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qTox/INSTALL.md
Anthony Bilinski c282c6e96f
chore(release): Remove support for macOS 10.14
macOS 10.14 is EOL by Apple, and brew no longer supports it. We can no longer
build qTox on 10.14 using our brew-based release process. Instead we will
release from 10.15, which loses compatibility with 10.14 with our current build
process.
2022-03-06 04:04:41 -08:00

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Install Instructions

Dependencies

Name Version Modules
Qt >= 5.5.0 concurrent, core, gui, network, opengl, svg, widget, xml
GCC/MinGW >= 4.8 C++11 enabled
toxcore >= 0.2.10 core, av
FFmpeg >= 2.6.0 avformat, avdevice, avcodec, avutil, swscale
CMake >= 2.8.11
OpenAL Soft >= 1.16.0
qrencode >= 3.0.3
sqlcipher >= 3.2.0
pkg-config >= 0.28
snorenotify >= 0.7.0 optional dependency

Optional dependencies

They can be disabled/enabled by passing arguments to cmake command when building qTox.

If they are missing, qTox is built without support for the functionality.

Development dependencies

Dependencies needed to run tests / code formatting, etc. Disabled if dependencies are missing.

Name Version
Check >= 0.9

Spell checking support

Name Version
sonnet >= 5.45

Use -DSPELL_CHECK=OFF to disable it.

Note: Specified version was tested and works well. You can try to use older version, but in this case you may have some errors (including a complete lack of spell check).

Linux

Auto-away support

Name Version
libXScrnSaver >= 1.2
libX11 >= 1.6.0

Disabled if dependencies are missing during compilation.

Snorenotify desktop notification backend

Disabled by default

Name Version
snorenotify >= 0.7.0

To enable: -DDESKTOP_NOTIFICATIONS=True

Linux

Simple install

Easy qTox install is provided for variety of distributions:


Arch

PKGBUILD is available in the community repo, to install:

pacman -S qtox

Fedora

qTox is available in the RPMFusion repo, to install:

dnf install qtox

Gentoo

qTox is available in Gentoo.

To install:

emerge qtox

openSUSE

qTox is available in openSUSE Factory.

To install in openSUSE 15.0 or newer:

zypper in qtox

To install in openSUSE 42.3:

zypper ar -f https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/server:/messaging/openSUSE_Leap_42.3 server:messaging
zypper in qtox

Slackware

qTox SlackBuild and all of its dependencies can be found here: http://slackbuilds.org/repository/14.2/network/qTox/

FreeBSD

qTox is available as a binary package. To install the qTox package:

pkg install qTox

The qTox port is also available at net-im/qTox. To build and install qTox from sources using the port:

cd /usr/ports/net-im/qTox
make install clean

If your distribution is not listed, or you want / need to compile qTox, there are provided instructions.


Most of the dependencies should be available through your package manager. You may either follow the directions below, or simply run ./simple_make.sh after cloning this repository, which will attempt to automatically download dependencies followed by compilation.

Install git

In order to clone the qTox repository you need Git.

Arch Linux

sudo pacman -S --needed git

Debian

sudo apt-get install git

Fedora

sudo dnf install git

openSUSE

sudo zypper install git

Ubuntu

sudo apt-get install git

Clone qTox

Afterwards open a new terminal, change to a directory of your choice and clone the repository:

cd /home/$USER/qTox
git clone https://github.com/qTox/qTox.git qTox

The following steps assumes that you cloned the repository at /home/$USER/qTox. If you decided to choose another location, replace corresponding parts.

GCC, Qt, FFmpeg, OpenAL Soft and qrencode

Arch Linux

sudo pacman -S --needed base-devel qt5 openal libxss qrencode ffmpeg opus libvpx libsodium

Debian

Note that only Debian >=9 stable (stretch) is supported.

sudo apt-get install \
    automake \
    autotools-dev \
    build-essential \
    check \
    checkinstall \
    cmake \
    ffmpeg \
    libavcodec-dev \
    libavdevice-dev \
    libexif-dev \
    libgdk-pixbuf2.0-dev \
    libgtk2.0-dev \
    libkdeui5 \
    libopenal-dev \
    libopus-dev \
    libqrencode-dev \
    libqt5opengl5-dev \
    libqt5svg5-dev \
    libsodium-dev \
    libsqlcipher-dev \
    libtool \
    libvpx-dev \
    libxss-dev \
    pkg-config \
    qrencode \
    qt5-default \
    qttools5-dev \
    qttools5-dev-tools \
    yasm

