Mercurial > libervia-backend
view doc/installation.rst @ 4118:07370d2a9bde
plugin XEP-0167: keep media order when starting a call:
media content order is relevant when building Jingle contents/SDP notably for bundling.
This patch fixes the previous behaviour of always using the same order by keeping the
order of the data (i.e. order of original SDP offer). Previous behaviour could lead to
call failure.
rel 424
author | Goffi <goffi@goffi.org> |
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date | Tue, 03 Oct 2023 15:15:24 +0200 |
parents | 3f59a2b141cc |
children | 810f2b80146b |
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.. _installation: ============ Installation ============ These are the instructions to install Libervia using Python. Note that if you are using GNU/Linux, Libervia may already be present on your distribution. Libervia is made of one backend, and several frontends. To use it, the first thing to do is to install the backend. We recommand to use development version for now, until the release of 0.9. Development version ------------------- *Note for Arch users: a pkgbuild is available for your distribution on AUR, check libervia-backend-hg (as well as other libervia-\* packages).* You can install the latest development version using pip. You need to have the following dependencies installed first: - Python 3 with development headers - Python 3 "venv", which may already be installed with Python 3 - Mercurial - libcairo 2 with development header - libjpeg with development headers - libgirepository 1.0 with development headers - libdbus-1 with development headers - libdbus-glib-1 with development headers - libxml2 with development headers - libxlt2 with development headers - D-Bus x11 tools (this doesn't needs X11, it is just needed for dbus-launch) - cmake - Python GPG package (and its GPG dependencies), those are needed to use all OpenPGP related features. We need to use the system package as package version needs to match system GPG version. On Debian and derivatives, you can get all this with following command:: $ sudo apt-get install python3-dev python3-venv python3-wheel mercurial libxml2-dev libxslt-dev libcairo2-dev libjpeg-dev libgirepository1.0-dev libdbus-1-dev libdbus-glib-1-dev dbus-x11 cmake python3-gpg Installation With pipx ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ If you have `pipx`_ installed, you can easily install the development version of the backend by entering the following command: .. code-block:: bash $ pipx install --system-site-packages hg+https://repos.goffi.org/libervia-backend#egg=libervia-backend[SVG] Installation With Virtual Environment And pip ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Alternatively, you can install a virtual environment, clone the repository, and pip install from there. Go in a location where you can install Libervia, for instance your home directory:: $ cd And enter the following commands (here we install Libervia with SVG support, which is needed to display SVG avatars on some frontends):: $ python3 -m venv --system-site-packages libervia $ source libervia/bin/activate $ pip install -U pip wheel $ hg clone https://repos.goffi.org/libervia-backend $ cd libervia-backend $ pip install -e . Don't worry if you see the following message, Libervia should work anyway:: Failed building wheel for <some_package_name> Post Installation ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ After installing Libervia, you need to install the media (you may skip this if you don't plan to use any graphical frontend):: $ cd $ hg clone https://repos.goffi.org/libervia-media then, create the directory ``~/.config/libervia``:: $ mkdir -p ~/.config/libervia and the file ``~/.config/libervia/libervia.conf`` containing: .. sourcecode:: cfg [DEFAULT] media_dir = ~/libervia-media Of course, replace ``~/libervia-media`` with the actual path you have used. You can check :ref:`configuration` for details Usage ===== To launch the Libervia backend, enter:: $ libervia-backend …or, if you want to launch it in foreground:: $ libervia-backend fg You can stop it with:: $ libervia-backend stop To know if backend is launched or not:: $ libervia-backend status **NOTE**: if ``misc/org.libervia.Libervia.service`` is installed correctly (which should be done during the installation), the backend is automatically launched when a frontend needs it. You can check that Libervia is installed correctly by trying jp (the backend need to be launched first, check below):: $ li --version Libervia CLI 0.8.0D « La Cecília » (rev 184c66256bbc [M] (default 2021-06-09 11:35 +0200) +524) Copyright (C) 2009-2021 Jérôme Poisson, Adrien Cossa This program comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions. If you have a similar output, Libervia is working. .. note:: You may see an error message indicating that D-Bus is not launched or that its environment variable is not set, this usually happens when launching Libervia on a server, without graphic interface like X.org or Wayland (otherwise D-Bus service should be launched automatically). In this case please follow instructions below. Launching D-Bus (on servers) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ You can launch the D-Bus service by creating a shell script with the following content in a file named ``dbus_launch.sh``: .. sourcecode:: sh #!/bin/sh DBUS_PATH="/tmp/.dbus.`whoami`" if [ ! -e $DBUS_PATH ]; then dbus-launch --sh-syntax > $DBUS_PATH chmod 400 $DBUS_PATH fi cat $DBUS_PATH Then run it before the backend or frontend by entering:: $ eval $(/path/to/dbus_launch.sh) This will launch the D-Bus daemon if necessary, and set the appropriate environment variable. If you use a new shell, be sure to launch the script again in an ``eval`` statement to have the environment variable set. You can put this in your ``.zshrc`` (or whatever you're using) to make it automatic. If you don't want to use D-Bus, you can use another bridge, e.g. ``pb`` is a good choice, by updating your :ref:`configuration` ``[DEFAULT]`` section with ``bridge = pb``. Frontends ========= So far, the following frontends exist and are actively maintained: Libervia Desktop (aka Cagou) desktop/mobile (Android) frontend Libervia Web the web frontend Libervia TUI (aka Primitivus) Text User Interface Libervia CLI (aka jp or li) Command Line Interface To launch Libervia TUI, just type:: $ libervia-tui then create a profile (XMPP account must already exist). To use Libervia CLI, follow its help (``li`` is a shortcut for ``libervia-cli``):: $ li --help There are some other frontends: Bellaciao based on Qt, a rich desktop frontend (currently on hold) Wix former desktop frontend based on WxWidgets (deprecated with version 0.6.0) Sententia Emacs frontend developed by a third party (development is currently stalled) .. _pipx: https://pypa.github.io/pipx/