctypesgen (OPTIONAL) Ctypesgen is Python wrapper generator for ctypes. It is used to generate a part of Subversion Ctypes Python bindings (CSVN). If you want to build CSVN, then pass the '--with-ctypesgen' option to `configure`. If ctypesgen.py is installed in a non-standard place, then use: --with-ctypesgen=/path/to/ctypesgen.py For more information on CSVN, see subversion/bindings/ctypes-python/README. 21. libmagic (OPTIONAL) Subversion's configure script attempts to find libmagic automatically. If it is installed in a non-standard location, then use: --with-libmagic=/path/to/libmagic/prefix The files include/magic.h and lib/libmagic.so.1.0 (or similar) are expected beneath this prefix directory. If they cannot be found Subversion will be compiled without support for libmagic. If libmagic is installed but support for it should not be compiled in, then use: --with-libmagic=no If configure should fail when libmagic is not present, but only the default locations should be searched, then use: --with-libmagic 22. LZ4 (OPTIONAL) Subversion uses LZ4 compression library version r129 or above. Configure will attempt to locate the system library by default using pkg-config and known paths. If it is installed in a non-standard location, then use: --with-lz4=/path/to/liblz4 If configure should use the version bundled with the sources, use: --with-lz4=internal 23. py3c (OPTIONAL) Subversion uses the Python 3 Compatibility Layer for C Extensions (py3c) library when building the Python language bindings. As py3c is a header-only library, it is needed only to build the bindings, not to use them. Configure will attempt to locate py3c by default using pkg-config and known paths. If it is installed in a non-standard location, then use: --with-py3c=/path/to/py3c/prefix The library can be downloaded from GitHub: https://github.com/encukou/py3c On Unix systems, you can also use the provided get-deps.sh script to download py3c and several other dependencies; see the top of section I.C for more about get-deps.sh. D. Documentation The primary documentation for Subversion is the free book "Version Control with Subversion", a.k.a. "The Subversion Book", obtainable from https://svnbook.red-bean.com/. Various additional documentation exists in the doc/ subdirectory of the Subversion source. See the file doc/README for more information. II. INSTALLATION ============ Subversion support three different build systems: - Autoconf/make, for Unix builds - Visual Studio vcproj, for Windows builds - CMake, for both Unix and Windows The first two have been in use since 2001. Sections A-E below describe the classic build system. The CMake build system was created in 2024 and is still under development. It will be included in Subversion 1.15 and is expected to be the default build system starting with Subversion 1.16. Section F below describes the CMake build system. A. Building from a Tarball ------------------------------ 1. Building from a Tarball Download the most recent distribution tarball from: https://subversion.apache.org/download/ Unpack it, and use the standard GNU procedure to compile: $ ./configure $ make # make install You can also run the full test suite by running 'make check'. Even in successful runs, some tests will report XFAIL; that is normal. Failed runs are indicated by FAIL or XPASS results, or a non-zero exit code from "make check". B. Building the Latest Source under Unix ------------------------------------- These instructions assume you have already installed Subversion and checked out a working copy of Subversion's own code -- either the latest /trunk code, or some branch or tag. You also need to have already installed whatever prerequisites that version of Subversion requires (if you haven't, the ./configure step should complain). You can discard the directory created by the tarball; you're about to build the latest, greatest Subversion client. This is the procedure Subversion developers use. First off, if you have any Subversion libraries lying around from previous 'make installs', clean them up first! # rm -f /usr/local/lib/libsvn* # rm -f /usr/local/lib/libapr* # rm -f /usr/local/lib/libserf* Start the process by running "autogen.sh": $ sh ./autogen.sh This script will make sure you have all the necessary components available to build Subversion. If any are missing, you will be told where to get them from. (See the 'Dependency Overview' in section I.) Note: if the command "autoconf" on your machine does not run autoconf 2.59 or later, but you do have a new enough autoconf available, then you can specify the correct one with the AUTOCONF variable. (The AUTOHEADER variable is similar.) This may be required on Debian GNU/Linux, where "autoconf" is actually a Perl script that attempts to guess which version is required -- because of the interaction between