Fedora

Note that sqlcipher is not included in all versions of Fedora yet. As of writing this section (November 2016), Fedora 25 ships sqlcipher, but Fedora 24 and older don't ship it yet. This means that if you can't install sqlcipher from repositories, you'll have to compile it yourself, otherwise compiling qTox will fail.

sudo dnf groupinstall "Development Tools" "C Development Tools and Libraries"
# (can also use sudo dnf install @"Development Tools")
sudo dnf install \
    autoconf \
    automake \
    check \
    check-devel \
    ffmpeg-devel \
    gtk2-devel \
    kf5-sonnet \
    libexif-devel \
    libsodium-devel \
    libtool \
    libvpx-devel \
    libXScrnSaver-devel \
    openal-soft-devel \
    openssl-devel \
    opus-devel \
    qrencode-devel \
    qt5-linguist \
    qt5-qtsvg \
    qt5-qtsvg-devel \
    qt-creator \
    qt-devel \
    qt-doc \
    qtsingleapplication \
    sqlcipher \
    sqlcipher-devel

Go to sqlcipher section to compile it if necessary.

openSUSE

sudo zypper install \
    libexif-devel \
    libffmpeg-devel \
    libopus-devel \
    libQt5Concurrent-devel \
    libqt5-linguist \
    libQt5Network-devel \
    libQt5OpenGL-devel \
    libqt5-qtbase-common-devel \
    libqt5-qtsvg-devel \
    libQt5Xml-devel \
    libsodium-devel \
    libvpx-devel \
    libXScrnSaver-devel \
    openal-soft-devel \
    patterns-openSUSE-devel_basis \
    qrencode-devel \
    sqlcipher-devel \
    sonnet-devel

Slackware

List of all the toxcore dependencies and their SlackBuilds can be found here: http://slackbuilds.org/repository/14.2/network/toxcore/

List of all the qTox dependencies and their SlackBuilds can be found here: http://slackbuilds.org/repository/14.2/network/qTox/

Ubuntu >=15.04

sudo apt-get install \
    automake \
    autotools-dev \
    build-essential cmake \
    check \
    checkinstall \
    libavcodec-ffmpeg-dev \
    libavdevice-ffmpeg-dev \
    libavfilter-ffmpeg-dev \
    libavutil-ffmpeg-dev \
    libexif-dev \
    libgdk-pixbuf2.0-dev \
    libglib2.0-dev \
    libgtk2.0-dev \
    libkdeui5 \
    libopenal-dev \
    libopus-dev \
    libqrencode-dev \
    libqt5opengl5-dev \
    libqt5svg5-dev \
    libsodium-dev \
    libsqlcipher-dev \
    libswresample-ffmpeg-dev \
    libswscale-ffmpeg-dev \
    libtool \
    libvpx-dev \
    libxss-dev \
    qrencode \
    qt5-default \
    qttools5-dev-tools

Ubuntu >=16.04:

sudo apt-get install \
    build-essential \
    cmake \
    libavcodec-dev \
    libavdevice-dev \
    libavfilter-dev \
    libavutil-dev \
    libexif-dev \
    libgdk-pixbuf2.0-dev \
    libglib2.0-dev \
    libgtk2.0-dev \
    libkdeui5 \
    libopenal-dev \
    libopus-dev \
    libqrencode-dev \
    libqt5opengl5-dev \
    libqt5svg5-dev \
    libsodium-dev \
    libsqlcipher-dev \
    libswresample-dev \
    libswscale-dev \
    libvpx-dev \
    libxss-dev \
    qrencode \
    qt5-default \
    qttools5-dev-tools \
    qttools5-dev

sqlcipher

If you are not using an old version of Fedora, skip this section, and go directly to compiling toxcore.

git clone https://github.com/sqlcipher/sqlcipher
cd sqlcipher
./configure --enable-tempstore=yes CFLAGS="-DSQLITE_HAS_CODEC" \
    LDFLAGS="-lcrypto"
make
sudo make install
cd ..

