| |
| Git installation |
| |
| Normally you can just do "make" followed by "make install", and that |
| will install the git programs in your own ~/bin/ directory. If you want |
| to do a global install, you can do |
| |
| $ make prefix=/usr all doc info ;# as yourself |
| # make prefix=/usr install install-doc install-html install-info ;# as root |
| |
| (or prefix=/usr/local, of course). Just like any program suite |
| that uses $prefix, the built results have some paths encoded, |
| which are derived from $prefix, so "make all; make prefix=/usr |
| install" would not work. |
| |
| The beginning of the Makefile documents many variables that affect the way |
| git is built. You can override them either from the command line, or in a |
| config.mak file. |
| |
| Alternatively you can use autoconf generated ./configure script to |
| set up install paths (via config.mak.autogen), so you can write instead |
| |
| $ make configure ;# as yourself |
| $ ./configure --prefix=/usr ;# as yourself |
| $ make all doc ;# as yourself |
| # make install install-doc install-html;# as root |
| |
| If you're willing to trade off (much) longer build time for a later |
| faster git you can also do a profile feedback build with |
| |
| $ make prefix=/usr profile |
| # make prefix=/usr PROFILE=BUILD install |
| |
| This will run the complete test suite as training workload and then |
| rebuild git with the generated profile feedback. This results in a git |
| which is a few percent faster on CPU intensive workloads. This |
| may be a good tradeoff for distribution packagers. |
| |
| Alternatively you can run profile feedback only with the git benchmark |
| suite. This runs significantly faster than the full test suite, but |
| has less coverage: |
| |
| $ make prefix=/usr profile-fast |
| # make prefix=/usr PROFILE=BUILD install |
| |
| Or if you just want to install a profile-optimized version of git into |
| your home directory, you could run: |
| |
| $ make profile-install |
| |
| or |
| $ make profile-fast-install |
| |
| As a caveat: a profile-optimized build takes a *lot* longer since the |
| git tree must be built twice, and in order for the profiling |
| measurements to work properly, ccache must be disabled and the test |
| suite has to be run using only a single CPU. In addition, the profile |
| feedback build stage currently generates a lot of additional compiler |
| warnings. |
| |
| Issues of note: |
| |
| - Ancient versions of GNU Interactive Tools (pre-4.9.2) installed a |
| program "git", whose name conflicts with this program. But with |
| version 4.9.2, after long hiatus without active maintenance (since |
| around 1997), it changed its name to gnuit and the name conflict is no |
| longer a problem. |
| |
| NOTE: When compiled with backward compatibility option, the GNU |
| Interactive Tools package still can install "git", but you can build it |
| with --disable-transition option to avoid this. |
| |
| - You can use git after building but without installing if you want |
| to test drive it. Simply run git found in bin-wrappers directory |
| in the build directory, or prepend that directory to your $PATH. |
| This however is less efficient than running an installed git, as |
| you always need an extra fork+exec to run any git subcommand. |
| |
| It is still possible to use git without installing by setting a few |
| environment variables, which was the way this was done |
| traditionally. But using git found in bin-wrappers directory in |
| the build directory is far simpler. As a historical reference, the |
| old way went like this: |
| |
| GIT_EXEC_PATH=`pwd` |
| PATH=`pwd`:$PATH |
| GITPERLLIB=`pwd`/perl/build/lib |
| export GIT_EXEC_PATH PATH GITPERLLIB |
| |
| - By default (unless NO_PERL is provided) Git will ship various perl |
| scripts. However, for simplicity it doesn't use the |
| ExtUtils::MakeMaker toolchain to decide where to place the perl |
| libraries. Depending on the system this can result in the perl |
| libraries not being where you'd like them if they're expected to be |
| used by things other than Git itself. |
| |
| Manually supplying a perllibdir prefix should fix this, if this is |
| a problem you care about, e.g.: |
| |
| prefix=/usr perllibdir=/usr/$(/usr/bin/perl -MConfig -wle 'print substr $Config{installsitelib}, 1 + length $Config{siteprefixexp}') |
| |
| Will result in e.g. perllibdir=/usr/share/perl/5.26.1 on Debian, |
| perllibdir=/usr/share/perl5 (which we'd use by default) on CentOS. |
| |
| - Unless NO_PERL is provided Git will ship various perl libraries it |
| needs. Distributors of Git will usually want to set |
| NO_PERL_CPAN_FALLBACKS if NO_PERL is not provided to use their own |
| copies of the CPAN modules Git needs. |
| |
| - Git is reasonably self-sufficient, but does depend on a few external |
| programs and libraries. Git can be used without most of them by adding |
| the appropriate "NO_<LIBRARY>=YesPlease" to the make command line or |
| config.mak file. |
| |
| - "zlib", the compression library. Git won't build without it. |
| |
| - "ssh" is used to push and pull over the net. |
| |