Subversion's and APR's configuration systems, the Perl script may get it wrong. So for example, you might need to do: $ AUTOCONF=autoconf2.59 sh ./autogen.sh Once you've prepared the working copy by running autogen.sh, just follow the usual configuration and build procedure: $ ./configure $ make # make install (Optionally, you might want to pass --enable-maintainer-mode to the ./configure script. This enables debugging symbols in your binaries (among other things) and most Subversion developers use it.) Since the resulting binary depends on shared libraries, the destination library directory must be identified in your operating system's library search path. That is in either /etc/ld.so.conf or $LD_LIBRARY_PATH for Linux systems and in /etc/rc.conf for FreeBSD, followed by a run of the 'ldconfig' program. Check your system documentation for details. By identifying the destination directory, Subversion will be able to dynamically load repository access plugins. If you try to do a checkout and see an error like: subversion/libsvn_ra/ra_loader.c:209: (apr_err=170000) svn: Unrecognized URL scheme 'https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/subversion/trunk' It probably means that the dynamic loader/linker can't find all of the libsvn_* libraries. C. Building under Unix in Different Directories -------------------------------------------- It is possible to configure and build Subversion on Unix in a directory other than the working copy. For example $ svn co https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/subversion/trunk svn $ cd svn $ # get SQLite amalgamation if required $ chmod +x autogen.sh $ ./autogen.sh $ mkdir ../obj $ cd ../obj $ ../svn/configure [...with options as appropriate...] $ make puts the Subversion working copy in the directory svn and builds it in a separate, parallel directory obj. Why would you want to do this? Well there are a number of reasons... * You may prefer to avoid "polluting" the working copy with files generated during the build. * You may want to put the build directory and the working copy on different physical disks to improve performance. * You may want to separate source and object code and only backup the source. * You may want to remote mount the working copy on multiple machines, and build for different machines from the same working copy. * You may want to build multiple configurations from the same working copy. The last reason above is possibly the most useful. For instance you can have separate debug and optimized builds each using the same working copy. Or you may want a client-only build and a client-server build. Using multiple build directories you can rebuild any or all configurations after an edit without the need to either clean and reconfigure, or identify and copy changes into another working copy. D. Installing from a Zip or Installer File under Windows ----------------------------------------------------- Of all the ways of getting a Subversion client, this is the easiest. Download a Zip or self-extracting installer via: https://subversion.apache.org/packages.html#windows For a Zip file extract the DLLs and EXEs to a directory of your choice. Included in the download are among other tools the SVN client, the SVNADMIN administration tool and the SVNLOOK reporting tool. You may want to add the bin directory in the Subversion folder to your PATH environment variable so as to not have to use the full path when running Subversion commands. To test the installation, open a DOS box (run either "cmd" or "command" from the Start menu's "Run..." menu option), change to the directory you installed the executables into, and run: C:\test>svn co https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/subversion/trunk svn This will get the latest Subversion sources and put them into the "svn" subdirectory. If using a self-extracting .exe file, just run it instead of unzipping it, to install Subversion. E. Building the Latest Source under Windows ---------------------------------------- E.1 Prerequisites * Microsoft Visual Studio. Any recent (2005+) version containing the Visual C++ component will work (E.g. Professional, Express, Community Edition). Make sure you enable C++ support during setup. * Python 2.7 or higher, downloaded from https://www.python.org/ which is used to generate the project files. * Perl 5.8 or higher from https://www.perl.org/get.html * Awk is needed to compile Apache. Source code is available in tools\dev\awk, run the buildwin.bat program to compile. * Apache apr, apr-util, and optionally apr-iconv libraries, version 1.4 or later (1.2 for apr-iconv). If you are building from a Subversion checkout and have not downloaded Apache 2, then get these 3 libraries from https://www.apache.org/dist/apr/. * SQLite 3.24.0 or higher from https://www.sqlite.org/download.html (3.39.4 or higher recommended) * ZLib 1.2 or higher is required and can be obtained from http://www.zlib.net/ * Either a Subversion client binary from https://subversion.apache.org/packages.html to do the initial checkout of the Subversion source or the zip file source distribution. Additional Options * [Optional] Apache Httpd 2 source, downloaded from https://httpd.apache.org/download.cgi, these instructions assume version 2.0.58. This is only needed for building the Subversion server Apache modules. ### FIXME Apache 2.2 or greater required. * [Optional] Berkeley DB for backend support of the server components are available from http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/database/database-technologies/berkeleydb/downloads/index-082944.html (Version 4.4.20 or in specific cases some higher version recommended) For more information see Section I.C.9. * [Optional] Openssl can be obtained from https://www.openssl.org/source/ * [Optional] NASM can be obtained from http://www.nasm.us/ * [Optional] A modified version of GNU libintl, called svn-win32-libintl.zip, can be used for displaying localized messages. Available at: http://subversion.tigris.org/servlets/ProjectDocumentList?folderID=2627 * [Optional] GNU gettext for generating message catalog (.mo) files from message translations. You can get the latest binaries from http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/. You'll need the binaries (gettext-0.14.1-bin.zip) and dependencies (gettext-0.14.1-dep.zip). E.2 Notes The Apache Serf library supports secure connections with OpenSSL and on-the-wire compression with zlib. If you want to use the secure connections feature, you should pass the option "--with-openssl" to the gen-make.py script. See Section I.C.7 for more details. E.3 Preparation This section describes how to unpack the files to make a build tree. * Make a directory SVN and cd into it. * Either checkout Subversion: svn co https://svn.apache.org/repos/asf/subversion/trunk src-trunk or unpack the zip file distribution and rename the directory to src-trunk. * Install Visual Studio Environment. You either have to tell the installer to register environment variables or run VCVARS32.BAT before building anything. If you are using a newer Visual Studio, use the 'Visual Studio 20xx Command Prompt' on the Start menu. * Install Python and add it to your path * Install Perl (it should add itself to the path) ### Subversion doesn't need perl. Only some dependencies need it (OpenSSL and some apr scripts) * Copy AWK (awk95.exe) to awk.exe (e.g. SVN\awk\awk.exe) and add the directory containing it (e.g. SVN\awk) to the path. ### Subversion doesn't need awk. Only some dependencies need it (some apr scripts) * [Optional] Install NASM and add it to your path ### Subversion doesn't need NASM. Only some dependencies need it optionally (OpenSSL) * [Optional] If you checked out Subversion from the repository and want to build Subversion with http/https access support then install the Apache Serf sources into SVN\src-trunk\serf. * [Optional] If you want BDB backend support, extract the Berkeley DB files into SVN\src-trunk\db4-win32. It's a good idea to add SVN\src-trunk\db4-win32\bin to your PATH, so that Subversion can find the Berkeley DB DLLs. [NOTE: This binary package of Berkeley DB is provided for convenience only. Please don't address questions about Berkeley DB that aren't directly related to using Subversion to the project mailing list.] If you build Berkeley DB from the source, you will have to copy the file db-x.x.x\build_win32\db.h to SVN\src-trunk\db4-win32\include, and all the import libraries to SVN\src-trunk\db4-win32\lib. Again, the DLLs should be somewhere in your path. ### Just use --with-serf instead of the hardcoded path * [Optional] If you want to build the server modules, extract Apache source into SVN\httpd-2.x.x. * If you are building from a checkout of Subversion, and you are NOT building Apache, then you will need the APR libraries. Depending on how you got your version of APR, either: - Extract the APR, APR-util and APR-iconv source distributions into SVN\apr, SVN\apr-util, and SVN\apr-iconv respectively. Or: - Extract the apr, apr-util and apr-iconv directories from the srclib folder in the Apache httpd source into SVN\apr, SVN\apr-util, and SVN\apr-iconv respectively. ### Just use --with-apr, etc. instead of the hardcoded paths * Extract the ZLib sources into SVN\zlib if you are not using the zlib included in the dependencies zip file. ### Just use --with-zlib instead of the hardcoded path * [Optional] If you want secure connection (https) client support extract OpenSSL into SVN\openssl ### And pass the path to both serf and gen-make.py * [Optional] If you want localized message support, extract svn-win32-libintl.zip into SVN\svn-win32-libintl and extract