====================================== INSTALLING SUBVERSION A Quick Guide ====================================== $LastChangedDate$ *** Note: Subversion is PRE-ALPHA code. Don't use it on real data. *** Contents: I. BUILD REQUIREMENTS II. INSTALLATION A. Bootstrapping from a Tarball or RPM B. Building the Latest Source under Unix C. Building under Unix in Different Directories D. Bootstrapping from a Zip File under Windows E. Building the Latest Source under Windows III. BUILDING A SUBVERSION SERVER A. Setting Up Apache B. Making and Installing the Subversion Server C. Configuring Apache for Subversion D. Running and Testing I. BUILD REQUIREMENTS ================== Subversion depends on a number of third party tools and libraries. If you are bootstrapping from a tarball, zipfile or an RPM then you will already have everything you require to get a Subversion client. So long as you don't plan to build a new client from the latest source or to build a Subversion server, you can go directly to section II.A. Otherwise, you need to read the following so that you can determine what other tools and libraries will be required so that Subversion can be built with the set of features you want. On Unix systems, the './configure' script will tell you if you are missing the correct version of any of the required libraries or tools, so if you are in a real hurry to get building, you can skip straight to section II. If you want to gather the pieces you will need before starting out, however, you should read the following. Note: Because previous builds of Subversion may have installed older versions of these libraries, you may want to run some of the cleanup commands described in section II.B before installing the following. 1. Apache Portable Runtime Whenever you want to build any part of Subversion, you need the Apache Portable Runtime (APR) and the APR Utility (APRUTIL) libraries. At the time of this writing, there were no official release versions of APR/APRUTIL available. If you want Subversion to build the APR libraries from source code as part of the Subversion build process, you can put their source code into the "./apr" and "./apr-util" directories. The Subversion tarball comes with copies of the libraries' source code stored in these subdirectories which you could copy or link to. To be safe, however, you should check out the latest version from the Apache CVS repository, since the latest Subversion may well rely on the latest changes to APR and APRUTIL. You can get the latest version of APR and APRUTIL with the following two commands. If you run them from the directory where you've checked out Subversion, then the APR source code will be in "./apr" and "./apr-util", where Subversion wants it: $ cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@cvs.apache.org:/home/cvspublic login (password: 'anoncvs') $ cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@cvs.apache.org:/home/cvspublic co apr $ cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@cvs.apache.org:/home/cvspublic co apr-util If you already have the APR libraries compiled and do not wish to regenerate it from source code, then Subversion needs to be able to find it. There are a couple of options for Subversion to find where the APR libraries are. By default, it will look for and use the apr-config and apu-config scripts. These scripts provide all the relevant information for the APR and APRUTIL installations. If you want to specify the location of the APR library, you can use the "--with-apr=" option of "./configure". It should be able to find the apr-config script in the standard location under that directory (e.g. ${prefix}/bin). Similar, you can specify the location of APRUTIL using the "--with-apr-util=" option to "./configure". It will look for the apu-config script relative to that directory. For example, if you wanted to use the APR libraries you had built with the Apache HTTP 2.0 server, you could run: $ ./configure --with-apr=/usr/local/apache2 \ --with-apr-util=/usr/local/apache2 ... 2. autoconf 2.50 or newer (Unix only) This is required only if you plan to build from the latest source (See section II.B). Generally only developers would be doing this, but at this stage in Subversion's development chances are you'll want to do this as well. 3. libtool 1.4 or newer (Unix only) This is required only if you plan to build from the latest source (See section II.B), which you probably want to do. See above. 4. bison or yacc (Unix only) This is required only if you plan to build from the latest source (See section II.B), which you probably want to do. See above. The reason one of these programs is required is that it will generate the code which parses complex date formats, so that Subversion can work with dates like "yesterday" and "last month" and "four hours ago". Note that most modern Unices come with one or the other of these programs, and only one is required. The reason you don't need one of these programs on a Windows platform is that the date parsing file has been pregenerated and will automatically be copied into place by the Windows Build. 5. Neon library 0.19.