| - A POSIX-compliant shell is required to run some scripts needed |
| for everyday use (e.g. "bisect", "request-pull"). |
| |
| - "Perl" version 5.26.0 or later is needed to use some of the |
| features (e.g. sending patches using "git send-email", |
| interacting with svn repositories with "git svn"). If you can |
| live without these, use NO_PERL. Note that recent releases of |
| Redhat/Fedora are reported to ship Perl binary package with some |
| core modules stripped away (see https://lwn.net/Articles/477234/), |
| so you might need to install additional packages other than Perl |
| itself, e.g. Digest::MD5, File::Spec, File::Temp, Net::Domain, |
| Net::SMTP, and Time::HiRes. |
| |
| - "libcurl" library is used for fetching and pushing |
| repositories over http:// or https://, as well as by |
| git-imap-send. If you do not need that functionality, |
| use NO_CURL to build without it. |
| |
| Git requires version "7.61.0" or later of "libcurl" to build |
| without NO_CURL. This version requirement may be bumped in |
| the future. |
| |
| - "expat" library; git-http-push uses it for remote lock |
| management over DAV. Similar to "curl" above, this is optional |
| (with NO_EXPAT). |
| |
| - "wish", the Tcl/Tk windowing shell is used in gitk to show the |
| history graphically, and in git-gui. If you don't want gitk or |
| git-gui, you can use NO_TCLTK. |
| |
| - A gettext library is used by default for localizing Git. The |
| primary target is GNU libintl, but the Solaris gettext |
| implementation also works. |
| |
| We need a gettext.h on the system for C code, gettext.sh (or |
| Solaris gettext(1)) for shell scripts, and libintl-perl for Perl |
| programs. |
| |
| Set NO_GETTEXT to disable localization support and make Git only |
| use English. Under autoconf the configure script will do this |
| automatically if it can't find libintl on the system. |
| |
| - Python version 2.7 or later is needed to use the git-p4 interface |
| to Perforce. |
| |
| - Some platform specific issues are dealt with Makefile rules, |
| but depending on your specific installation, you may not |
| have all the libraries/tools needed, or you may have |
| necessary libraries at unusual locations. Please look at the |
| top of the Makefile to see what can be adjusted for your needs. |
| You can place local settings in config.mak and the Makefile |
| will include them. Note that config.mak is not distributed; |
| the name is reserved for local settings. |
| |
| - To build and install documentation suite, you need to have |
| the asciidoc/xmlto toolchain. Because not many people are |
| inclined to install the tools, the default build target |
| ("make all") does _not_ build them. |
| |
| "make doc" builds documentation in man and html formats; there are |
| also "make man", "make html" and "make info". Note that "make html" |
| requires asciidoc, but not xmlto. "make man" (and thus make doc) |
| requires both. |
| |
| "make install-doc" installs documentation in man format only; there |
| are also "make install-man", "make install-html" and "make |
| install-info". |
| |
| Building and installing the info file additionally requires |
| makeinfo and docbook2X. Version 0.8.3 is known to work. |
| |
| Building and installing the pdf file additionally requires |
| dblatex. Version >= 0.2.7 is known to work. |
| |
| All formats require at least asciidoc 8.4.1. Alternatively, you can |
| use Asciidoctor (requires Ruby) by passing USE_ASCIIDOCTOR=YesPlease |
| to make. You need at least Asciidoctor version 1.5. |
| |
| There are also "make quick-install-doc", "make quick-install-man" |
| and "make quick-install-html" which install preformatted man pages |
| and html documentation. To use these build targets, you need to |
| clone two separate git-htmldocs and git-manpages repositories next |
| to the clone of git itself. |
| |
| The minimum supported version of docbook-xsl is 1.74. |
| |
| Users attempting to build the documentation on Cygwin may need to ensure |
| that the /etc/xml/catalog file looks something like this: |
| |
| <?xml version="1.0"?> |
| <!DOCTYPE catalog PUBLIC |
| "-//OASIS//DTD Entity Resolution XML Catalog V1.0//EN" |
| "http://www.oasis-open.org/committees/entity/release/1.0/catalog.dtd" |
| > |
| <catalog xmlns="urn:oasis:names:tc:entity:xmlns:xml:catalog"> |
| <rewriteURI |
| uriStartString = "http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current" |
| rewritePrefix = "/usr/share/sgml/docbook/xsl-stylesheets" |
| /> |
| <rewriteURI |
| uriStartString="http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5" |
| rewritePrefix="/usr/share/sgml/docbook/xml-dtd-4.5" |
| /> |
| </catalog> |
| |
| This can be achieved with the following two xmlcatalog commands: |
| |
| xmlcatalog --noout \ |
| --add rewriteURI \ |
| http://docbook.sourceforge.net/release/xsl/current \ |
| /usr/share/sgml/docbook/xsl-stylesheets \ |
| /etc/xml/catalog |
| |
| xmlcatalog --noout \ |
| --add rewriteURI \ |
| http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.5/xsl/current \ |
| /usr/share/sgml/docbook/xml-dtd-4.5 \ |
| /etc/xml/catalog |