Warning
Much of the information here is outdated and refers to obsolete OOo versions.
For current information on how to build OOo, see the OOo Wiki: Building Guide
Building OpenOffice.org 2.x (680er/300er series) under Windows with 4NT
Beware! The build instructions for OpenOffice.org 1.1.x (and older) are different!
Last changes made: $Date: 2010/06/08 16:09:13 $
This document describes the requirements and actions that you need to build OpenOffice.org on Windows.
Commands you have to type on the keyboard follow this syntax throughout this document:
D:\my\source> winenv.bat
In this example, the script winenv.bat
is executed in the directory
D:\my\source
under a 4NT shell. Unless stated otherwise, all commands
appearing in this document should be entered from a 4NT shell (the exception
is the configure script which has to be run from a cygwin bash shell).
$SRC_ROOT
will denote the directory in which the source code
of OpenOffice.org is stored.
Table of Contents
- Overview
- Build Requirements
- Build Instructions
- Instructions to Build an Installation Set
- Building Localized Versions of OpenOffice.org
- Building Localized Language Packs
Overview
This section is meant as a reminder or checklist for those who have some experience in building OpenOffice.org. Everybody else should jump to the Build Requirements section.
Even experienced builders are well advised to check the release notes at http://development.openoffice.org/releases/2.0.0rc2.html and the section Build Requirements in this document to inform yourself about changes since the previous releases.
Detailed step-by-step build descriptions are given from the next section on.
Overview of Performing a Full Build
To perform a full build, you need to follow these steps:
- Get the source code, either from the download webpage (http://download.openoffice.org/next) or alternatively via a check-out from the cvs tree against a release tag, e.g. OpenOffice_3_1_0.
- Run the
configure
script in a cygwin bash shell to check all requirements and to create the scriptwinenv.bat
. - Run the
winenv.bat
(under 4NT) script to set all environment variables.Please see the last screen from the configure script for more specific information on setting up for your platform.
- Build typing
dmake
in$SRC_ROOT
, orbuild --all
in theinstetoo_native
module, orbuild
followed bydeliver
in the individual modules.
Build Requirements
Before you start building, you must ensure that your system satisfies the recommended software and hardware requirements for the type of system you are working on. For Windows, these are as follows:
see Windows Build RequirementsGet the source code
You have two options to get the source code:
-
Download the source code tarball
(http://download.openoffice.org/3.1.0/source.html),
e.g.
OOo_3.1.0_src_core.tar.gz
in case of the 3.1 stable release.Unpack the tarballs as follows:
> tar -xvzf OOo_3.1.0_src_core.tar.gz > cd OOO300m9
This will be $SRC_ROOT from now on. Please check the OpenOffice.org Wiki for more detailed information about the source tarballs.
-
Another possibility is to check out the code from the subversion tree.
The non-bold slash means that the command should be in one line. It is
possible to update an already existing older copy to a newer release:
$SRC_ROOT> svn / co svn://svn.services.openoffice.org/ooo/tags/OpenOffice_3_1_0 /
-
A note on the tags (i.e. the argument to the -r option in the cvs commands listed above): If trunk is used as a tag, you will get the newest latest source code. This, however, will most likely not build since development is going on there. See http://tools.openoffice.org#CWS for a description of the development process with child workspaces and Environment Information System for the current child workspaces and milestones.
Generating the Build Environment and Build Tools
Ideally, in keeping with the principles of open source, you would use an open source shell to build on a computer running a Win32 operating system. However, you decided to use a non-open source shell to build on a computer running a Win32 operating system: the 4NT command shell.
On the other hand, the bash
shell from the cygwin tools is needed to run
the configure
script which generates the build environment. The
configure
script checks that all software, hardware, and system
requirements for the build are satisfied, and it creates a configuration file
called winenv.bat
that sets all necessary
build environment variables and builds the dmake.exe
.
See the example below.
This configuration file is created in the SRC_ROOT
directory.
A top-level makefile script makefile.mk
are moved into SRC_ROOT
as well. This is due to technical reasons:
The SRC_ROOT
directory in the cvs tree can only hold directories.
On the other hand, the top-level makefile.mk
should logically be
placed in the top-level directory SRC_ROOT
. The cvs tree holds
these files in config_office
and configure
copies
them up.
The following should demonstrate in detail what steps have to be done to set up the environment:
As 4nt is not the only possible shell, you have to enable the use of 4NT with--with-use-shell=4nt
-
Run the configure script according to the following example. We assume here that
-
the source code is in
C:\OOO300_m9
-
JDK 1.4.1_02 is installed in
C:\j2sdk1.4.1_02
-
the Microsoft Compiler is located in
c:\Programme\Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 2003\Vc7
. -
and your zip.exe and unzip.exe are in
C:\unzip
Running the configure script could then look like the following (bold typed text is what you enter):
(open a cygwin bash shell)
cd /cygdrive/c/OOO310_m11/config_office
./configure --with-cl-home="/cygdrive/c/Programme/Microsoft Visual Studio .NET 2003/Vc7" --with-jdk-home=/cygdrive/c/j2sdk1.4.1_02 --with-unzip-home=/cygdrive/c/unzip --with-use-shell=4nt
.
