5.2 KiB
Build Instructions (Linux)
Follow the guidelines below for building Electron on Linux.
Prerequisites
- At least 25GB disk space and 8GB RAM.
- Python 2.7.x. Some distributions like CentOS still use Python 2.6.x
so you may need to check your Python version with
python -V
. - Node.js v0.12.x. There are various ways to install Node. You can download source code from Node.js and compile from source. Doing so permits installing Node on your own home directory as a standard user. Or try repositories such as NodeSource.
- Clang 3.4 or later.
- Development headers of GTK+ and libnotify.
On Ubuntu, install the following libraries:
$ sudo apt-get install build-essential clang libdbus-1-dev libgtk2.0-dev \
libnotify-dev libgnome-keyring-dev libgconf2-dev \
libasound2-dev libcap-dev libcups2-dev libxtst-dev \
libxss1 libnss3-dev gcc-multilib g++-multilib curl
On Fedora, install the following libraries:
$ sudo yum install clang dbus-devel gtk2-devel libnotify-devel libgnome-keyring-devel \
xorg-x11-server-utils libcap-devel cups-devel libXtst-devel \
alsa-lib-devel libXrandr-devel GConf2-devel nss-devel
Other distributions may offer similar packages for installation via package managers such as pacman. Or one can compile from source code.
Getting the Code
$ git clone https://github.com/electron/electron.git
Bootstrapping
The bootstrap script will download all necessary build dependencies and create
the build project files. You must have Python 2.7.x for the script to succeed.
Downloading certain files can take a long time. Notice that we are using
ninja
to build Electron so there is no Makefile
generated.
$ cd electron
$ ./script/bootstrap.py -v
Cross compilation
If you want to build for an arm
target you should also install the following
dependencies:
$ sudo apt-get install libc6-dev-armhf-cross linux-libc-dev-armhf-cross \
g++-arm-linux-gnueabihf
And to cross compile for arm
or ia32
targets, you should pass the
--target_arch
parameter to the bootstrap.py
script:
$ ./script/bootstrap.py -v --target_arch=arm
Building
If you would like to build both Release
and Debug
targets:
$ ./script/build.py
This script will cause a very large Electron executable to be placed in
the directory out/R
. The file size is in excess of 1.3 gigabytes. This
happens because the Release target binary contains debugging symbols.
To reduce the file size, run the create-dist.py
script:
$ ./script/create-dist.py
This will put a working distribution with much smaller file sizes in
the dist
directory. After running the create-dist.py script, you
may want to remove the 1.3+ gigabyte binary which is still in out/R
.
You can also build the Debug
target only:
$ ./script/build.py -c D
After building is done, you can find the electron
debug binary under out/D
.
Cleaning
To clean the build files:
$ ./script/clean.py
Troubleshooting
Error While Loading Shared Libraries: libtinfo.so.5
Prebulit clang
will try to link to libtinfo.so.5
. Depending on the host
architecture, symlink to appropriate libncurses
:
$ sudo ln -s /usr/lib/libncurses.so.5 /usr/lib/libtinfo.so.5
Tests
Test your changes conform to the project coding style using:
$ npm run lint
Test functionality using:
$ ./script/test.py
Advanced topics
The default building configuration is targeted for major desktop Linux distributions, to build for a specific distribution or device, following information may help you.
Building libchromiumcontent
locally
To avoid using the prebuilt binaries of libchromiumcontent
, you can pass the
--build_libchromiumcontent
switch to bootstrap.py
script:
$ ./script/bootstrap.py -v --build_libchromiumcontent
Note that by default the shared_library
configuration is not built, so you can
only build Release
version of Electron if you use this mode:
$ ./script/build.py -c R
Using system clang
instead of downloaded clang
binaries
By default Electron is built with prebuilt clang
binaries provided by Chromium
project. If for some reason you want to build with the clang
installed in your
system, you can call bootstrap.py
with --clang_dir=<path>
switch. By passing
it the build script will assume the clang binaries reside in <path>/bin/
.
For example if you installed clang
under /user/local/bin/clang
:
$ ./script/bootstrap.py -v --build_libchromiumcontent --clang_dir /usr/local
$ ./script/build.py -c R
Using other compilers other than clang
To build Electron with compilers like g++
, you first need to disable clang
with --disable_clang
switch first, and then set CC
and CXX
environment
variables to the ones you want.
For example building with GCC toolchain:
$ env CC=gcc CXX=g++ ./script/bootstrap.py -v --build_libchromiumcontent --disable_clang
$ ./script/build.py -c R