Compile toxcore

Normally you don't want to do that, bootstrap.sh will do it for you.

Provided that you have all required dependencies installed, you can simply run:

git clone https://github.com/toktok/c-toxcore.git toxcore
cd toxcore
git checkout v0.2.13
cmake . -DBOOTSTRAP_DAEMON=OFF
make -j$(nproc)
sudo make install

# we don't know what whether user runs 64 or 32 bits, and on some distros
# (Fedora, openSUSE) lib/ doesn't link to lib64/, so add both
echo '/usr/local/lib64/' | sudo tee -a /etc/ld.so.conf.d/locallib.conf
echo '/usr/local/lib/' | sudo tee -a /etc/ld.so.conf.d/locallib.conf
sudo ldconfig

Compile qTox

Make sure that all the dependencies are installed. If you experience problems with compiling, it's most likely due to missing dependencies, so please make sure that you did install all of them.

If you are compiling on Fedora 25, you must add libtoxcore to the PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable manually:

# we don't know what whether user runs 64 or 32 bits, and on some distros
# (Fedora, openSUSE) lib/ doesn't link to lib64/, so add both
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH="$PKG_CONFIG_PATH:/usr/local/lib64/pkgconfig"
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH="$PKG_CONFIG_PATH:/usr/local/lib/pkgconfig"

Run in qTox directory to compile:

cmake .
make -j$(nproc)

Now you can start compiled qTox with ./qtox

Congratulations, you've compiled qTox :)

Debian / Ubuntu / Mint

If the compiling process stops with a missing dependency like: ... libswscale/swscale.h missing try:

apt-file search libswscale/swscale.h

And install the package that provides the missing file. Start make again. Repeat if necessary until all dependencies are installed. If you can, please note down all additional dependencies you had to install that aren't listed here, and let us know what is missing ;)


Building packages

Alternately, qTox now has the experimental and probably-dodgy ability to package itself (in .deb form natively, and .rpm form with alien).

After installing the required dependencies, run bootstrap.sh and then run the buildPackages.sh script, found in the tools folder. It will automatically get the packages necessary for building .debs, so be prepared to type your password for sudo.


Security hardening with AppArmor

See AppArmor to enable confinement for increased security.

OS X

Supported OS X versions: >=10.15.

Compiling qTox on OS X for development requires 2 tools: Xcode and homebrew.

Automated Script

You can now set up your OS X system to compile qTox automatically thanks to the script in: ./osx/qTox-Mac-Deployer-ULTIMATE.sh

This script can be run independently of the qTox repo and is all that's needed to build from scratch on OS X.

To use this script you must launch terminal which can be found: Applications > Utilities > Terminal.app

If you wish to lean more you can run ./qTox-Mac-Deployer-ULTIMATE.sh -h

Note that the script will revert any non-committed changes to qTox repository during the update phase.

First Run / Install

If you are running the script for the first time you will want to make sure your system is ready. To do this simply run ./qTox-Mac-Deployer-ULTIMATE.sh -i to run you through the automated install set up.

After running the installation setup you are now ready to build qTox from source, to do this simply run: ./qTox-Mac-Deployer-ULTIMATE.sh -b

If there aren't any errors then you'll find a locally working qTox application in your home folder under ~/qTox-Mac_Build

Updating

If you want to update your application for testing purposes or you want to run a nightly build setup then run: ./qTox-Mac-Deployer-ULTIMATE.sh -u and follow the prompts. (NOTE: If you know you updated the repos before running this hit Y) followed by ./qTox-Mac-Deployer-ULTIMATE.sh -b to build the application once more. (NOTE: This will delete your previous build.)

Deploying

OS X requires an extra step to make the qTox.app file shareable on a system that doesn't have the required libraries installed already.

If you want to share the build you've made with your other friends who use OS X then simply run: ./qTox-Mac-Deployer-ULTIMATE.sh -d

Manual Compiling

Required Libraries

Install homebrew if you don't have it:

ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"

First, let's install the dependencies available via brew.

brew install git ffmpeg qrencode libtool automake autoconf check qt5 libvpx \
opus sqlcipher libsodium

Next, install toxcore

Then, clone qTox:

git clone https://github.com/qTox/qTox

Finally, copy all required files. Whenever you update your brew packages, you may skip all of the above steps and simply run the following commands:

cd ./git/qTox
sudo bash bootstrap-osx.sh

Compiling

You can build qTox with Qt Creator seperate download or manually with cmake

With that; in your terminal you can compile qTox in the git dir:

cmake .
make

Or a cleaner method would be to:

cd ./git/dir/qTox
mkdir ./build
cd build
cmake ..

