6.6 KiB
Building LibreWolf from source:
First, let's download the latest tarball. This tarball is the latest produced by the CI.
To download the latest from a script, use wget/curl like this:
wget -O librewolf-96.0-2.source.tar.gz https://gitlab.com/librewolf-community/browser/source/-/jobs/artifacts/main/raw/librewolf-96.0-2.source.tar.gz?job=build-job
curl -L -o librewolf-96.0-2.source.tar.gz https://gitlab.com/librewolf-community/browser/source/-/jobs/artifacts/main/raw/librewolf-96.0-2.source.tar.gz?job=build-job
Next, we create ourselves a build folder and extract the tarball.
mkdir build
cd build
tar xf ../librewolf-96.0-2.source.tar.gz
build environment
Next step, if you have not done so already, you must create the build environment:
./librewolf-96.0/lw/mozfetch.sh
This would create a mozilla-unified folder in our 'build' folder, or basically anywhere that is your current working directory. It takes about an hour for me to complete, but it needs to be done only once. This step might fail and cause problems. Hack a bit, and if that fails you can ask on our Gitter/Matrix channels. There is no need to actually build mozilla-unified (Mozilla Nightly) itself, nor is the folder needed to build LibreWolf. So you can remove it: rm -rf mozilla-unfied
if you don't plan on using/exploring it.
wasi sdk
Since Firefox 95.0, we need to install an additional library, the 'wasi sdk'. This library sandboxes wasm libraries, which is what we want, but it's still experimental for us to include properly.
A few resources:
- mozilla.org: WebAssembly and Back Again: Fine-Grained Sandboxing in Firefox 95.
- Compiling C to WebAssembly using clang/LLVM and WASI.
- Firefox 95 on POWER.
To setup the wasi sdk headers, you can use librewolf-96.0/lw/setup-wasi-linux.sh. Please note that this script is a bit experimental and not all kinks have been worked out, but it should work.
This might not be enough on all systems. Some systems have the wasi-libc library already installed, and some don't. It depends on the installed version of Clang/LLVM it seems, which should be v8 or above. On debian-based systems: sudo apt install wasi-libc
, on Arch: https://archlinux.org/packages/community/any/wasi-libc/
(pacman -Syu wasi-libc
). Instructions for macos/windows and perhaps other Linux distro's will be added here soon.
Or, the other option is to not use these sandbox libraries: In this case we can't use our standard mozconfig symlink from mozconfig.new into mozconfig.new.without-wasi. In that case you have to type something along the lines of:
cd librewolf-96.0
cp lw/mozconfig.new.without-wasi mozconfig
cd ..
building librewolf
Now we're ready to actually build LibreWolf:
cd librewolf-96.0
./mach build
Also takes me an hour. Then, we can run it:
./mach run
Or make a package:
./mach package
I want to keep up to date with the latest, but compile myself
- To first clone the repo:
git clone https://gitlab.com/librewolf-community/browser/source.git
cd source
make librewolf
- To keep up-to-date:
git pull
make librewolf
[dev info] How to use this repo instead of Common:
Since the dawn of time, we have used Common to get patches, source_files, including source_files/{branding}
This source repo supports all that, because it uses these same things to produce the tarball. As far as I can tell, the mapping from Common to Source would be:
- patches -> patches
- source_files/search-config.json -> assets/search-config.json
- source_files/browser/branding/librewolf -> themes/browser/branding/librewolf
With this mapping, I hope that other builders that can't use our tarball (afterMozilla project, weird distro's), still use the same source/patches as the builders that do use it.
Another feature
The file assets/patches.txt defines what patches go in. These are not the only patches a builder will use, weird distro's etc, will use additional patches. those patches can live in the repo of that distro, or in a subfolder here. I hope this gives everybody the freedom to build anyway they please, like in Common, but with the added benefit that we produce a source tarball.
Implementing a build script the new way:
The repository has a short example shell script on how to use the new-style tarball approach instead of the older patching-it-yourself approach.
[dev info] Building the LibreWolf source tarball:
Luckly, you don't need the build environment for this. If you don't have write access, just:
git clone https://gitlab.com/librewolf-community/browser/source.git
cd source
make all
If you do have write access, we're first gonna check for a newer version of Firefox:
git clone git@gitlab.com:librewolf-community/browser/source.git
cd source
make check
If there is a new version, it's a good time to git commit and trigger a CI build job.
git commit -am v$(cat version)-$(cat release) && git push
To build the source archive:
make all
If you have a working build environment, you can build librewolf with:
make librewolf
This extracts the source, and then tries to ./mach build && ./mach package
.
FAQ: Common issues when setting up the Mozilla build environment
- it doesnt find a suitable python.
export MACH_USE_SYSTEM_PYTHON=1
make librewolf
- requires <python-package-2, which is not installed.
pip3 install <python-package-2>
And retry.