[2-3] The Neon library allows a Subversion client to interact with remote repositories over the Internet. Although in theory you could have the client interact only with local repositories, currently the build system requires Neon to be present. Hopefully, this will be fixed in the future. The Neon library source code can be installed in "./neon" if you want Subversion to build it. The source code is included with the latest Subversion tarball, and it can also be obtained from: http://www.webdav.org/neon/neon-0.19.3.tar.gz Unpack the archive using tar/gunzip and rename the resulting directory from "./neon-0.19.3/" to "./neon/". Without source code, a previously compiled library can be picked up from the standard locations. If you want to specify a nonstandard location, you need to use the LDFLAGS environmental variable when you run "./configure". You may also have to specify where the neon-config script (which identifies various features of the Neon library) is kept by giving the "--with-neon=" option to "./configure". Note that the script should be kept in a "bin" subdirectory beneath whereever "--with-neon" is pointed. 6. Berkeley DB 4.0.14 Berkeley DB is needed to build a Subversion server, or to access a repository on local disk. If you are only interested in building a Subversion client that speaks to a remote (networked) repository, you don't need it. You'll need Berkeley DB 4.0.14 installed on your system. You can get it from: http://www.sleepycat.com/. If you already have another version of Berkeley DB installed and don't want to downgrade, you can unpack the Berkeley 4.0.14 distribution into a subdir named `db' in the top-level of the Subversion source tree. Then Subversion will ignore the system DB and use the one it found in its own source tree. Alternatively, you can add this flag --with-berkeley-db=/usr/local/BerkeleyDB.4.0 to your `configure' switches, and the build process will use the Berkeley library in the named directory. You may need to use a different path, of course. If you are on the Windows platform and want to build Subversion, a precompiled version of the Berkeley DB library is available for download at the Subversion web site: http://subversion.tigris.org/servlets/ProjectDownloadList 7. Apache Web Server 2.0.31 or newer The Apache HTTP server is required if you wish to offer your Subversion repository over the Internet. Building Subversion, the Apache server, and the modules that Apache needs to communicate with Subversion are complicated enough that there is a whole section at the end of this document that describes how it is done. See section III for details. 8. Python 2.0 If you want to run "make check" or build from the latest source under Unix as described in section II.B, install Python 2.0 or higher on your system. The majority of the test suite is written in Python, as is part of Subversion's build system. Get it from http://www.python.org/. 9. Visual C++ 6.0 or newer (Windows Only) To build Subversion under any of the MS Windows platforms, you will need a copy of Microsoft Visual C++. The project files are provided for you. 10. A gnu-like diff and patch Many of the features of the Subversion client require the ability to call out to an external diff or patch program, one that conforms to the behaviour of the GNU versions of these programs. On some versions of Unix, this may involve getting a replacement for your already existing diff and patch program. On FreeBSD systems, for example, it requires getting gdiff and gpatch. On a Windows platform, Subversion also requires a GNU diff.exe and patch.exe. One implementation is provided by the Cygwin project: http://sources.redhat.com/cygwin Note that the diff.exe and patch.exe must be installed into the "C:\Program Files\cygnus\cygwin\bin" directory in order for Subversion to find them at this time. If you have Cygwin installed somewhere else, you should create this directory path and copy those two files to it. You'll also need to copy the cygwin1.dll file into the same directory. 11. Libraries for our libraries Some of the libraries that Subversion depends on themselves have optional dependencies that can add features to what Subversion can do. Here are some examples. The Neon library has support for SSL encryption by relying on the OpenSSL library. When Neon is created with this dependency, then the Subversion client inherits the ability to support SSL connections. Neon also has support for sending compressed data using the zlib library which a Subversion client can take advantage of. With Unix-based systems, you can enable support for SSL from the Subversion build provided that you are building Neon in the "./neon/" directory as described above in section I.5. You also need OpenSSL installed on your system. Just add "--with-ssl" as a parameter when you run Subversion's "./configure", and it will be passed on to the Neon build system. If your OpenSSL installation is hard for Neon to find, you may need to use "--with-ssl=/path/to/lib" instead. The zlib library is included in Neon by default, but you can also specify a path to the library using "--with-zlib". Consult the Neon documentation for more information on how to use these parameters and versions of libraries you need. Under Windows, you have to edit a batch file available in your Subversion source tree (the root of which is labelled below): \build\win32\build_neon.bat and point it to the appropriate directories. You can also add support for these features to a Subversion server and you can even use the same support libraries. The Subversion build system will not provide them, however. You add them by specifying parameters to the "./configure" script of the Apache Server instead. For getting SSL on your server, you would add the "--enable-ssl" or "--with-ssl=/path/to/lib" option to Apache's "./configure" script. Apache