Installation instructions for forked-daapd ------------------------------------------ This document contains instructions for installing forked-daapd from the git tree. The source for this version of forked-daapd can be found here: The original (now unmaintained) source can be found here: Quick version for Debian/Ubuntu users ------------------------------------- If you are the lucky kind, this should get you all the required tools and libraries: sudo apt-get install \ build-essential git autotools-dev autoconf libtool gettext gawk gperf \ antlr3 libantlr3c-dev libconfuse-dev libunistring-dev libsqlite3-dev \ libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libswscale-dev libavutil-dev libasound2-dev \ libmxml-dev libgcrypt11-dev libavahi-client-dev libavl-dev zlib1g-dev \ libevent-dev Depending on the version of libav/ffmpeg in your distribution you may also need libavresample-dev. To build with LastFM support, you should also install libcurl4-openssl-dev. Note that while forked-daapd will work with versions of libevent between 2.0.0 and 2.1.3, it is recommended to use either libevent 1 or 2.1.4+. Otherwise you will not have support for Shoutcast metadata and simultaneous streaming to multiple clients. Libevent 1 is not in the Debian repository, but you can get the packages in the Ubuntu repository. Then run the following: git clone https://github.com/ejurgensen/forked-daapd.git cd forked-daapd autoreconf -i ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var make sudo make install Finally, read the bit in the bottom of this document about init scripts, read the README, edit the configuration file and restart the server. Quick version for FreeBSD 10+ ----------------------------- The build process for FreeBSD is rather complicated, but the good news is that there is a script in the 'scripts' folder that will at least attempt to do all the work for you. And should the script not work for you, you can still look through it and use it as an installation guide. Long version - requirements --------------------------- Required tools: - ANTLR v3 is required to build forked-daapd, along with its C runtime (libantlr3c). Use a version between 3.1.3 and 3.4 of ANTLR v3 and the matching C runtime version. Get it from - Java runtime: ANTLR is written in Java and as such a JRE is required to run the tool. The JRE is enough, you don't need a full JDK. - autotools: autoconf 2.63+, automake 1.10+, libtool 2.2. Run autoreconf -i at the top of the source tree to generate the build system. - gettext: libunistring requires iconv and gettext provides the autotools macro definitions for iconv. - gperf Libraries: - libantlr3c (ANTLR3 C runtime, use the same version as antlr3) from - Avahi client libraries (avahi-client), 0.6.24 minimum from - sqlite3 3.5.0+ with unlock notify API enabled (read below) from - libav 0.6.x - 0.8.x (or ffmpeg 0.5.x - 0.10.x) from - libconfuse from - libevent 1.4+ (best with version 1.4 or 2.1.4+) from - libavl 0.3.5 from - MiniXML (aka mxml or libmxml) from - gcrypt 1.2.0+ from - zlib from - libunistring 0.9.3+ from - libasound (optional - ALSA support, recommended for Linux) from - libflac (optional - FLAC support) from - taglib (optional - Musepack support) from - libplist 0.16+ (optional - iTunes XML support) from - libspotify (optional - Spotify support) from - libcurl (optional - LastFM support) from If using binary packages, remember that you need the development packages to build forked-daapd (usually named -dev or -devel). libavl is not the GNU libavl. There doesn't seem to be an upstream website anymore, but you can fetch it from any Debian mirror. sqlite3 needs to be built with support for the unlock notify API; this isn't always the case in binary packages, so you may need to rebuild sqlite3 to enable the unlock notify API (you can check for the presence of the sqlite3_unlock_notify symbol in the sqlite3 library). Refer to the sqlite3 documentation, look for SQLITE_ENABLE_UNLOCK_NOTIFY. libav (or ffmpeg) is a central piece of forked-daapd and most other FLOSS multimedia applications. The version of libav you use will potentially have a great influence on your experience with forked-daapd. forked-daapd is known to be working with libav 0.8.x, but it also supports older versions of libav and ffmpeg. Embedded artwork is only supported if your version of forked-daapd is built with libav 9+ or ffmpeg 0.11+. Long version - building and installing -------------------------------------- Start by generating the build system by running autoreconf -i. This will generate the configure script and Makefile.in. The configure script will look for a wrapper called antlr3 in the PATH to invoke ANTLR3. If your installation of ANTLR3 does not come with such a wrapper, create one as follows: #!/bin/sh CLASSPATH=... exec /path/to/java -cp $CLASSPATH org.antlr.Tool "@" Adjust the CLASSPATH as needed so that Java will find all the jars needed by ANTLR3. The parsers will be generated during the build, no manual intervention is needed. To display the configure options run ./configure --help Support for Spotify is optional. Use --enable-spotify to enable this feature. If you enable this feature libspotify/api.h is required at compile time. Forked-daapd uses runtime dynamic linking to the libspotify library, so even though you compiled with --enable-spotify, the executable will still be able to run on systems without libspotify (the Spotify features will then be disabled). Support for LastFM scrobbling is optional. Use --enable-lastfm to enable this feature. Support for iTunes Music Library XML format is optional. Use --enable-itunes to enable this feature. FLAC and Musepack support are optional, and they are probably only required if your version of libav/ffmpeg is very old (version 0.5 or 0.6). Use --enable-flac and --enable-musepack to enable. Support for the MPD protocol is optional. Use --enable-mpd to enable this feature. Recommended build settings: ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var After configure run the usual make, and if that went well, sudo make install Long version - after installation --------------------------------- After installation, edit the configuration file, /etc/forked-daapd.conf and adjust the values at your convenience. forked-daapd will drop privileges to any user you'll specify in the configuration file if it's started as root. This user must have read permission on your library (you can create a group for this and make the user a member of the group, for instance) and read/write permissions on the database location ($localstatedir/cache/forked-daapd by default). You'll need an init script if you want to start forked-daapd at boot. A simple init script will do, forked-daapd daemonizes all by itself and creates a pidfile under /var/run. Different distributions have different standards for init scripts and some do not use init scripts anymore; check the documentation for your distribution. For dependency-based boot systems, here are the forked-daapd dependencies: - local filesystems - network filesystems, if needed in your setup (library on NFS, ...) - networking - NTP - Avahi daemon The LSB header below sums it up: ### BEGIN INIT INFO # Provides: forked-daapd # Required-Start: $local_fs $remote_fs $network $time # Required-Stop: $local_fs $remote_fs $network $time # Should-Start: avahi # Should-Stop: avahi # Default-Start: 2 3 4 5 # Default-Stop: 0 1 6 # Short-Description: DAAP/DACP (iTunes) server, support for AirPlay and Spotify # Description: forked-daapd is an iTunes-compatible media server for # sharing your media library over the local network with DAAP # clients like iTunes. Like iTunes, it can be controlled by # Apple Remote (and compatibles) and stream music directly to # AirPlay devices. It also supports streaming to RSP clients # (Roku devices) and streaming from Spotify. ### END INIT INFO