gettext-x.x.x-bin.zip and gettext-x.x.x-dep.zip into SVN\gettext-x.x.x-bin. Add SVN\gettext-x.x.x-bin\bin to your path. * Download the SQLite amalgamation from https://www.sqlite.org/download.html and extract it into SVN\sqlite-amalgamation. See I.C.12 for alternatives to using the amalgamation package. E.4 Building the Binaries To build the binaries either follow these instructions. Start in the SVN directory you created. Set up the environment (commands should be one line even if wrapped here). C:>set VER=trunk C:>set DIR=trunk C:>set BUILD_ROOT=C:\SVN C:>set PYTHONDIR=C:\Python27 C:>set AWKDIR=C:\SVN\Awk C:>set ASMDIR=C:\SVN\asm C:>set SDKINC="C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDK\include" C:>set SDKLIB="C:\Program Files\Microsoft SDK\lib" C:>set GETTEXTBIN=C:\SVN\gettext-0.14.1-bin\bin C:>PATH=%PATH%;%BUILD_ROOT%\src-%DIR%\db4-win32;%ASMDIR%; %PYTHONDIR%;%AWKDIR%;%GETTEXTBIN% C:>set INCLUDE=%SDKINC%;%INCLUDE% C:>set LIB=%SDKLIB%;%LIB% OpenSSL < 1.1.0 C:>cd openssl C:>perl Configure VC-WIN32 [*] C:>call ms\do_masm C:>nmake -f ms\ntdll.mak C:>cd out32dll C:>call ..\ms\test C:>cd ..\.. *Note: Use "call ms\do_nasm" if you have nasm instead of MASM, or "call ms\do_ms" if you don't have an assembler. Also if you are using OpenSSL >= 1.0.0 masm is no longer supported. You will have to use do_nasm or do_ms in this case. OpenSSL >= 1.1.0 C:>cd openssl C:>perl Configure VC-WIN32 C:>nmake C:>nmake test C:>cd .. Apache 2 This step is only required for building the server dso modules. ### FIXME Apache 2.2 or greater required. Old build instructions for VC6. C:>set APACHEDIR=C:\Program Files\Apache Group\Apache2 C:>msdev httpd-2.0.58\apache.dsw /MAKE "BuildBin - Win32 Release" APR If you downloaded APR / APR-UTIL / APR_ICONV by source, you will have to build these libraries first. Building these libraries on Windows is straight forward and in most cases as simple as issuing these two commands: C:>nmake -f Makefile.win C:>nmake -f Makefile.win install Please refer to the build instructions provided by the library source for actual build instructions. ZLib If you downloaded the zlib source, you will have to build ZLib first. Building ZLib using Visual Studio should be quite simple. Just open the appropriate solution and build the project zlibstat using the IDE. Please refer to the build instructions provided by the library source for actual build instructions. Note that you'd make sure to define ZLIB_WINAPI in the ZLib config header and move the lib-file into the zlib root-directory. Please note that you MUST NOT build ZLib with the included assembler optimized code. It is known to be buggy, see for example the discussion https://svn.haxx.se/dev/archive-2013-10/0109.shtml. This means that you must not define ASMV or ASMINF. Note that the VS projects in contrib\visualstudio define these in the Debug configuration. Apache Serf ### Section about Apache Serf might be required/useful to add. ### scons is required too and Apache Serf needs to be configured prior to ### be able to build Subversion using: ### scons APR=[PATH_TO_APR] APU=[PATH_TO_APU] OPENSSL=[PATH_TO_OPENSSL] ### ZLIB=[PATH_TO_ZLIB] PREFIX=[PATH_TO_SERF_DEST] ### scons check ### scons install Subversion Things to note: * If you don't want to build mod_dav_svn, omit the --with-httpd option. The zip file source distribution contains apr, apr-util and apr-iconv in the default build location. If you have downloaded the apr files yourself you will have to tell the generator where to find the APR libraries; the options are --with-apr, --with-apr-util and --with-apr-iconv. * If you would like a debug build substitute Debug for Release in the msbuild command. * There have been rumors that Subversion on Win32 can be built using the latest cygwin, you probably don't want the zip file source distribution though. ymmv. * You will also have to distribute the C runtime dll with the binaries. Also, since Apache/APR do not provide .vcproj files, you will need to convert the Apache/APR .dsp files to .vcproj files with Visual Studio before building -- just open the Apache .dsw file and answer 'Yes To All' when the conversion dialog pops up, or you can open the individual .dsp files and convert them one at a time. The Apache/APR projects required by Subversion are: apr-util\libaprutil.dsp, apr\libapr.dsp, apr-iconv\libapriconv.dsp, apr-util\xml\expat\lib\xml.dsp, apr-iconv\ccs\libapriconv_ccs_modules.dsp, and apr-iconv\ces\libapriconv_ces_modules.dsp. * If the server dso modules are being built and tested Apache must not be running or the copy of the dso modules will fail. C:>cd src-%DIR% If Apache 2 has been built and the server modules are required then gen-make.py will already have been run. If the source is from the zip file, Apache 2 has not been built so gen-make.py must be run: C:>python gen-make.py --vsnet-version=20xx --with-berkeley-db=db4-win32 --with-openssl=..