enables zlib support by default, but you can specify a nonstandard location for the library with the "--with-z=/path/to/dir" option. Consult the Apache documentation for more details, and for other modules you may wish to install to enhance your Subversion server. If you don't already have it, you can get a copy of OpenSSL, including instructions for building and packaging on both Unix systems and Windows, at: http://www.openssl.org/ Many Unix systems already come with zlib, but if you need it it is available from: http://www.gzip.org/zlib/ Windows users should just get the pre-built package: http://www.gzip.org/zlib/contrib/zlib113-win32.zip The neon build scripts on Windows are set up to use those libraries. II. INSTALLATION ============ A. Bootstrapping from a Tarball or RPM ----------------------------------- In order to get the very latest Subversion source code, you need to check it out of a Subversion repository, and therefore you first need a Subversion client. 1. Boostrapping from a Tarball Download the most recent distribution tarball from: http://subversion.tigris.org/servlets/ProjectDownloadList Unpack it, and use the standard GNU procedure to compile: $ ./configure --enable-maintainer-mode --disable-shared $ make (The first switch to ./configure turns on debugging, and the second switch builds a statically-linked client binary.) After compiling, you will have a large 'svn' binary sitting in the tree. Use it to check out a real Subversion working copy: $ subversion-rXXXX/subversion/clients/cmdline/svn checkout \ http://svn.collab.net/repos/svn/trunk -d svn A svn/dist.sh A svn/buildcheck.sh A svn/HACKING ... 2. Bootstrapping from an RPM If you are using Linux (or any OS that can use RPM) then another possibility is to download the binary RPM from the http://summersoft.fay.ar.us/pub/linux/RPMS/i386 or http://summersoft.fay.ar.us/pub/linux/RPMS/ppc directory. Currently only Linux on the i386 and ppc platforms are supported using this method. You might also require additional RPMS (which can be found in the above mentioned directory) to use the subversion RPM depending on what packages you already have installed: subversion*.i386.rpm apache*.i386.rpm (Version 2.0.32 or greater) db*.i386.rpm (Version 4.0.14 or greater) expat (Comes with RedHat) neon (Version 0.19.[2-3]) After downloading, install it (as root user): # rpm -ivh subversion*.386.rpm (add other packages as necessary) After installing, you can then use the svn command to check out the latest source code: $ /usr/bin/svn checkout http://svn.collab.net/repos/svn/trunk -d svn A svn/dist.sh A svn/buildcheck.sh A svn/HACKING ... Note: For an easy way to generate a new version of the RPM source and binary package from the latest source code you just checked out, see the packages/rpm/README file for a one-line build procedure. B. Building the Latest Source under Unix ------------------------------------- (These instructions assume you have already installed Subversion and checked out a Subversion working copy. See the section "Bootstrapping From A Tarball Or RPM" above for more.) You can discard the directory created by the tarball; you're about to build the latest, greatest Subversion client. First off, if you have any Subversion libraries lying around from previous 'make installs', clean them up first! # rm -f /usr/local/lib/libsvn* # rm -f /usr/local/lib/libapr* # rm -f /usr/local/lib/libexpat* # rm -f /usr/local/lib/libneon* Start the process by running "autogen.sh": $ sh ./autogen.sh This script will make sure you have all the necessary components available to build Subversion. If any are missing, you will be told where to get them from. (See the 'Build Requirements' in section I.) After all components are in place, follow the usual procedure: $ ./configure --enable-maintainer-mode --disable-shared $ make $ make check (optional) # make install The flags to `configure' are highly recommended for developers, as they build a statically-linked binary. If you don't use those flags, then you must reverse the order of the "make check" and "make install" steps, because the shared libraries must be installed before "make check" will work. Additionally, with shared library builds, the destination library directory must be identified in your operating system's library search path. That is in either /etc/ld.so.conf or $LD_LIBRARY_PATH for linux systems and in /etc/rc.conf for FreeBSD, followed by a run of the 'ldconfig' program. Check your system documentation for details. By identifying the destination directory, Subversion will be able to dynamically load repository access plugins. If you try to do a checkout and see an error like: svn_error: #21068 : Unrecognized URL scheme: http://svn.collab.net/repos/svn/trunk It probably means that the dynamic loader/linker can't find all of the libsvn_* libraries. Note that if you commonly build with the -jN option to make, the make step above may fail, because we don't ensure that third party libraries in our source tree will finish building before subversion itself. If you want to use -jN, use the following instead: $ ./configure --enable-maintainer-mode --disable-shared $ make -jN external-all $ make -jN local-all $ make check # make install C. Building under Unix in Different Directories -------------------------------------------- It is possible to configure and build Subversion on Unix in a directory other than the working copy. For example $ svn co http://svn.collab.net/repos/svn/trunk -d svn $ cd svn $ # get neon/db/apr as required $ chmod +x autogen.sh $ ./autogen.sh $ mkdir ../obj $ cd ../obj $ ../svn/configure [...with options as appropriate...] $ make puts the Subversion working copy in the directory svn and builds it in a separate, parallel directory obj. Why would you want to do this? Well there are a number of reasons... * You may prefer to avoid "polluting" the working copy with files generated during the build. * You may want to put the build directory and the working copy on different physical disks to improve performance. * You may want to separate source and object code and only backup the source. * You may want to remote mount the working copy on multiple machines, and build for different machines from the same working copy. * You may want to build multiple configurations from the same working copy. The last reason above is possibly the most useful. For instance you can have separate debug and optimised builds each using the same working copy. Or you may want a client only build and a client-server build. Using multiple build directories you can rebuild any or all configurations after an edit without the need to either clean and reconfigure, or identify and copy changes into a another working copy. D. Bootstrapping from a Zip File under Windows ------------------------------------------- Of all the ways of getting a Subversion client, this is the easiest. Just download the ZIP file, run your unzipping utility (WinZIP, ZipGenius, UltimateZIP, FreeZIP, whatever) and extract the DLLs and EXEs to a directory of your choice. Included in the download is the SVN client, the SVNADMIN administration tool, and the SVNLOOK reporting tool. Now open a DOS box (run either "cmd" or "command" from the Start menu's "Run..." menu option), change to the directory you installed the executables into, and run: C:\test>svn co http://svn.collab.net/repos/svn/trunk -d svn This will get the latest Subversion sources and put them into the "svn" subdirectory. If you want to use this client for more than just downloading the latest sources, though, you will probably need to make sure that Subversion has access to the diff.exe and patch.exe programs, as described in section I.10. E. Building the Latest Source under Windows ---------------------------------------- (These instructions assume you have already installed Subversion and checked out a Subversion working copy. See the section "Bootstrapping From A Zip File Under Windows" above for more.) There is some support for building Subversion on Win32 platforms. The project files included in the source tree are from Microsoft Visual C++ 6.x; earlier versions of the compiler are not supported at this time. To build the client components, you'll need a copy of neon 0.19.[2-3]. See section I.5 for details on where to get one and what to do with it when you get it. [NOTE: The neon library supports secure connections with OpenSSL and on-the-wire compression with zlib. If you want to use those features, you should edit the file \build\win32\build_neon.bat to point to the appropriate directories. See Section I.11 for more details. If you want to build the (local) server components, you'll also need a copy of Berkeley DB, version 4.0.14 or newer. Details are in Section I.6. For your convenience, there is also a binary distibution on the Subversion downloads page http://subversion.tigris.org/ProjectDownloadList The file there is named db-4.0.14-win32.zip Unpack the distribution into the root directory of the Subversion source tree as \db4-win32. It's a good idea to add \db4-win32\bin to your PATH, so that Subversion can find the Berkeley DB DLLs. [NOTE: This binary package of Berkeley DB is provided for convenience only. Please don't address questions about Berkeley DB that aren't directly related to using Subversion to the project list.] If you build Berkeley DB from the source, you will have to copy the file ..db-4.0.14\build_win32\db.h to \db4-win32\include, and all the import libraries to \db4-win32\lib. Again, the DLLs should be somewhere in your path. The workspace `subversion.dsw' at the top of the source tree includes all the necessary projects. Right now, only static libraries are built. The "__build__" project (active by default) builds all the libraries and programs. The "__check__" project builds the test drivers. You will have to edit the file svn_private_config.hw to set the correct paths for diff and patch. [NOTE: There have been rumours that Subversion on Win32 can be built using the latest cygwin. ymmv.] III. BUILDING A SUBVERSION SERVER ============================ A. Setting Up Apache ----------------- (Following the BOOTSTRAPPING FROM RPM procedures above will install and build the latest Subversion server for Linux RedHat 7.1, 7.2, and PPC Linux systems *IF* the apache-devel-2.0.31 or greater package is already installed when the SUBVERSION RPM is built.) 