Unnamed repository; edit this file 'description' to name the repository.
Diffstat (limited to 'book/src/building-from-source.md')
| -rw-r--r-- | book/src/building-from-source.md | 208 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 208 deletions
diff --git a/book/src/building-from-source.md b/book/src/building-from-source.md deleted file mode 100644 index 33038098..00000000 --- a/book/src/building-from-source.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,208 +0,0 @@ -## Building from source - -- [Configuring Helix's runtime files](#configuring-helixs-runtime-files) - - [Linux and macOS](#linux-and-macos) - - [Windows](#windows) - - [Multiple runtime directories](#multiple-runtime-directories) - - [Note to packagers](#note-to-packagers) -- [Validating the installation](#validating-the-installation) -- [Configure the desktop shortcut](#configure-the-desktop-shortcut) -- [Building the Debian package](#building-the-debian-package) - -Requirements: - -Clone the Helix GitHub repository into a directory of your choice. The -examples in this documentation assume installation into either `~/src/` on -Linux and macOS, or `%userprofile%\src\` on Windows. - -- The [Rust toolchain](https://www.rust-lang.org/tools/install) -- The [Git version control system](https://git-scm.com/) -- A C++14 compatible compiler to build the tree-sitter grammars, for example GCC or Clang - -If you are using the `musl-libc` standard library instead of `glibc` the following environment variable must be set during the build to ensure tree-sitter grammars can be loaded correctly: - -```sh -RUSTFLAGS="-C target-feature=-crt-static" -``` - -1. Clone the repository: - - ```sh - git clone https://github.com/helix-editor/helix - cd helix - ``` - -2. Compile from source: - - ```sh - # Reproducible - cargo install --path helix-term --locked - ``` - ```sh - # Optimized - cargo install \ - --profile opt \ - --config 'build.rustflags=["-C", "target-cpu=native"]' \ - --path helix-term \ - --locked - ``` - - Either command will create the `hx` executable and construct the tree-sitter - grammars in the local `runtime` folder. - -> 💡 If you do not want to fetch or build grammars, set an environment variable `HELIX_DISABLE_AUTO_GRAMMAR_BUILD` - -> 💡 Tree-sitter grammars can be fetched and compiled if not pre-packaged. Fetch -> grammars with `hx --grammar fetch` and compile them with -> `hx --grammar build`. This will install them in -> the `runtime` directory within the user's helix config directory (more -> [details below](#multiple-runtime-directories)). - -### Configuring Helix's runtime files - -#### Linux and macOS - -The **runtime** directory is one below the Helix source, so either export a -`HELIX_RUNTIME` environment variable to point to that directory and add it to -your `~/.bashrc` or equivalent: - -```sh -export HELIX_RUNTIME=~/src/helix/runtime -``` - -Or, create a symbolic link: - -```sh -ln -Tsf $PWD/runtime ~/.config/helix/runtime -``` - -#### Windows - -Either set the `HELIX_RUNTIME` environment variable to point to the runtime files using the Windows setting (search for -`Edit environment variables for your account`) or use the `setx` command in -Cmd: - -```sh -setx HELIX_RUNTIME "%userprofile%\src\helix\runtime" -``` - -> 💡 `%userprofile%` resolves to your user directory like -> `C:\Users\Your-Name\` for example. - -Or, create a symlink in `%appdata%\helix\` that links to the source code directory: - -| Method | Command | -| ---------- | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | -| PowerShell | `New-Item -ItemType Junction -Target "runtime" -Path "$Env:AppData\helix\runtime"` | -| Cmd | `cd %appdata%\helix` <br/> `mklink /D runtime "%userprofile%\src\helix\runtime"` | - -> 💡 On Windows, creating a symbolic link may require running PowerShell or -> Cmd as an administrator. - -#### Multiple runtime directories - -When Helix finds multiple runtime directories it will search through them for files in the -following order: - -1. `runtime/` sibling directory to `$CARGO_MANIFEST_DIR` directory (this is intended for - developing and testing helix only). -2. `runtime/` subdirectory of OS-dependent helix user config directory. -3. `$HELIX_RUNTIME` -4. Distribution-specific fallback directory (set at compile time—not run time— - with the `HELIX_DEFAULT_RUNTIME` environment variable) -5. `runtime/` subdirectory of path to Helix executable. - -This order also sets the priority for selecting which file will be used if multiple runtime -directories have files with the same name. - -#### Note to packagers - -If you are making a package of Helix for end users, to provide a good out of -the box experience, you should set the `HELIX_DEFAULT_RUNTIME` environment -variable at build time (before invoking `cargo build`) to a directory which -will store the final runtime files after installation. For example, say you want -to package the runtime into `/usr/lib/helix/runtime`. The rough steps a build -script could follow are: - -1. `export HELIX_DEFAULT_RUNTIME=/usr/lib/helix/runtime` -1. `cargo build --profile opt --locked` -1. `cp -r runtime $BUILD_DIR/usr/lib/helix/` -1. `cp target/opt/hx $BUILD_DIR/usr/bin/hx` - -This way the resulting `hx` binary will always look for its runtime directory in -`/usr/lib/helix/runtime` if the user has no custom runtime in `~/.config/helix` -or `HELIX_RUNTIME`. - -### Validating the installation - -To make sure everything is set up as expected you should run the Helix health -check: - -```sh -hx --health -``` - -For more information on the health check results refer to -[Health check](https://github.com/helix-editor/helix/wiki/Healthcheck). - -### Configure the desktop shortcut - -If your desktop environment supports the -[XDG desktop menu](https://specifications.freedesktop.org/menu-spec/menu-spec-latest.html) -you can configure Helix to show up in the application menu by copying the -provided `.desktop` and icon files to their correct folders: - -```sh -cp contrib/Helix.desktop ~/.local/share/applications -cp contrib/helix.png ~/.icons # or ~/.local/share/icons -``` -It is recommended to convert the links in the `.desktop` file to absolute paths to avoid potential problems: - -```sh -sed -i -e "s|Exec=hx %F|Exec=$(readlink -f ~/.cargo/bin/hx) %F|g" \ - -e "s|Icon=helix|Icon=$(readlink -f ~/.icons/helix.png)|g" ~/.local/share/applications/Helix.desktop -``` - -To use another terminal than the system default, you can modify the `.desktop` -file. For example, to use `kitty`: - -```sh -sed -i "s|Exec=hx %F|Exec=kitty hx %F|g" ~/.local/share/applications/Helix.desktop -sed -i "s|Terminal=true|Terminal=false|g" ~/.local/share/applications/Helix.desktop -``` - -### Building the Debian package - -If the `.deb` file provided on the release page uses a `libc` version higher -than that used by your Debian, Ubuntu, or Mint system, you can build the package -from source to match your system's dependencies. - -Install `cargo-deb`, the tool used for building the `.deb` file: - -```sh -cargo install cargo-deb -``` - -After cloning and entering the Helix repository as previously described, -use the following command to build the release binary and package it into a `.deb` file in a single step. - -```sh -cargo deb -- --locked -``` - -> 💡 This locks you into the `--release` profile. But you can also build helix in any way you like. -> As long as you leave a `target/release/hx` file, it will get packaged with `cargo deb --no-build` - -> 💡 Don't worry about the following: -> ``` -> warning: Failed to find dependency specification -> ``` -> Cargo deb just reports which packaged files it didn't derive dependencies for. But -> so far the dependency deriving seams very good, even if some of the grammar files are skipped. - -You can find the resulted `.deb` in `target/debian/`. It should contain everything it needs, including the - -- completions for bash, fish, zsh -- .desktop file -- icon (though desktop environments might use their own since the name of the package is correctly `helix`) -- launcher to the binary with the runtime |