\openssl --with-zlib=..\zlib --with-libintl=..\svn-win32-libintl Then build subversion: C:>msbuild subversion_vcnet.sln /t:__MORE__ /p:Configuration=Release C:>cd .. The binaries have now been built. E.5 Packaging the binaries You now need to copy the binaries ready to make the release zip file. You also need to do this to run the tests as the new binaries need to be in your path. You can use the build/win32/make_dist.py script in the Subversion source directory to do that. [TBD: Describe how to do this. Note dependencies on zip, jar, doxygen.] E.6 Testing the Binaries [TBD: It's been a long, long while since it was necessary to move binaries around for testing. win-tests.py does that automagically. Fix this section accordingly, and probably reorder, putting the packaging at the end.] The build process creates the binary test programs but it does not copy the client tests into the release test area. C:>cd src-%DIR% C:>mkdir Release\subversion\tests\cmdline C:>xcopy /S /Y subversion\tests\cmdline Release\subversion\tests\cmdline If the server dso modules have been built then copy the dso files and dlls into the Apache modules directory. C:>copy Release\subversion\mod_dav_svn\mod_dav_svn.so "%APACHEDIR%"\modules C:>copy Release\subversion\mod_authz_svn\mod_authz_svn.so "%APACHEDIR%"\modules C:>copy svn-win32-%VER%\bin\intl.dll "%APACHEDIR%\bin" C:>copy svn-win32-%VER%\bin\iconv.dll "%APACHEDIR%\bin" C:>copy svn-win32-%VER%\bin\libdb42.dll "%APACHEDIR%\bin" C:>cd .. Put the svn-win32-trunk\bin directory at the start of your path so you run the newly built binaries and not another version you might have installed. Then run the client tests: C:>PATH=%BUILD_ROOT%\svn-win32-%VER%\bin;%PATH% C:>cd src-%DIR% C:>python win-tests.py -c -r -v If the server dso modules were built configure Apache to use the mod_dav_svn and mod_authz_svn modules by making sure these lines appear uncommented in httpd.conf: LoadModule dav_module modules/mod_dav.so LoadModule dav_fs_module modules/mod_dav_fs.so LoadModule dav_svn_module modules/mod_dav_svn.so LoadModule authz_svn_module modules/mod_authz_svn.so And further down the file add location directives to point to the test repositories. Change the paths to the SVN directory you created (paths should be on one line even if wrapped here): <Location /svn-test-work/repositories> DAV svn SVNParentPath C:/SVN/src-trunk/Release/subversion/tests/cmdline/ svn-test-work/repositories </Location> <Location /svn-test-work/local_tmp/repos> DAV svn SVNPath c:/SVN/src-trunk/Release/subversion/tests/cmdline/ svn-test-work/local_tmp/repos </Location> Then restart Apache and run the tests: C:>python win-tests.py -c -r -v -u http://localhost C:>cd .. F. Building using CMake -------------------- Get the sources, either a release tarball or by checking out the official repository. The CMake build system currently only exists in /trunk and it will be included in the 1.15 release. The process for building on Unix and Windows is the same. $ python gen-make.py -t cmake $ cmake -B out [build options] $ cmake --build out "out" in the commands above is the build directory used by CMake. Build options can be added, for example: $ cmake -B out -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local/subversion -DSVN_ENABLE_RA_SERF=ON Build options can be listed using: $ cmake -LH Windows tricks: - Modern versions of Microsoft Visual Studio provide support for CMake projects out-of-box, including intellisense, integrated options editor, test explorer, and more. In order to use it for Subversion, open the source directory with Visual Studio, and the configuration should start automatically. For editing the cache (options), do right-click to the CMakeLists.txt file and clicking `CMake Settings for Subversion` will open the editor. After the required settings are configured, hit `F7` in order to build. For more info, check the article bellow: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/cpp/build/cmake-projects-in-visual-studio - There is a useful tool for bootstrapping the dependencies, vcpkg. It provides ports for the most of the Subversion's dependencies, which then could be installed via a single command. To start using it, download the registry from GitHub, bootstrap vcpkg, and install the dependencies: $ git clone https://github.com/microsoft/vcpkg $ cd vcpkg && .\bootstrap-vcpkg.bat -disableMetrics $ .