1. Obtaining and Installing Apache 2.0 Checkout the "httpd-2.0" cvs module from apache.org. If you have questions about the Apache 2.0 build, please consult the HTTPD install documentation: http://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.0/install.html Place this module wherever you wish; it's an independent project. $ cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@cvs.apache.org:/home/cvspublic login (password 'anoncvs') $ cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@cvs.apache.org:/home/cvspublic co httpd-2.0 Checkout the "apr" and "apr-util" modules into the srclib/ directory: $ cd httpd-2.0/srclib $ cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@cvs.apache.org:/home/cvspublic co apr $ cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@cvs.apache.org:/home/cvspublic co apr-util At the top of the httpd-2.0 tree: $ ./buildconf $ ./configure --enable-dav --enable-so --prefix=/usr/local/apache2 The first arg says to build mod_dav. The second arg says to enable shared module support which is needed for a typical compile of mod_dav_svn (see below). The third arg is where you will ultimately install apache. Note: if you build Subversion with --enable-maintainer-mode, then do the same for Apache. mod_dav_svn uses Apache's maintainer-mode stuff from its headers, so you want to ensure that Apache is built with the same assumption. Just add --enable-maintainer-mode to the configure line above. Note: if you have multiple db versions installed on your system, Apache might link to a different one than Subversion, causing failures when accessing the repository through Apache. To prevent this from happening, you have to tell Apache which db version to use and where to find db. Add --with-dbm=db4 and --with-berkeley-db=/usr/local/BerkeleyDB.4.0 to the configure line. Make sure this is the same db as the one Subversion uses. This note assumes you have installed Berkeley DB 4.0.14 at its default locations. For more info about the db requirement, see section I.6. You may also want to include other modules in your build. Add --enable-ssl to turn on SSL support, for example. Consult the Apache documentation for more details. All instructions below assume you configured Apache to install under /usr/local/apache2/; substitute appropriately if you chose some other location. Compile and install apache: $ make depend && make && make install B. Making and Installing the Subversion Server ------------------------------------------- Go back into your subversion working copy and run ./autogen.sh if you need to. Then run: $ ./configure --with-apxs=/usr/local/apache2/bin/apxs This argument tells subversion to build mod_dav_svn, and where to find the required information to do so. Note: do *not* configure subversion with "--disable-shared"! mod_dav_svn *must* be built as a shared library, and it will look for other libsvn_*.so libraries on your system. Note: it *is* possible to build mod_dav_svn as a static library and link it directly into Apache. Possible, but painful. Stick with the shared library for now; if you can't, then ask. $ rm /usr/local/lib/libsvn* If you have old subversion libraries sitting on your system, libtool will link them instead of the `fresh' ones in your tree. Remove them before building subversion. $ make clean && make && make install After the make install, the Subversion shared libraries are in /usr/local/lib/. libmod_dav_svn.so should be installed in /usr/local/apache2/modules/. C. Configuring Apache for Subversion --------------------------------- The following assumes you have already created a repository. For documentation on how to do that, see README. Add this to the *bottom* of /usr/local/apache2/conf/httpd.conf: DAV svn SVNPath /absolute/path/to/repository This will give anyone unrestricted access to the repository. If you want limited access, read or write, you add these lines to the Location block: AuthType Basic AuthName "Subversion repository" AuthUserFile /my/svn/user/passwd/file And: a) For a read/write restricted repository: Require valid-user b) For a write restricted repository: Require valid-user c) For seperate restricted read and write access: AuthGroupFile /my/svn/group/file Require group svn_committers Require group svn_committers Require group svn_readers These are only a few simple examples. For a complete tutorial on Apache access contol, please consider taking a look at the tutorials found under the "Security" on the following page: http://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.0/misc/tutorials.html In order for 'svn cp' to work (which is actually implemented as a DAV COPY command), mod_dav needs to be able to be able to determine the hostname of the server. A standard way of doing this is to use Apache's ServerName directive to set the server's hostname. Edit your /usr/local/apache2/conf/httpd.conf to include: ServerName svn.myserver.org If you are using virtual hosting through Apache's NameVirtualHost directive, you may need to use the ServerAlias directive to specify additional names that your server is known by. NOTE: If you are unfamiliar with an Apache directive, or not exactly sure about what it does, don't hesitate to look it up in the documentation: http://httpd.apache.org/docs-2.0/mod/directives.html. NOTE: Make sure that the user 'nobody' (or whatever UID the httpd process runs as) has permission to read and write the Berkeley DB files! This is a very common problem. D. Running and Testing ------------------- Fire up apache 2.0: $ /usr/local/apache2/bin/apachectl stop $ /usr/local/apache2/bin/apachectl start Check /usr/local/apache2/logs/error_log to make sure it started up okay. Try doing a network checkout from the repository: $ svn co http://localhost/svn/repos -d wc The most common reason this might fail is permission problems reading the repository db files. If the checkout fails, chmod 777 and try again. You can see all of mod_dav_svn's complaints in the Apache error logfile, /usr/local/apache2/logs/error_log. For more information about tracing problems, see "Debugging the server" in the HACKING file.