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John Woods, 12/12/2012 12:24 PM
h1. Installing Wt on Ubuntu
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For installation of Wt on Ubuntu, you have the choice between the official package available in Ubuntu, prebuilt packages by Pau Garcia i Quiles (always updated to the newest Wt version) or installation from source.
h2. Installing from the Official Package
Since Ubuntu Intrepid (8.10), official packages for Ubuntu are available. To install Wt, run:
$ sudo aptitude install witty witty-dbg witty-dev witty-doc
This will automatically install all the required dependencies. If you only want the runtime library, you only need to install the witty package. The witty-dbg package contains the debug versions of the libraries. Make sure you install witty-dev (or libwtwhatever-dev) if you want to develop Wt applications.
The official package is usually a bit outdated due to the stabilization periods Debian and Ubuntu need prior to release. If you want to use the newest version of Wt and not build from source, read on.
h2. Installing from Prebuilt Packages
Since Wt 2.0.3, unofficial packages for Ubuntu are being built by "Pau Garcia i Quiles":http://www.elpauer.org/. To install Wt, add the "Wt PPA":http://launchpad.net/~pgquiles/+archive/wt to your repositories (check "Adding this PPA to your system" in the Wt PPA page). After adding the repository to your system, run:
$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo aptitude install libwt*
This will automatically install all the required dependencies. If you only want the runtime library, you only need to install the libwt24, libwthttp24, libwtext24, etc packages (no -dev, -doc or -dbg packages). The libwt-dbg package contains the debug versions of the libraries.
These packages are built by the maintainer of the official Debian and Ubuntu packages and are always updated to the latest version of Wt. If you want to use the newest version of Wt and not build from source, this is the preferred method.
Please note in the past packages were named witty, witty-dev, witty-doc and witty-dbg. These package still exist but only as transitional packages and will be removed in the future. It is recommended that you install libwt*.
h2. Installing from Sources
h3. Howto for wthttpd on gutsy
I made this for a freshly installed ubuntu 7.10 (gutsy gibbon).
It's without unicode,mysql and extjs support.
Should work similar for debian 4.0 etch.
As I wrote this down after installation, I hope all steps are correct. If you encounter problems, please let me know.
h3. Installing System Dependencies
Note : this information is partially out of date. Instead of installing the 1.34 versions of the boost projects, use the 1.35 ones (also in ubuntu with sudo apt-get install libboost1.35-dev)
Open a terminal and enter the following commands (as tested for Ubuntu 12.04):
sudo apt-get install gcc g++ libboost-date-time-dev libboost-dev libboost-filesystem-dev libboost-program-options-dev libboost-regex-dev libboost-signals-dev libboost-system-dev libboost-thread-dev libboost-thread-dev libboost-random-dev libboost-test-dev doxygen libgraphicsmagick3 libssl-dev libpq-dev libssl-dev cmake
If you also want support for deploying applications using FastCGI, you'll need the following library, and set FCGI to true when configuring Wt:
sudo apt-get install libfcgi-dev
h3. Getting External Sources
h4. Get asio (http://sourceforge.net/projects/asio/)
wget -c http://kent.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/asio/asio-0.3.9.tar.bz2
tar xvfj asio-0.3.9.tar.bz2
h4. Get Wt (http://www.webtoolkit.eu/wt)
wget -c http://kent.dl.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/witty/wt-2.1.0.tar.gz
tar xvfz wt-2.1.0.tar.gz
h3. Buidling and Installing Sources
h4. asio
cd asio-0.3.9
./configure
sudo make install
sudo ldconfig
h4. Wt
cd wt-2.1.0
mkdir build; cd build
cmake ..
make
sudo make install
sudo ldconfig
h3. Try the Examples
h4. From the Prebuilt Packages
- To build the examples, call CMake this way:
cmake -DWT_SOURCE_DIR=/usr/share/doc/witty-doc/ -DEXAMPLES_CONNECTOR="wt;wthttp" /usr/share/doc/witty-doc/examples
Then go to /usr/share/doc/witty-doc/examples and enter the directory of the example you want to run.
When running the example, set the docroot to "."
For instance, if you compiled the examples in /home/user/dev/wtexamples, you would do:
$ mkdir /home/user/dev/wtexamples
$ cd /home/user/dev/wtexamples
$ cmake -DWT_SOURCE_DIR=/usr/share/doc/witty-doc/ -DEXAMPLES_CONNECTOR="wt;wthttp" /usr/share/doc/witty-doc/examples
$ make
$ cd /usr/share/doc/witty-doc/examples/charts
$ /home/user/dev/wtexamples/charts/charts.wt --http-port 10000 --http-addr 0.0.0.0 --docroot .
h4. From the Sources
- If you installed Wt using the source packages (http://sourceforge.net/projects/witty/files/), then you can find instructions on how to run the examples in the file INSTALL.html that is included in the main directory of the respective source package.
h4. Special Cases
Please note the wt-homepage example will not run properly unless you download ExtJS (http://extjs.com) and extract it the proper place.
Please note the wtwithqt example needs Qt 4.x to run
h3. Using 'ccmake' to Edit Build Options
This is an easy, graphical way to edit the build options
cd build
ccmake .
h3. If It Fails with SSL Problem
[[https://www.failsafepayments.com/solutions/merchant-accounts.html|online merchant payment gateway]]
Edit the HTTP_WITH_SSL to OFF, and try again (or you could install openssl-dev and try again)
CMake Error: This project requires some variables to be set,
and cmake can not find them.
Please set the following variables:
OPENSSL_INCLUDE
OPENSSL_LIB
h2. Ubuntu's Official Documentation
You can find it "here":https://help.ubuntu.com/community/BuildingWtFromSource
Updated by John Woods about 12 years ago · 30 revisions