\vcpkg install apr apr-util expat zlib sqlite3 [any other dependency] After this is done, vcpkg can be integrated into CMake by passing the vcpkg toolchain to CMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE option. In order to do it with Visual Studio, open the CMake cache editor as explained in the previous step, and put the following into `CMake toolchain file` field, where VCPKG_ROOT is the path to vcpkg registry: <VCPKG_ROOT>/scripts/buildsystems/vcpkg.cmake III. BUILDING A SUBVERSION SERVER ============================ Subversion has two servers you can choose from: svnserve and Apache. svnserve is a small, lightweight server program that is automatically compiled when you build Subversion's source. Apache is a more heavyweight HTTP server, but tends to have more features. This section primarily focuses on how to build Apache and the accompanying mod_dav_svn server module for it. If you plan to use svnserve instead, jump right to section E for a quick explanation. A. Setting Up Apache Httpd ----------------------- 1. Obtaining and Installing Apache Httpd 2 Subversion tries to compile against the latest released version of Apache httpd 2.2+. The easiest thing for you to do is download a source tarball of the latest release and unpack that. If you have questions about the Apache httpd 2.2 build, please consult the httpd install documentation: https://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.2/install.html At the top of the httpd tree: $ ./buildconf $ ./configure --enable-dav --enable-so --enable-maintainer-mode The first arg says to build mod_dav. The second arg says to enable shared module support which is needed for a typical compile of mod_dav_svn (see below). The third arg says to include debugging information. If you built Subversion with --enable-maintainer-mode, then you should do the same for Apache; there can be problems if one was compiled with debugging and the other without. Note: if you have multiple db versions installed on your system, Apache might link to a different one than Subversion, causing failures when accessing the repository through Apache. To prevent this from happening, you have to tell Apache which db version to use and where to find db. Add --with-dbm=db4 and --with-berkeley-db=/usr/local/BerkeleyDB.4.2 to the configure line. Make sure this is the same db as the one Subversion uses. This note assumes you have installed Berkeley DB 4.2.52 at its default locations. For more info about the db requirement, see section I.C.9. You may also want to include other modules in your build. Add --enable-ssl to turn on SSL support, and --enable-deflate to turn on compression support, for example. Consult the Apache documentation for more details. All instructions below assume you configured Apache to install in its default location, /usr/local/apache2/; substitute appropriately if you chose some other location. Compile and install apache: $ make && make install B. Making and Installing the Subversion Apache Server Module --------------------------------------------------------- Go back into your subversion working copy and run ./autogen.sh if you need to. Then, assuming Apache httpd 2.2 is installed in the standard location, run: $ ./configure Note: do *not* configure subversion with "--disable-shared"! mod_dav_svn *must* be built as a shared library, and it will look for other libsvn_*.so libraries on your system. If you see a warning message that the build of mod_dav_svn is being skipped, this may be because you have Apache httpd 2.x installed in a non-standard location. You can use the "--with-apxs=" option to locate the apxs script: $ ./configure --with-apxs=/usr/local/apache2/bin/apxs Note: it *is* possible to build mod_dav_svn as a static library and link it directly into Apache. Possible, but painful. Stick with the shared library for now; if you can't, then ask. $ rm /usr/local/lib/libsvn* If you have old subversion libraries sitting on your system, libtool will link them instead of the `fresh' ones in your tree. Remove them before building subversion. $ make clean && make && make install After the make install, the Subversion shared libraries are in /usr/local/lib/. mod_dav_svn.so should be installed in /usr/local/libexec/ (or elsewhere, such as /usr/local/apache2/modules/, if you passed --with-apache-libexecdir to configure). Section II.E explains how to build the server on Windows. C. Configuring Apache Httpd for Subversion --------------------------------------- The following section is an abbreviated version of the information in the Subversion Book (https://svnbook.red-bean.com). Please read chapter 6 for more details. The following assumes you have already created a repository. For documentation on how to do that, see README. The following also assumes that you have modified /usr/local/apache2/conf/httpd.conf to reflect your setup. At a minimum you should look at the User, Group and ServerName directives. Full details on setting up apache can be found at: https://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.2/ First, your httpd.conf needs to load the mod_dav_svn module. If you pass --enable-mod-activation to Subversion's configure, 'make