So you want to build git-annex from source. This is encouraged for users with experience building code from source. But the build may require some care and feeding. This page will start with the easy methods and work up to the harder ones. ## prerequisites Start by installing the [Haskell Platform](http://hackage.haskell.org/platform/). In Debian, this is as simple as: sudo apt-get install haskell-platform ## downloading the source code The easiest way is using git; see [[download]] or just run: git clone git://git-annex.branchable.com/ git-annex ## building from source on Debian This is the method used by git-annex's author, and so it's the one most likely to work without problems. First, install everything git-annex needs to build: sudo apt-get build-dep git-annex Now you can build git-annex by running either `make` or `cabal build` inside the source tree. ## building from source with stack Using stack automates nearly everything, will work on many systems, and avoids build failures due to fast-changing haskell libraries. First, [install stack](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack/blob/master/doc/install_and_upgrade.md) It will be part of the Haskell Platform soon. On Debian unstable/testing: sudo apt-get install haskell-stack zlib1g-dev libtinfo-dev Get the git-annex source code, and inside the source tree run: stack setup stack install Move git-annex into some directory that is in your PATH: mv ~/.local/bin/git-annex ~/bin # or /usr/local/bin/ or whatever (Why not run `stack install git-annex`? Because that causes stack to [ignore git-annex's stack.yaml file](https://github.com/commercialhaskell/stack/issues/2371), yielding a less reliable build.) Note that this build produces a git-annex without the build flags XMPP, DBUS, and MagicMime. These optional features require installing additional C libraries. To try to build with these features enabled, pass extra parameters when running stack install: `--flag git-annex:XMPP --flag git-annex:DBUS --flag git-annex:MagicMime` ## minimal build from source with cabal This can be done anywhere, and builds git-annex without some optional features that require harder-to-install C libraries. This is plenty to let you get started with git-annex, but it does not include the assistant or webapp. Be warned that this involves building a lot of Haskell libraries from source, and so it has a lot of moving parts, and it's not uncommon for it to be broken from time to time. Get the git-annex source code, and inside the source tree, run: cabal install -j -f"-assistant -webapp -webdav -pairing -xmpp -dns -dbus -magicmime" --only-dependencies cabal configure -f"-assistant -webapp -webdav -pairing -xmpp -dns -dbus -magicmime" cabal build -j PATH=$HOME/bin:$PATH cabal install --bindir=$HOME/bin ## full build from source with cabal To build with all features enabled, including the assistant and webapp, you will need to install several C libraries and their headers, including libgnutls, libgsasl, libxml2, libmagic, and zlib. How to do that for your OS is beyond the scope of this page. Once the C libraries are installed, run inside the source tree: cabal install -j --only-dependencies cabal configure cabal build -j PATH=$HOME/bin:$PATH cabal install --bindir=$HOME/bin ## EKG When building with cabal, you can optionally enable the [[EKG monitoring interface|ekg]]. This is great for debugging resource usage problems, but not for general-purpose builds. Just pass `-f+EKG` to `cabal configure`