Deploying

If you compiled qTox properly you can now deploy the qTox.app that's created where you built qTox so you can distribute the package.

Using your qt5 homebrew installation from the build directory:

/usr/local/Cellar/qt5/5.5.1_2/bin/macdeployqt ./qTox.app

Running qTox

You've got 2 choices, either click on the qTox app that suddenly exists, or do the following:

qtox.app/Contents/MacOS/qtox

Enjoy the snazzy CLI output as your friends and family congratulate you on becoming a hacker

Windows

Cross-compile from Linux

See windows/cross-compile.

Native

Qt

Download the Qt online installer for Windows from qt.io. While installation you have to assemble your Qt toolchain. Take the most recent version of Qt compiled with MinGW. Although the installer provides its own bundled MinGW compiler toolchain its recommend installing it separately because Qt is missing MSYS which is needed to compile and install OpenAL. Thus you can - if needed - deselect the tab Tools. The following steps assume that Qt is installed at C:\Qt. If you decided to choose another location, replace corresponding parts.

MinGW

Download the MinGW installer for Windows from sourceforge.net. Make sure to install MSYS (a set of Unix tools for Windows). The following steps assume that MinGW is installed at C:\MinGW. If you decided to choose another location, replace corresponding parts. Select mingw-developer-toolkit, mingw32-base, mingw32-gcc-g++, msys-base and mingw32-pthreads-w32 packages using MinGW Installation Manager (mingw-get.exe). Check that the version of MinGW, corresponds to the version of the QT component!

Wget

Download the Wget installer for Windows from http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/packages/wget.htm. Install them. The following steps assume that Wget is installed at C:\Program Files (x86)\GnuWin32\. If you decided to choose another location, replace corresponding parts.

UnZip

Download the UnZip installer for Windows from http://gnuwin32.sourceforge.net/packages/unzip.htm. Install it. The following steps assume that UnZip is installed at C:\Program Files (x86)\GnuWin32\. If you decided to choose another location, replace corresponding parts.

Setting up Path

Add MinGW/MSYS/CMake binaries to the system path to make them globally accessible. Open Control Panel -> System and Security -> System -> Advanced system settings -> Environment Variables... (or run sysdm.cpl select tab Advanced system settings -> button Environment Variables). In the second box search for the PATH variable and press Edit.... The input box Variable value: should already contain some directories. Each directory is separated with a semicolon. Extend the input box by adding ;C:\MinGW\bin;C:\MinGW\msys\1.0\bin;C:\Program Files (x86)\CMake 2.8\bin;C:\Program Files (x86)\GnuWin32\bin. The very first semicolon must only be added if it is missing. CMake may be added by installer automatically. Make sure that paths containing alternative sh, bash implementations such as C:\Program Files\OpenSSH\bin are at the end of PATH or build may fail.

Cloning the Repository

Clone the repository (https://github.com/qTox/qTox.git) with your preferred Git client. SmartGit or TorteiseGit are both very nice for this task (you may need to add git.exe to your PATH system variable). The following steps assume that you cloned the repository at C:\qTox. If you decided to choose another location, replace corresponding parts.

Getting dependencies

Run bootstrap.bat in the previously cloned C:\qTox repository. The script will download the other necessary dependencies, compile them and put them into their appropriate directories.

Note that there have been detections of false positives by some anti virus software in the past within some of the libraries used. Please refer to the wiki page problematic antiviruses for more information if you run into troubles on that front.

Compile-time switches

They are passed as an argument to cmake command. E.g. with a switch SWITCH that has value YES it would be passed to cmake in a following manner:

cmake -DSWITCH=yes

Switches:

  • SMILEYS, values:
    • if not defined or an unsupported value is passed, all emoticon packs are included
    • DISABLED don't include any emoticon packs, custom ones are still loaded
    • MIN minimal support for emoticons, only a single emoticon pack is included