# Build Instructions This document contains instructions for building OwnTone from the git tree. If you just want to build from a release tarball, you don't need the build tools (git, autotools, autoconf, automake, gawk, gperf, gettext, bison and flex), and you can skip the autoreconf step. ## Quick Version for Debian/Ubuntu If you are the lucky kind, this should get you all the required tools and libraries: ```bash sudo apt-get install \ build-essential git autotools-dev autoconf automake libtool gettext gawk \ gperf bison flex libconfuse-dev libunistring-dev libsqlite3-dev \ libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libavfilter-dev libswscale-dev libavutil-dev \ libasound2-dev libmxml-dev libgcrypt20-dev libavahi-client-dev zlib1g-dev \ libevent-dev libplist-dev libsodium-dev libjson-c-dev libwebsockets-dev \ libcurl4-openssl-dev libprotobuf-c-dev ``` Note that OwnTone will also work with other versions and flavours of libgcrypt and libcurl, so the above are just suggestions. The following features require extra packages, and that you add a configure argument when you run ./configure: Feature | Configure argument | Packages ---------------------|--------------------------|------------------------------------- Chromecast | `--enable-chromecast` | libgnutls*-dev PulseAudio | `--with-pulseaudio` | libpulse-dev These features can be disabled saving you package dependencies: Feature | Configure argument | Packages ---------------------|--------------------------|------------------------------------- Spotify (built-in) | `--disable-spotify` | libprotobuf-c-dev Player web UI | `--disable-webinterface` | libwebsockets-dev Live web UI | `--without-libwebsockets`| libwebsockets-dev Then run the following (adding configure arguments for optional features): ```bash git clone https://github.com/owntone/owntone-server.git cd owntone-server autoreconf -i ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var --enable-install-user make sudo make install ``` Using `--enable-install-user` means that `make install` will also add system user and group for owntone. With the above configure arguments, a systemd service file will be installed to `/etc/systemd/system/owntone.service` so that the server will start on boot. Use `--disable-install-systemd` if you don't want that. Now edit `/etc/owntone.conf`. Note the guide at the top highlighting which settings that normally require modification. Start the server with `sudo systemctl start owntone` and check that it is running with `sudo systemctl status owntone`. See the [Documentation](getting-started.md) for usage information. ## Quick version for Fedora If you haven't already enabled the free RPM fusion packages do that, since you will need ffmpeg. You can google how to do that. Then run: ```bash sudo dnf install \ git automake autoconf gettext-devel gperf gawk libtool bison flex \ sqlite-devel libconfuse-devel libunistring-devel mxml-devel libevent-devel \ avahi-devel libgcrypt-devel zlib-devel alsa-lib-devel ffmpeg-devel \ libplist-devel libsodium-devel json-c-devel libwebsockets-devel \ libcurl-devel protobuf-c-devel ``` Clone the OwnTone repo: ```bash git clone https://github.com/owntone/owntone-server.git cd owntone-server ``` Then run the following: ```bash autoreconf -i ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var --enable-install-user make sudo make install ``` Using `--enable-install-user` means that `make install` will also add system user and group for owntone. With the above configure arguments, a systemd service file will be installed to `/etc/systemd/system/owntone.service` so that the server will start on boot. Use `--disable-install-systemd` if you don't want that. Now edit `/etc/owntone.conf`. Note the guide at the top highlighting which settings that normally require modification. Start the server with `sudo systemctl start owntone` and check that it is running with `sudo systemctl status owntone`. See the [Documentation](getting-started.md) for usage information. ## Quick Version for FreeBSD 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. ## Quick Version for macOS Using Homebrew This workflow file used for building OwnTone via Github actions includes all the steps that you need to execute: [.github/workflows/macos.yml](https://github.com/owntone/owntone-server/blob/master/.github/workflows/macos.yml) ## "Quick" Version for macOS Using MacPorts Caution: 1) this approach may be out of date, consider using the Homebrew method above since it is continuously tested. 2) MacPorts requires many downloads and lots of time to install (and sometimes build) ports. You will need a decent network connection and some patience! Install MacPorts (which requires Xcode): ```bash sudo port install \ autoconf automake libtool pkgconfig git gperf bison flex libgcrypt \ libunistring libconfuse ffmpeg libevent json-c libwebsockets curl \ libplist libsodium protobuf-c ``` Download, configure, build, and install the [Mini-XML library](https://www.msweet.org/mxml/) Download, configure, build and install the [libinotify-kqueue library](https://github.com/libinotify-kqueue/libinotify-kqueue) Add the following to `.bashrc`: ```bash # add /usr/local to pkg-config path export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/usr/local/lib/pkgconfig:/opt/local/lib/pkgconfig # libunistring doesn't support pkg-config, set overrides export LIBUNISTRING_CFLAGS=-I/opt/local/include export LIBUNISTRING_LIBS="-L/opt/local/lib -lunistring" ``` Optional features require the following additional ports: Feature | Configure argument | Ports --------------------|--------------------------|------------------- Chromecast | `--enable-chromecast` | gnutls PulseAudio | `--with-pulseaudio` | pulseaudio Clone the OwnTone repository: ```bash git clone https://github.com/owntone/owntone-server.git cd owntone-server ``` Finally, configure, build, install, and add configuration arguments for optional features: ```bash autoreconf -i ./configure make sudo make install ``` Note: if for some