moment/INSTALL.md
2020-05-20 23:56:19 -04:00

8.9 KiB

Installation

Instructions and releases are currently only available for Linux,
but compiling on Windows and macOS should be possible with the right tools.

Packages

Linux

For developement, or if none of the package options are satisfying,
see manual installation.

AppImage

For x86 64bit glibc-based systems, Mirage is available as an AppImage
on the release page.

AppImages are single executable files that contain the app and all
its dependencies.
Mirage images are built in Ubuntu 16.04, and should therefore run on any distro
released in April 2016 or later.

How to start AppImages
(TL;DR: chmod +x Mirage-*.AppImage && ./Mirage-*.AppImage)

Flatpak

Mirage is also available as a Flatpak
on the release page.
Follow these instructions to install the flatpak
command on your system.

To then install and run the downloaded .flatpak file:

    flatpak remote-add --user --if-not-exists \
        flathub https://flathub.org/repo/flathub.flatpakrepo

    flatpak install --user flathub org.kde.Platform//5.12
    flatpak install --user mirage-*.flatpak

    flatpak run io.github.mirukana.mirage

If downloading the dependencies fail due to e.g. connection error,
run flatpak repair before retrying.

If your architecture is not listed on the release page, clone the repository
and see packaging/flatpak/README.md to build the
package on your machine.

Arch Linux

Available on the AUR

Using a AUR helper to install it,
in this example yay:

yay -S matrix-mirage-git

Manual Installation

Qt 5.12+, Python 3.6+ (with pip to install packages from the
requirements.txt), PyOtherSide 1.5+ and
libolm 3+ are required.
The equivalent -dev or -devel packages are needed, if your distro
splits development headers into their own packages.

For the Pillow Python package, these dependencies are recommended to support
all common image formats:

  • libjpeg-turbo
  • zlib
  • libtiff
  • libwebp
  • openjpeg2

libmediainfo is also required for the pymediainfo package.

Environment Variables

To ensure Qt 5 will be used by default, compile using all CPU cores and
optimize the build for your machine:

export QT_SELECT=5
export MAKEFLAGS="-j$(nproc)"
export CFLAGS="-march=native -O2 -pipe"

Package Manager Dependencies

Alpine Linux 3.9+ / apk

PyOtherSide and
libolm must be manually installed.

sudo apk add qt5-qtquickcontrols2-dev qt5-qtsvg-dev qt5-qtimageformats \
             python3-dev py3-setuptools \
             build-base git cmake \
             libjpeg-turbo-dev zlib-dev tiff-dev libwebp-dev openjpeg-dev \
             libmediainfo-dev

export PATH="/usr/lib/qt5/bin:$PATH"

Arch Linux / pacman & AUR

libolm is from the AUR, this example uses
yay to install it like other packages.
Alternatively, you can just use pacman and
install libolm manually.

yay -Syu qt5-base qt5-declarative qt5-quickcontrols2 qt5-svg \
         qt5-graphicaleffects qt5-imageformats \
         python python-pip \
         python-pyotherside \
         libolm \
         base-devel git cmake \
         libjpeg-turbo zlib libtiff libwebp openjpeg2 libmediainfo

Fedora 30+ / dnf

PyOtherSide and
libolm must be manually installed.

sudo dnf groupinstall 'Development Tools'
sudo dnf install qt5-devel qt5-qtbase qt5-qtdeclarative qt5-qtquickcontrols2 \
                 qt5-qtsvg qt5-qtgraphicaleffects qt5-qtimageformats \
                 python3-devel python3-pip \
                 git cmake \
                 libjpeg-turbo-devel zlib-devel libtiff-devel libwebp-devel	\
                 openjpeg2-devel libmediainfo-devel

sudo ln -s /usr/bin/qmake-qt5 /usr/bin/qmake

Gentoo / emerge

libolm must be manually installed.

You might need to prepend the emerge command with USE=bindist,
if emerge says so.

sudo emerge -av qtcore qtdeclarative qtquickcontrols2 \
                qtsvg qtgraphicaleffects qtimageformats \
                dev-python/pip pyotherside \
                dev-vcs/git cmake \
                libjpeg-turbo zlib tiff libwebp openjpeg libmediainfo

Ubuntu 19.04 / apt

libolm must be manually installed.

sudo apt update
sudo apt install qt5-default qt5-qmake qt5-image-formats-plugins \
                 qml-module-qtquick2 qml-module-qtquick-window2 \
                 qml-module-qtquick-layouts qml-module-qtquick-dialogs \
                 qml-module-qt-labs-platform \
                 qtdeclarative5-dev \
                 qtquickcontrols2-5-dev \
                 python3-dev python3-pip \
                 qml-module:io-thp-pyotherside \
                 build-essential git cmake \
                 libjpeg-turbo8-dev zlib1g-dev libtiff5-dev libwebp-dev \
                 libopenjp2-7-dev libmediainfo-dev

Ubuntu 19.10+, Debian bullseye / apt

Follow the steps for Ubuntu 19.04, but instead of
installing libolm manually:

sudo apt install libolm-dev

Void Linux / xbps

PyOtherSide must be manually installed.

sudo xbps-install -Su qt5-devel qt5-declarative-devel \
                      qt5-quickcontrols2-devel \
                      qt5-svg-devel qt5-graphicaleffects qt5-imageformats \
                      python3-devel python3-pip \
                      olm-devel \
                      base-devel git cmake \
                      libjpeg-turbo-devel zlib-devel tiff-devel libwebp-devel \
                      libopenjpeg2-devel libmediainfo-devel

Installing PyOtherSide Manually

Skip this section if you already installed it from your
distro's package manager.

git clone https://github.com/thp/pyotherside
cd pyotherside
make clean
qmake
make
sudo make install

Installing libolm Manually

Skip this section if you already installed it from your
distro's package manager.

git clone https://gitlab.matrix.org/matrix-org/olm/
cd olm
cmake . -Bbuild
cmake --build build
sudo make install

Installing Mirage

After following the above sections instructions depending on your system,
clone the repository, install the python dependencies, compile and install:

git clone --recursive https://github.com/mirukana/mirage
cd mirage
pip3 install --user -Ur requirements.txt

qmake mirage.pro
make
sudo make install

If everything went fine, run mirage to start.

Common Issues

cffi version mismatch

When installing the python dependencies, if you get a version mismatch error
related to cffi, try:

pip3 install --user --upgrade --force-reinstall cffi

Component is not ready

If the application doesn't start when you run mirage and shows a
QQmlComponent: Component is not ready message in the terminal,
a QML component failed to import due to either missing dependencies
or a programming error.

If PyOtherSide is correctly installed, you should see a similar message:

Got library name:  "/usr/lib/qt5/qml/io/thp/pyotherside/libpyothersideplugin.so"

If not, verify the installed files and their permissions.
To ensure the correct permissions are set for the PyOtherSide plugin files:

sudo chmod -R 755 /usr/lib/qt5/qml/io
sudo chmod 644 /usr/lib/qt5/qml/io/thp/pyotherside/*
sudo chmod 755 /usr/lib/qt5/qml/io/thp/pyotherside/*.so

Note that the Qt lib path might be /usr/lib/qt/ instead of /usr/lib/qt5/,
depending on the distro.