install' target should automatically add this line for you. In any case, if Apache HTTPD gives you an error like "Unknown DAV provider: svn", then you may want to verify that this line exists in your httpd.conf: LoadModule dav_svn_module modules/mod_dav_svn.so NOTE: if you built mod_dav as a dynamic module as well, make sure the above line appears after the one that loads mod_dav.so. Next, add this to the *bottom* of your httpd.conf: <Location /svn/repos> DAV svn SVNPath /absolute/path/to/repository </Location> This will give anyone unrestricted access to the repository. If you want limited access, read or write, you add these lines to the Location block: AuthType Basic AuthName "Subversion repository" AuthUserFile /my/svn/user/passwd/file And: a) For a read/write restricted repository: Require valid-user b) For a write restricted repository: <LimitExcept GET PROPFIND OPTIONS REPORT> Require valid-user </LimitExcept> c) For separate restricted read and write access: AuthGroupFile /my/svn/group/file <LimitExcept GET PROPFIND OPTIONS REPORT> Require group svn_committers </LimitExcept> <Limit GET PROPFIND OPTIONS REPORT> Require group svn_committers Require group svn_readers </Limit> ### FIXME Tutorials section refers to old 2.0 docs These are only a few simple examples. For a complete tutorial on Apache access control, please consider taking a look at the tutorials found under "Security" on the following page: https://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.0/misc/tutorials.html In order for 'svn cp' to work (which is actually implemented as a DAV COPY command), mod_dav needs to be able to determine the hostname of the server. A standard way of doing this is to use Apache's ServerName directive to set the server's hostname. Edit your /usr/local/apache2/conf/httpd.conf to include: ServerName svn.myserver.org If you are using virtual hosting through Apache's NameVirtualHost directive, you may need to use the ServerAlias directive to specify additional names that your server is known by. If you have configured mod_deflate to be in the server, you can enable compression support for your repository by adding the following line to your Location block: SetOutputFilter DEFLATE NOTE: If you are unfamiliar with an Apache directive, or not exactly sure about what it does, don't hesitate to look it up in the documentation: https://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.2/mod/directives.html. NOTE: Make sure that the user 'nobody' (or whatever UID the httpd process runs as) has permission to read and write the Berkeley DB files! This is a very common problem. D. Running and Testing ------------------- Fire up apache 2: $ /usr/local/apache2/bin/apachectl stop $ /usr/local/apache2/bin/apachectl start Check /usr/local/apache2/logs/error_log to make sure it started up okay. Try doing a network checkout from the repository: $ svn co http://localhost/svn/repos wc The most common reason this might fail is permission problems reading the repository db files. If the checkout fails, make sure that the httpd process has permission to read and write to the repository. You can see all of mod_dav_svn's complaints in the Apache error logfile, /usr/local/apache2/logs/error_log. To run the regression test suite for networked Subversion, see the instructions in subversion/tests/cmdline/README. For advice about tracing problems, see "Debugging the server" in https://subversion.apache.org/docs/community-guide/. E. Alternative: 'svnserve' and ra_svn ----------------------------------- An alternative network layer is libsvn_ra_svn (on the client side) and the 'svnserve' process on the server. This is a simple network layer that speaks a custom protocol over plain TCP (documented in libsvn_ra_svn/protocol): $ svnserve -d # becomes a background daemon $ svn checkout svn://localhost/usr/local/svn/repository You can use the "-r" option to svnserve to set a logical root for repositories, and the "-R" option to restrict connections to read-only access. ("Read-only" is a logical term here; svnserve still needs write access to the database in this mode, but will not allow commits or revprop changes.) 'svnserve' has built-in CRAM-MD5 authentication (so you can use non-system accounts), and can also be tunneled over SSH (so you can use existing system accounts). It's also capable of using Cyrus SASL if libsasl2 is detected at ./configure time. Please read chapter 6 in the Subversion Book (https://svnbook.red-bean.com) for details on these features. IV. PROGRAMMING LANGUAGE BINDINGS (PYTHON, PERL, RUBY, JAVA) ======================================================== For Python, Perl and Ruby bindings, see the file ./subversion/bindings/swig/INSTALL For Java bindings, see the file ./subversion/bindings/javahl/README
06-24
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