reason you've installed the `avahi` port, you need to add `--without-avahi` to configure above. Edit `/usr/local/etc/owntone.conf` and change the `uid` to a proper system daemon (eg: unknown), and run the following commands: ```bash sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/var/run sudo mkdir -p /usr/local/var/log # or change logfile in conf sudo chown unknown /usr/local/var/cache/owntone # or change conf ``` Run OwnTone: ```bash sudo /usr/local/sbin/owntone ``` Verify it is running (you need to Ctrl+C to stop dns-sd): ```bash dns-sd -B _daap._tcp ``` ## Long Version - Requirements Required tools: - 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 - bison 3.0+ (yacc is not sufficient) - flex (lex is not sufficient) Libraries: - [Avahi](https://avahi.org/) client libraries (avahi-client) 0.6.24+ - [SQLite](https://sqlite.org/) 3.5.0+ with the unlock notify API enabled. SQLite needs to be built with the support for the unlock notify API; this is not always the case in binary packages, so you may need to rebuild SQLite to enable the unlock notify API. You can check for the presence of the `sqlite3_unlock_notify` symbol in the sqlite library. Refer to the `SQLITE_ENABLE_UNLOCK_NOTIFY` in the SQLlite documentation. - [FFmpeg](https://ffmpeg.org/) - [libconfuse](https://github.com/libconfuse/libconfuse) - [libevent](https://libevent.org/) 2.1.4+ - [Mini-XML](https://www.msweet.org/mxml/) (aka mxml or libmxml) - [Libgcrypt](https://gnupg.org/software/libgcrypt/) 1.2.0+ - [zlib](https://zlib.net/) - [libunistring](https://www.gnu.org/software/libunistring/) 0.9.3+ - [json-c](https://github.com/json-c/json-c/) - [libcurl](https://curl.se/libcurl/) - [libplist](https://github.com/JonathanBeck/libplist/) 0.16+ - [libsodium](https://doc.libsodium.org/) - [protobuf-c](https://github.com/protobuf-c/protobuf-c/) - [alsa-lib](https://github.com/alsa-project/alsa-lib/) (optional - ALSA local audio) often already installed as part of your distro - [PulseAudio](https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/PulseAudio/) (optional - PulseAudio local audio) - [GnuTLS](https://www.gnutls.org/) (optional - Chromecast support) - [Libwebsockets](https://libwebsockets.org/) 2.0.2+ (optional - websocket support) Note: If using binary packages, remember that you need the development packages to build OwnTone (usually suffixed with -dev or -devel). ## Long Version - Building and Installing Start by generating the build system by running `autoreconf -i`. This will generate the configure script and `Makefile.in`. To display the configure options `run ./configure --help`. Support for Spotify is optional. Use `--disable-spotify` to disable this feature. Support for LastFM scrobbling is optional. Use `--enable-lastfm` to enable this feature. Support for the MPD protocol is optional. Use `--disable-mpd` to disable this feature. Support for Chromecast devices is optional. Use `--enable-chromecast` to enable this feature. The player web interface is optional. Use `--disable-webinterface` to disable this feature. If enabled, `sudo make install` will install the prebuild html, js, css files. The prebuild files are: - `htdocs/index.html` - `htdocs/player/*` The source for the player web interface is located under the `web-src` folder and requires nodejs >= 6.0 to be built. In the `web-src` folder run `npm install` to install all dependencies for the player web interface. After that run `npm run build`. This will build the web interface and update the `htdocs` folder. (See [Web interface](clients/web-interface.md) for more informations) Building with libwebsockets is required if you want the web interface. It will be enabled if the library is present (with headers). Use `--without-libwebsockets` to disable. Building with PulseAudio is optional. It will be enabled if the library is present (with headers). Use `--without-pulseaudio` to disable. Recommended build settings: ```bash ./configure --prefix=/usr --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var --enable-install-user ``` After configure run the usual make, and if that went well, `sudo make install`. With the above configure arguments, a systemd service file will be installed to `/etc/systemd/system/owntone.service` so that the server will start on boot. Use `--disable-install-systemd` if you don't want that. Using `--enable-install-user` means that `make install` will also add a system user and group for owntone. After installation: - edit the configuration file, `/etc/owntone.conf` - make sure the Avahi daemon is installed and running (Debian: `apt install avahi-daemon`) OwnTone will drop privileges to any user you specify in the configuration file if it's started as root. This user must have read permission to your library and read/write permissions to the database location (`$localstatedir/cache/owntone` by default). ## Non-Priviliged User Version for Development OwnTone is meant to be run as system wide daemon, but for development purposes you may want to run it isolated to your regular user. The following description assumes that you want all runtime data stored in `$HOME/owntone_data` and the source in `$HOME/projects/owntone-server`. Prepare directories for runtime data: ```bash mkdir -p $HOME/owntone_data/etc mkdir -p $HOME/owntone_data/media ``` Copy one or more mp3 file to test with to `owntone_data/media`. Checkout OwnTone and configure build: ```bash cd $HOME/projects git clone https://github.com/owntone/owntone-server.git cd owntone-server autoreconf -vi ./configure --prefix=$HOME/owntone_data/usr --sysconfdir=$HOME/owntone_data/etc --localstatedir=$HOME/owntone_data/var ``` Build and install runtime: ```bash make install ``` Edit `owntone_data/etc/owntone.conf`, find the following configuration settings and set them to these values: ```conf uid = ${USER} loglevel = "debug" directories = { "${HOME}/owntone_data/media" } ``` Run the server: ```bash ./src/owntone -f ``` Note: You can also use the copy of the binary located in `$HOME/owntone_data/usr/sbin`