Setting up your development environment
This chapter will help you set your development environment for librsvg.
System requirements
A 64-bit installation of Linux.
8 GB of RAM, or 16 GB recommended if you will be running the full test suite frequently.
Around 10 GB free of hard disk space.
You can either use podman to work in a containerized setup (this chapter will show you how), or you can install librsvg’s dependencies by hand.
Make sure you have
git
installed.Your favorite text editor.
Downloading the source code
git clone https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/librsvg.git
Setting up with podman
An easy way to set up a development environment is to use podman to download and run a container image. This is
similar to having a chroot
with all of librsvg’s dependencies
already set up.
Install podman
on your distro, and then:
cd librsvg # wherever you did your "git clone"
sh ci/pull-container-image.sh
In the librsvg source tree, ci/pull-container-image.sh
is a script
that will invoke podman pull
to download the container image that
you can use for development. It is the same image that librsvg uses
for its continuous integration pipeline (CI), so you can have exactly
the same setup on your own machine.
That pull-container-image.sh
script will give you instructions
similar to these:
You can now run this:
podman run --rm -ti --cap-add=SYS_PTRACE -v $(pwd):/srv/project -w /srv/project $image_name
Don't forget to run this once inside the container:
source ci/env.sh
source ci/setup-dependencies-env.sh
You can cut&paste those commands (from the script’s output, not from this document!). The first one should give you a shell prompt inside the container. The second and third ones will make Rust available in the shell’s environment, and adjust some environment variables so that the compilation process can find the installed dependencies.
What’s all that magic? Let’s dissect the podman command line:
podman run
- run a specific container image. The image name is the last parameter in that command; it will look something likeregistry.gitlab.gnome.org/gnome/librsvg/opensuse/tumbleweed:x86_64-1.60.0-2022-08-17.0-main
. This is an image built on on a base of the openSUSE Tumbleweed, a rolling distribution of Linux with very recent dependencies.--rm
- Remove the container after exiting. It will terminate when youexit
the container’s shell.-ti
- Set up an interactive session.--cap-add=SYS_PTRACE
- Make it possible to rungdb
inside the container.-v $(pwd):/srv/project` - Mount the current directory as ``/srv/project
inside the container. This lets you build from your current source tree without first copying it into the container; it will be available in/srv/project
.
Finally, don’t forget to source ci/env.sh
and source
ci/setup-dependencies-env.sh
once you are inside podman run
.
You can now skip to Building and testing.
Setting up dependencies manually
To compile librsvg, you need the following packages installed. The minimum version is listed here; you may use a newer version instead.
Compilers and build tools:
Mandatory dependencies:
Optional dependencies:
GDK-Pixbuf 2.20.0
GObject-Introspection 0.10.8
dav1d 1.3.0 (to support the AVIF image format)
The following sections describe how to install these dependencies on several systems. For fully manual builds, you can try using the script in ci/build-dependencies.sh. Librsvg’s continuous integration (CI) infrastructure uses that script to install the dependencies before building.
Debian based systems
As of 2018/Feb/22, librsvg cannot be built in debian stable and ubuntu 18.04, as they have packages that are too old.
Build dependencies on Debian Testing or Ubuntu 18.10:
apt-get install -y gcc rustc cargo cargo-c ninja-build \
meson gi-docgen python3-docutils git \
libgdk-pixbuf2.0-dev libgirepository1.0-dev \
libxml2-dev libcairo2-dev libpango1.0-dev
Additionally, as of September 2018 you need to add gdk-pixbuf utilities to your path, see #331 for details:
PATH="$PATH:/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/gdk-pixbuf-2.0"
Fedora based systems
dnf install -y gcc rust rust-std-static cargo cargo-c ninja-build \
meson gi-docgen python3-docutils git redhat-rpm-config \
gdk-pixbuf2-devel gobject-introspection-devel \
libxml2-devel cairo-devel cairo-gobject-devel pango-devel
openSUSE based systems
zypper install -y gcc rust rust-std cargo cargo-c ninja \
meson python3-gi-docgen python38-docutils git \
gdk-pixbuf-devel gobject-introspection-devel \
libxml2-devel cairo-devel pango-devel
macOS systems
Dependencies may be installed using Homebrew or another package manager.
brew install meson gi-docgen pkgconfig gobject-introspection gdk-pixbuf pango
Building and testing
Make sure you have gone through the steps in Setting up with podman or Setting up dependencies manually. Then, do the following.
Normal development: You can use cargo build --workspace
and
cargo test --workspace
as for a simple Rust project; this is what
you will use most of the time during regular development. If you are
using the podman container as per above, you should do this in the
/srv/project
directory most of the time. The --workspace
options are because librsvg’s repository contains multiple crates in a
single Cargo workspace.
To casually test rendering, for example, for a feature you are developing, you can run target/debug/rsvg-convert -o output.png my_test_file.svg.
If you do a release build with cargo build –release –workspace, which includes optimizations, the binary will be in target/release/rsvg-convert. This version is much faster than the debug version.
Doing a full build: You can use the following:
mkdir -p _build
meson setup _build -Ddocs=enabled -Dintrospection=enabled -Dvala=enabled
meson compile -C _build
meson test -C _build
You should only have to do that if you need to run the full test suite, for the C API tests and the tests for limiting memory consumption.