.
.
(some screen output here)
.
.
.
(more screen output here)
bash-2.02$ exit
-
the source code is in
winenv.bat
from your 4NT shell.
Note the change in pathname notation. Since the cygwin bash
shell won't accept backslashes, paths have to be typed in a
cygwin bash notation which is /cygdrive/c/path/to/file
,
instead of C:\path\to\file
. This may appear
confusing at the moment, but sticking to this notation will
work.
There are a number of further options that you can use with the
configure
script. To display these options, type
the following command:
config_office> bash configure --help
After running configure
you have to execute the
configuration file which sets all environment variables. The generated
file is called winenv.bat
.
If you experiment with the newest sources from the cvs-tree, mind that updates
to the configure process may not happen via updates of configure
(the script file) but via the files configure.in
and
set_soenv.in
. The configure script itself is created from
configure.in
using the
autoreconf
command. The perl script set_soenv is created when you
run configure from set_soenv.in.
If you need to modify or create a correct configure you would run commands like the following:
$SRC_ROOT> cd config_office config_office> cvs update configure.in get a bash shell config_office>bash autoconf exit the bash shellTo update the
configure
script. If you only use code from the
snapshot releases on the web, you don't need to be concerned about this.
Build Instructions
Building a Full Build of the Office Suite
Now you are ready to build OpenOffice.org. To build the entire suite, all you have to do (after having created the environment as described above) is to run dmake from the top-level directory. This may take several hours.$SRC_ROOT> dmake
If you wish to control the build more you can perform a build with local install sets or tarballs.
- instsetoo_native will create rpm's or the actual delivery package for your platform.
- instsetoo will create a single tar file containing the build however it is deprecated.
cd $SRC_ROOT cd instetoo_native build --all
If you decide to rebuild a module or build each module individually (mind
dependencies!), you will have to use the build
tool. A subsequent
deliver
will copy all created binaries, libraries etc. into the
solver tree:
$SRC_ROOT/(module)> build $SRC_ROOT/(module)> deliver
The following table shows the time required to build on a system with a particular specification. You can use these details to estimate the time required to build on your system.
Architecture | Intel |
Processor | Athlon XP1700 |
Processor speed | 1466 MHz |
RAM | 512 MB |
Hard Disk | 160 GB 7200 RPM IDE |
Time (for SRC680_m86) | ~17 h |
Building a Project with Debug Information
To rebuild a complete project with debug information, remove all object
files by removing the
wntmsci10.pro
directory. Then run build
with the debug option set to true:
$SRC_ROOT/(module)> rm -rf wntmsci10.pro $SRC_ROOT/(module)> build debug=true
Instructions to Build an Installation Set
The build process (started with a top-level dmake
or
build --all
in $SRC_ROOT/instsetoo_native
) will create
an installation sets in English.
A simple build
in $SRC_ROOT/instsetoo_native
will also create the installation sets, provided all other modules are
already built.
If you have built an installation set earlier and want to re-build it, please delete the local outpath first:
$SRC_ROOT/instsetoo_native> rm -rf wntmsci10.pro
The English installation set will be located at
$SRC_ROOT/instsetoo_native/wntmsci10.pro/OpenOffice/install/en-US
.
Execute the setup
binary to install:
$SRC_ROOT> cd instsetoo_native/wntmsci10.pro/OpenOffice/install/en-US en-US> setup.exeThe en-US in the path names indicates that the localization is American English. This value corresponds to the language tags defined by RFC 1766 (Tags for the Identification of Languages). The German installation set will be located in a de subdirectory. This scheme holds true for all localizations you may have chosen explicitly (see next section Building Localized Versions of OpenOffice.org).
For a network installation, use the -net
option to
setup
. Details on the network installation process
can be found at
http://installation.openoffice.org/proposals/netinstall.html
in the installation project webpage.
For information on creating an automated installation script and create a response file.
Building Localized Versions of OpenOffice.org
Running the configure script with the --with-lang option will introduce the build
of additional language resources. This switch accepts one or more RFC 1766 language
tags as arguments, unfortunately not all languages are supported. Check the value
of the completelangiso
macro in $SRC_ROOT/solenv/inc/postset.mk
for all the currently supported language tags.
Example: --with-lang="de fr"
enables the build of the localized german and
french version.
The environment variable WITH_LANG
will then contain the language tags of the additional (en-US will always be build)
languages.
Building Localized Language Packs
If you build additional localized languages it is possible to generate Language Packs that contain only the changes needed to add the additional language to an OpenOffice.org of a different language.
The following commands will generate language packs languages that were specified with the --with-lang switch during the configure phase. Note that you can only build the language packs after you have build the complete office with all selected languages.
$SRC_ROOT> cd instsetoo_native/util; dmake ooolanguagepack