Difference between revisions of "Client Compile"

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I usually read fiotcin, but I find that these books can still spur change and cause deep shifts in our way of being .some of my all-time faves:Imajica  Clive BarkerSkinny Legs and All  Tom Robbinsthe Griffin and Sabine series  Nick Bantockthe Odd Thomas series and From the Corner of His Eye  Dean KoontzCry to Heaven  Anne RiceThe Red Tent  Anita DiamantThe Golden Notebook  Doris LessingThe Good Time Gospel Boys  Billy Bittingerthe Tao te ChingLooking forward to your compiled list Hugs and butterflies,~T~
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FileZilla 3 has the following dependencies:
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* libfilezilla
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* wxWidgets
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* GnuTLS
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* libidn  (under Unix-like systems)
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* gettext (Compiletime only)
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* libdbus (under Unix-like systems)
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If you've checked out FileZilla from the SVN repository as opposed to using an official release, you also need the following dependencies:
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* Perl
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* Libtool
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* autoconf
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* automake
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Execute autoreconf -i after installing these additional dependencies.
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If all dependencies are installed, compiling FileZilla is as simple as calling
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* ./configure
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* make
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* make install
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If anything is missing, the configure script will tell you about it.
 +
 
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For more exotic systems, more detailed instructions are provided:
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# [[Compiling FileZilla 3 under Windows]]
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# [[Compiling FileZilla 3 under Mac OS X]]
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# [[Cross Compiling FileZilla 3 for Windows under Debian GNU/Linux]]
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===Packages===
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On Debian and derivatives like Ubuntu, you can install dependencies with the command shown below.
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<pre>sudo apt-get install libfilezilla-dev libwxbase3.0-dev gnutls-dev libdbus-1-dev</pre>
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If you can't find a package on Debian and derivatives, then use <tt>apt-cache</tt> find a package name. For example, <tt>apt-cache search filezilla | grep dev</tt> will reveal the package <tt>libfilezilla-dev</tt>.
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On Red Hat and derivatives like Fedora, you can install dependencies with the command shown below.
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<pre>sudo dnf install libfilezilla-devel wxBase3-devel gnutls-devel</pre>
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If you can't find a package on Red Hat and derivatives, then use <tt>denf</tt> find a package name. For example, <tt>dnf search filezilla | grep dev</tt> will reveal the package <tt>libfilezilla-devel</tt>.

Latest revision as of 04:05, 12 October 2023

FileZilla 3 has the following dependencies:

  • libfilezilla
  • wxWidgets
  • GnuTLS
  • libidn (under Unix-like systems)
  • gettext (Compiletime only)
  • libdbus (under Unix-like systems)

If you've checked out FileZilla from the SVN repository as opposed to using an official release, you also need the following dependencies:

  • Perl
  • Libtool
  • autoconf
  • automake

Execute autoreconf -i after installing these additional dependencies.

If all dependencies are installed, compiling FileZilla is as simple as calling

  • ./configure
  • make
  • make install

If anything is missing, the configure script will tell you about it.

For more exotic systems, more detailed instructions are provided:

  1. Compiling FileZilla 3 under Windows
  2. Compiling FileZilla 3 under Mac OS X
  3. Cross Compiling FileZilla 3 for Windows under Debian GNU/Linux

Packages[edit]

On Debian and derivatives like Ubuntu, you can install dependencies with the command shown below.

sudo apt-get install libfilezilla-dev libwxbase3.0-dev gnutls-dev libdbus-1-dev

If you can't find a package on Debian and derivatives, then use apt-cache find a package name. For example, apt-cache search filezilla | grep dev will reveal the package libfilezilla-dev.

On Red Hat and derivatives like Fedora, you can install dependencies with the command shown below.

sudo dnf install libfilezilla-devel wxBase3-devel gnutls-devel

If you can't find a package on Red Hat and derivatives, then use denf find a package name. For example, dnf search filezilla | grep dev will reveal the package libfilezilla-devel.