Evolution
Evolution is the integrated mail, calendar and address book suite from the Evolution Team.
See the Evolution GNOME Wiki page for more information.
If you are using Evolution, you may wish to subscribe to the Evolution users mailing list. Visit there to subscribe or view archives of the Evolution mailing list.
There is also a #gnome-evolution IRC channel on Libera.Chat.
Help for Evolution is available in the user manual (select "Help" from
the menu after running the application), at the
GNOME users help site, and in the --help strings (run
evolution --help
at the command line).
The rest of this file is dedicated to building Evolution.
DEPENDENCIES
In order to build Evolution you need to have the full set of GNOME 3 (or greater) development libraries installed.
GNOME 3 or greater comes with most of the modern distributions, so in most cases it should be enough to just install all the devel packages from your distribution.
Please make sure you have the most recent versions of the libraries installed, since bugs in the libraries can cause bugs in Evolution.
Additional dependencies, besides the stock GNOME libraries (the dependencies should be compiled in the order they are listed here):
- evolution-data-server of the same version as the Evolution is
- libsoup 3.0 or later
- WebKitGTK 2.34.0
- Mozilla NSPR/NSS libraries These are needed if you want to compile Evolution with SSL and S/MIME support. Many distributions ship these as Mozilla development packages.
Other dependencies are claimed during the configure phase. If these are optional, also a parameter for the CMake configure to not use that dependency is shown.
CONFIGURING EVOLUTION
First you have to decide whether you want to install Evolution (and its dependencies) into the same prefix as the rest of your GNOME install, or into a new prefix.
Installing everything into the same prefix as the rest of your GNOME install will make it much easier to build and run programs, and easier to switch between using packages and building it yourself, but it may also make it harder to uninstall later. Also, it increases the chance that something goes wrong and your GNOME installation gets ruined.
If you want to install in a different prefix, you need to do the following things:
-
Set the environment variables to contain a colon-separated list of all the directories that will be involved in the build. The environment variables are
GSETTINGS_SCHEMA_DIR
,LD_LIBRARY_PATH
,PATH
andPKG_CONFIG_PATH
.For example, if you have GNOME installed in
/usr
and you are installing Evolution and its dependencies in/opt/evolution
, you want to do something like the following (assuming you are using Bash):export GSETTINGS_SCHEMA_DIR="/opt/evolution/share/glib-2.0/schemas" export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/evolution/lib:$LD_LIBRARY_PATH export PATH=/opt/evolution/bin:$PATH export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/opt/evolution/lib/pkgconfig:$PKG_CONFIG_PATH
-
Edit the D-Bus
session-local.conf
file (which is normally search for by D-Bus in/etc/dbus-1/
) to include the location where you are installing Evolution.In the example given above (GNOME in
/usr
, Evolution and dependencies in/opt/evolution
), yoursession-local.conf
will have to look like this:<!DOCTYPE busconfig PUBLIC "-//freedesktop//DTD D-BUS Bus Configuration 1.0//EN" "http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/dbus/1.0/busconfig.dtd"> <busconfig> <!-- Search for .service files in /usr/local --> <servicedir>/opt/evolution/share/dbus-1/services</servicedir> </busconfig>
-
Pass an appropriate
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX
parameter to the configure scripts of Evolution and its dependencies, eg:cd ..../sources/evolution mkdir build cd build cmake -G "Unix Makefiles" \ -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/opt/evolution \ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \ ..
-
Run
cmake --help
to get list of available generators (the -G argument) on your platform.
OPTIONAL FEATURES
Some optional features can be enabled at compilation time by passing appropriate flags to the CMake. These options are shown at the end of the successful configure phase.
BUILDING EVOLUTION
After the Evolution is properly configured, run:
make -j
make -j install
to build it.
ONLINE BUILD MANUAL
An online build manual is also available.