File

INSTALL @ 12557:ee5b061588ea 0.12

net.unbound: Merge luaunbound and prosody defaults in absence of user config (fixes #1763) (thanks rgd) add_defaults() is supposed to merge 3 tables, the defaults in luaunbound, the defaults from prosody and any config from the prosody config file. In the case where no `unbound={}` has been in the config, it skips over the merge and returns only the prosody built-in defaults. This results in libunbound skipping reading resolv.conf and uses its default behavior of full recursive resolution. Prior to #1737 there were only two tables, the luaunbound defaults and the prosody config, where bypassing the merge and returning the former did the right thing.
author Kim Alvefur <zash@zash.se>
date Sun, 19 Jun 2022 19:49:32 +0200
parent 12286:ad88732eea51
line wrap: on
line source

(This file was created from
https://prosody.im/doc/installing_from_source on 2013-03-31)

# Installing from source

## Dependencies

There are a couple of development packages which Prosody needs installed
before you can build it. These are:

-   The [Lua](http://lua.org/) library, version 5.4 recommended
-   [OpenSSL](http://openssl.org/)
-   String processing library, one of
    -   [ICU](https://icu.unicode.org/) (recommended)
    -   [GNU libidn](http://www.gnu.org/software/libidn/)

These can be installed on Debian/Ubuntu by running
`apt build-dep prosody` or by installing the packages
`liblua5.4-dev`, `libicu-dev` and `libssl-dev`.

On Mandriva try:

	urpmi lua liblua-devel libidn-devel libopenssl-devel

On Mac OS X, if you have MacPorts installed, you can try:

	sudo port install lua lua-luasocket lua-luasec lua-luaexpat

On other systems... good luck, but please let us know of the best way of
getting the dependencies for your system and we can add it here.

## configure

The first step of building is to run the configure script. This creates
a file called 'config.unix' which is used by the next step to control
aspects of the build process.

	./configure

All options to configure can be seen by running

	./configure --help

## make

Once you have run configure successfully, then you can simply run:

   make

Simple? :-)

If you do happen to have problems at this stage, it is most likely due
to the build process not finding the dependencies. Ensure you have them
installed, and in the standard library paths for your system.

For more help, just ask ;-)

==== install ====

At this stage you should be able to run Prosody simply with:

   ./prosody

There is no problem with this, it is actually the easiest way to do
development, as it doesn't spread parts around your system, and you
can keep multiple versions around in their own directories without
conflict.

Should you wish to install it system-wide however, simply run:

   sudo make install

...it will install into /usr/local/ by default. To change this you can
pass to the initial ./configure using the 'prefix' option, or edit
config.unix directly. If the new path doesn't require root permission to
write to, you also won't need (or want) to use 'sudo' in front of the
'make install'.

Have fun, and see you on Jabber!