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- Tor Browser Build
- =================
- Installing build dependencies
- -----------------------------
- To build Tor Browser, you need a Linux distribution that has support
- for runc (such as Debian Buster, Ubuntu 16.04, Fedora 30, etc ...).
- Your user account should have sudo access, which is required to be able
- to extract container file systems, start containers and copy files to and
- from containers.
- The sources of most components are downloaded using git, which needs to
- be installed. Some components are downloaded using mercurial which also
- needs to be installed.
- You also need a few perl modules installed:
- - YAML::XS
- - File::Basename
- - Getopt::Long
- - Template
- - IO::Handle
- - IO::CaptureOutput
- - JSON
- - File::Temp
- - Path::Tiny
- - File::Path
- - File::Slurp
- - File::Copy::Recursive
- - String::ShellQuote
- - Sort::Versions
- - Digest::SHA
- - Data::UUID
- - Data::Dump
- If you are running Debian or Ubuntu, you can install them with:
- # apt-get install libyaml-libyaml-perl libtemplate-perl \
- libio-handle-util-perl libio-all-perl \
- libio-captureoutput-perl libjson-perl libpath-tiny-perl \
- libstring-shellquote-perl libsort-versions-perl \
- libdigest-sha-perl libdata-uuid-perl libdata-dump-perl \
- libfile-copy-recursive-perl libfile-slurp-perl git runc \
- mercurial
- The build system is based on rbm, which is included as a git submodule
- in the rbm/ directory. You can fetch the rbm git submodule by running
- 'make submodule-update'.
- Starting a build
- ----------------
- To start a build, run one of the following commands, depending on the
- channel you want to build:
- $ make release
- $ make alpha
- $ make nightly
- You can find the build result in the directory release/unsigned/$version
- or alpha/unsigned/$version for release or alpha builds. The result of
- nightly can be found in the nightly/$version directory.
- If you want to build for a specific platform only, append the platform
- name to the makefile target:
- $ make nightly-linux-x86_64
- $ make nightly-linux-i686
- $ make nightly-linux-arm
- $ make nightly-windows-i686
- $ make nightly-windows-x86_64
- $ make nightly-osx-x86_64
- $ make nightly-android-armv7
- $ make nightly-android-aarch64
- $ make nightly-android-x86
- $ make nightly-android-x86_64
- When you want to quickly do a build to test a change, you can use the
- testbuild makefile target, and find the build in the testbuild directory.
- The build will be the same as regular alpha builds, except that in order
- to make the build faster, only the en-US locale will be built, and no
- mar file will be created. If you want to base your testbuild on the latest
- nightly code insted, rename rbm.local.conf.example to rbm.local.conf
- and adapt the torbrowser-testbuild option accordingly.
- Updating git sources
- --------------------
- You can run `make fetch` to fetch the latest sources from git for all
- components included in Tor Browser. You should run this if you want to
- make a nightly build with the latest commits, and you disabled automatic
- fetching of new commits for nightly builds in rbm.local.conf.
- Number of make processes
- ------------------------
- By default the builds are run with 4 processes simultaneously (with
- make -j4). If you want to change the number of processes used, you can
- set the RBM_NUM_PROCS environment variable:
- $ export RBM_NUM_PROCS=8
- You can also set the buildconf/num_procs option in rbm.local.conf.
- Automated builds
- ----------------
- If the build fails, a shell will automatically open in the build
- container to help you debug the problem. You probably want to disable
- this if you want to do automated builds. To disable this, set
- the RBM_NO_DEBUG environment variable to 1:
- export RBM_NO_DEBUG=1
- Or set the debug option to 0 in the rbm.local.conf file.
- If you want to select the output directory, you can use rbm's --output-dir
- option. You can look at the Makefile to find the rbm command for what
- you want to build, and add the --output-dir option. For example, if you
- want to build Tor Browser nightly for linux-x86_64:
- ./rbm/rbm build release --output-dir=/var/builds/nightly/2020-05-23 \
- --target nightly --target torbrowser-linux-x86_64
- The files will be put in the directory selected by --output-dir in a
- subdirectory named as the version number (or current date for nightly).
- To remove this version subdirectory, add the noversiondir target:
- ./rbm/rbm build release --output-dir=/var/builds/nightly/2020-05-23 \
- --target nightly --target torbrowser-linux-x86_64 \
- --target noversiondir
- Automated builds using tbb-testsuite
- ------------------------------------
- The Tor Browser testsuite scripts can also be used to do nightly builds
- and publish the build logs. The recommended way to do that is to use
- the ansible roles from the tools/ansible directory. See next section
- for details.
- Using ansible to set up a nightly build machine
- -----------------------------------------------
- The directory tools/ansible contains some ansible roles to set up a
- nightly build machine. You can look at the playbook defined in
- boklm-tbb-nightly-build.yml and variables in group_vars/boklm-tbb-nightly/
- for an example of how it can be used.
- Signing builds
- --------------
- If the environment variable RBM_SIGN_BUILD is set to 1, the
- sha256sums-unsigned-build.txt and sha256sums-unsigned-build.incrementals.txt
- files will be signed with gpg. You can use the RBM_GPG_OPTS environment
- variable to add some options to the gpg command used to sign the file.
- You can also set the var/sign_build and var/sign_build_gpg_opts options
- in the rbm.local.conf file.
- Cleaning obsolete files and containers images
- ---------------------------------------------
- You can run `make clean` to clean old build files and containers that
- are no longer used in current builds. Before doing that, you need to
- configure the branches and build targets you are using in the
- rbm.local.conf file. The cleaning script will check out all the configured
- branches to create a list of used build files, and delete the files
- from the 'out' directory that are not used. If you want to see the list
- of files and containers that would be removed without doing it, you can
- use `make clean-dry-run`.
- Building without containers (Android builds only)
- -------------------------------------------------
- By default the build is done inside containers. Adding the no_containers
- target will disable the use of containers. The following commands can
- be used to build the alpha version for e.g. android-armv7:
- ./rbm/rbm build release --target no_containers --target testbuild \
- --target torbrowser-android-armv7
- Note: the logs will still show the use and creation of a container image
- called "containers_disabled". This is due to the way we disable the use
- of containers: the container-image project is still called, but it will
- just create an empty file instead of a real container image.
- The build without containers is currently only supported for the Android
- builds, and will require that you run Debian Stretch and install build
- dependencies for all the components that are built. This can be done
- with the following command:
- # apt-get install build-essential python automake libtool zip unzip \
- autoconf2.13 openjdk-8-jdk gettext-base autotools-dev \
- automake autoconf libtool autopoint libssl-dev \
- pkg-config zlib1g-dev libparallel-forkmanager-perl \
- libfile-slurp-perl bzip2 xz-utils apksigner yasm
- Common Build Errors
- -------------------
- You can look at the README.BUILD_ERRORS file for a list of common build
- errors and their solutions.
- Hacking on the Tor Browser build
- --------------------------------
- The file README.HACKING tries to list the main things to know when
- making changes to the Tor Browser build.
- Description of makefile rules
- -----------------------------
- You can find a description of the Makefile rules in the README.MAKEFILE
- file.
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