Compiling the GTK+ libraries3GTK LibraryCompiling the GTK+ Libraries
How to compile GTK+ itself
Building GTK+ on UNIX-like systems
This chapter covers building and installing GTK+ on UNIX and
UNIX-like systems such as Linux. Compiling GTK+ on Microsoft
Windows is different in detail and somewhat more difficult to
get going since the necessary tools aren't included with
the operating system.
Before we get into the details of how to compile GTK+, we should
mention that in many cases, binary packages of GTK+ prebuilt for
your operating system will be available, either from your
operating system vendor or from independent sources. If such a
set of packages is available, installing it will get you
programming with GTK+ much faster than building it yourself. In
fact, you may well already have GTK+ installed on your system
already.
On all supported platforms, GTK+ uses the Meson build system.
tar xvfJ gtk+-3.24.0.tar.xz
Once you have extracted the files from the release archive, and
you entered the source directory, you can use the meson
command to configure the project.
meson setup --prefix=/opt/gtk _builddir .
A full list of options can be found by running
meson configure from within the build directory.
In general, the defaults are right and should be trusted.
After you've run meson setup, you then run the
meson compile command to build the project and
install it.
meson compile -C _builddir
meson install -C _builddir
If you don't have permission to write to the directory you are
installing in, you may have to change to root temporarily before
running meson install.
Several environment variables are useful to pass to set before
running configure. CPPFLAGS contains options to
pass to the C compiler, and is used to tell the compiler where
to look for include files. The LDFLAGS variable
is used in a similar fashion for the linker. Finally the
PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable contains
a search path that pkg-config (see below)
uses when looking for files describing how to compile
programs using different libraries. If you were installing GTK+
and it's dependencies into /opt/gtk, you
might want to set these variables as:
CPPFLAGS="-I/opt/gtk/include"
LDFLAGS="-L/opt/gtk/lib"
PKG_CONFIG_PATH="/opt/gtk/lib/pkgconfig"
export CPPFLAGS LDFLAGS PKG_CONFIG_PATH
You may also need to set the LD_LIBRARY_PATH
environment variable so the systems dynamic linker can find
the newly installed libraries, and the PATH
environment program so that utility binaries installed by
the various libraries will be found.
LD_LIBRARY_PATH="/opt/gtk/lib"
PATH="/opt/gtk/bin:$PATH"
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH PATH
Dependencies
Before you can compile the GTK+ widget toolkit, you need to have
various other tools and libraries installed on your
system. The main tool needed during the build process (as
differentiated from the tools used in when creating GTK+
mentioned above such as meson)
is pkg-config.
pkg-config
is a tool for tracking the compilation flags needed for
libraries that are used by the GTK+ libraries. (For each
library, a small .pc text file is installed
in a standard location that contains the compilation flags
needed for that library along with version number information.)
Some of the libraries that GTK+ depends on are maintained by
by the GTK+ team: GLib, GdkPixbuf, Pango, ATK and GObject Introspection.
Other libraries are maintained separately.
The GLib library
provides core non-graphical functionality such as high level data types,
Unicode manipulation, and an object and type system to C programs. It is
available here.
The GdkPixbuf library
provides facilities for loading images in a variety of file formats.
It is available
here.
Pango is a library
for internationalized text handling. It is available
here.
ATK is the
Accessibility Toolkit. It provides a set of generic
interfaces allowing accessibility technologies such as
screen readers to interact with a graphical user interface.
It is available
here.
Gobject Introspection
is a framework for making introspection data available to
language bindings. It is available
here.
External dependencies
The GNU
libiconv library is needed to build GLib if your
system doesn't have the iconv()
function for doing conversion between character
encodings. Most modern systems should have
iconv().
The libintl library from the GNU gettext
package is needed if your system doesn't have the
gettext() functionality for handling
message translation databases.
The libraries from the X window system are needed to build
Pango and GTK+. You should already have these installed on
your system, but it's possible that you'll need to install
the development environment for these libraries that your
operating system vendor provides.
The fontconfig
library provides Pango with a standard way of locating
fonts and matching them against font names.
Cairo
is a graphics library that supports vector graphics and image
compositing. Both Pango and GTK+ use cairo for all of their
drawing.
libepoxy
is a library that abstracts the differences between different
OpenGL libraries. GTK+ uses it for cross-platform GL support.
The Wayland libraries
are needed to build GTK+ with the Wayland backend.
The shared-mime-info
package is not a hard dependency of GTK+, but it contains definitions
for mime types that are used by GIO and, indirectly, by GTK+.
gdk-pixbuf will use GIO for mime type detection if possible. For this
to work, shared-mime-info needs to be installed and
XDG_DATA_DIRS set accordingly at configure time.
Otherwise, gdk-pixbuf falls back to its built-in mime type detection.
Building and testing GTK+
First make sure that you have the necessary external
dependencies installed: pkg-config, GNU make,
the JPEG, PNG, and TIFF libraries, FreeType, and, if necessary,
libiconv and libintl. To get detailed information about building
these packages, see the documentation provided with the
individual packages.
On a Linux system, it's quite likely you'll have all of these
installed already except for pkg-config.
Then build and install the GTK+ libraries in the order:
GLib, Pango, ATK, then GTK+. For each library, follow the
steps of configure, make,
make install mentioned above. If you're
lucky, this will all go smoothly, and you'll be ready to
start compiling your own GTK+
applications. You can test your GTK+ installation
by running the gtk3-demo program that
GTK+ installs.
If either the meson setup or the
meson compile commands fail, look closely
at the error messages printed; these will often provide useful
information as to what went wrong.
Extra Configuration Options
In addition to the standard meson options
when configuring the GTK+ project, you have a number of
additional arguments. (Command line arguments for the other
libraries are described in the documentation distributed with
the those libraries.)
meson setup-Dxinerama=[yes/no/auto]-Dgtk_doc=[false/true]-Dprint_backends=["cups,file,lpr,papi,test,auto"]-Dx11_backend=[false/true]-Dwin32_backend=[false/true]-Dquartz_backend=[false/true]-Dbroadway_backend=[false/true]-Dwayland_backend=[false/true]-Dintrospection=[false/true]-Dinstalled_tests=[false/true]-Dxinerama
By default GTK will try to link against the Xinerama libraries
if they are found. This option can be used to explicitly control
whether Xinerama should be used.
-Dgtk_doc
The gtk-doc package is
used to generate the reference documentation included
with GTK+. By default support for gtk-doc
is disabled because it requires various extra dependencies
to be installed. If you have
gtk-doc installed and
are modifying GTK+, you may want to enable
gtk-doc support by passing
in -Dgtk_doc=true. If not
enabled, pre-generated HTML files distributed with GTK+
will be installed.
-Dprint_backends
By default GTK will try to build the appropriate print backend
for the system. You can specify the print backends manually to
explicitly control which backends should be build.
-Dx11_backend,
-Dwin32_backend,
-Dquartz_backend,
-Dbroadway_backend,
-Dwayland_backend
Enable specific backends for GDK. If none of these options
are given, the x11 backend will be enabled by default,
unless the platform is Windows, in which case the default is
win32. If any backend is explicitly enabled or disabled, no
other platform will be enabled automatically. Other
supported backends are the quartz backend for macOS, and the
HTML-based Broadway backend.
-Dintrospection
Build with or without introspection support.
The default is 'true'.
-Dinstalled-tests
Whether to install tests on the system. If enabled, tests
and their data are installed in ${libexecdir}/gtk+/installed-tests.
Metadata for the tests is installed in ${prefix}/share/installed-tests/gtk+.
To run the installed tests, gnome-desktop-testing-runner
can be used.