Kiwix Build provides advanced tools to (cross-)compile easily Kiwix & openZIM softwares and libraries and deploy them. They have been tested on Fedora 35+ & Ubuntu 20.04+.
Kiwix Build audience is:
- Advanced users who don't want/can handle all the dependencies compilations manually
- Kiwix developer team for its own CI/CD
You will need a recent version of Meson (>= 0.34) and Ninja (>= 1.6) If your distribution provides a recent enough versions for them, just install them with your package manager. Continue to read the instructions otherwise.
Before anything else you need to install Python3 related tools. On Debian based systems:
sudo apt-get install python3-pip virtualenv
Create a virtual environment to install python module in it instead of modifying the system.
virtualenv -p python3 ./ # Create virtualenv
source bin/activate # Activate the virtualenv
Then, download and install kiwix-build and its dependencies:
git clone https://github.com/kiwix/kiwix-build.git
cd kiwix-build
pip3 install .
hash -r # Refresh bash paths
The compilation is handled by the kiwix-build
command. It will compile
everything. If you are using a supported platform (Redhat or Debian
based) it will install missing packages using sudo
. You can get
kiwix-build
usage like this:
kiwix-build --help
You may want to compile a specific target so you will have to specify it on the
command line:
kiwix-build libkiwix # will build kiwix-build and its dependencies
kiwix-build kiwix-desktop # will build kiwix-desktop and its dependencies
kiwix-build zim-tools # will build zim-tools and its dependencies
By default, kiwix-build
will build kiwix-tools
.
To see the whole list of available targets run with non existing target, ex:
kiwix-build not-existing-target
...
invalid choice: 'not-existing-target' (choose from 'alldependencies', 'android-ndk',
...
If no config is specified, the default will be native_dyn
.
You can select another config using the option
--config
. For now, there is ten different supported
platforms:
- native_dyn
- native_mixed
- native_static
- android
- android_arm
- android_arm64
- android_x86
- android_x86_64
- flatpak
All native_*
config means using the native compiler without any cross-compilation option.
Other may simply use cross-compilation or may download a specific toolchain to use.
kiwix-android
(https://github.com/kiwix/kiwix-android) depends of
the libkiwix
project.
When building libkiwix
, you should directly use the
target-platform android_<arch>
:
kiwix-build libkiwix --config android_arm
You may directly use the special config android
which will build different android architectures
kiwix-build --config android libkiwix
By default, it will build for all android architecture,
you can limit this with option --android-arch
:
kiwix-build libkiwix --config android --android-arch arm # aar with arm architecture
kiwix-build libkiwix --config android --android-arch arm --android-arch arm64 # aan with arm and arm64 architectures
To build kiwix-android
itself, you should see the documentation of kiwix-android
.
When building for ios, we may want to compile a "fat library", a library for several architectures.
To do so, you should directly use the target-platfrom ios_multi
.
As for android
, kiwix-build
will build the library several times
(once for each platform) and then create the fat library.
kiwix-build --config iOS_multi libkiwix
You can specify the supported architectures with the option --ios-arch
:
kiwix-build --config iOS_multi libkiwix # all architetures
kiwix-build --config iOS_multi --ios-arch arm --ios-arch arm64 # arm and arm64 arch only
Kiwix-build.py will create several directories:
ARCHIVES
: All the downloaded archives go there.SOURCES
: All the sources (extracted from archives and patched) go there.BUILD_<config>
: All the build files go there.BUILD_<config>/INSTALL
: The installed files go there.BUILD_<config>/LOGS
: The logs files of the build.
If you want to install all those directories elsewhere, you can pass the
--working-dir
option to kiwix-build
:
If you need to install Meson "manually":
virtualenv -p python3 ./ # Create virtualenv
source bin/activate # Activate the virtualenv
pip3 install meson # Install Meson
hash -r # Refresh bash paths
If you need to install Ninja "manually":
wget https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/releases/download/v1.8.2/ninja-linux.zip
unzip ninja-linux.zip ninja -d $HOME/bin