Difference between revisions of "Installing Lazarus on FreeBSD"

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(Updated for FreeBSD 11 & 12)
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==via the Ports tree==
 
==via the Ports tree==
  
The latest version of Lazarus available in the FreeBSD port tree is v 2.0.0. We can use that to install Lazarus (GTK2 or QT5).
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The latest version of Lazarus available in the FreeBSD port tree is v 2.0.4. We can use that to install Lazarus (GTK2 or QT5).
  
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
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You can either install the sources in your home directory or in the system-wide '''/usr/local/share/fpsrc''' directory. You will need to do this as root if you use the system-wide directory.  
 
You can either install the sources in your home directory or in the system-wide '''/usr/local/share/fpsrc''' directory. You will need to do this as root if you use the system-wide directory.  
  
=== Installing FPC sources in home directory ===
+
=== Installing FPC sources ===
 
 
Create a directory to hold the Free Pascal sources under your home directory. Note that when you extract the compressed tar file, it will include a directory of fpc-3.0.4, so if that is good enough for you go ahead and:
 
  
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
tar xvzf /usr/ports/distfiles/freepascal/fpc-3.0.4.source.tar.gz
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# cd /usr/ports/lang/fpc-source && make install clean
 
</syntaxhighlight>
 
</syntaxhighlight>
  
=== Installing FPC sources in system-wide directory ===
+
or
 
 
As root, create the '''fpcsrc''' directory in '''/usr/local/share''', change to the new directory and:
 
  
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
tar xvzf /usr/ports/distfiles/freepascal/fpc-3.0.4.source.tar.gz
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# pkg install lang/fpc-source
 
</syntaxhighlight>
 
</syntaxhighlight>
  

Revision as of 23:16, 15 August 2019

Installing Lazarus on FreeBSD

The following applies to FreeBSD 11-STABLE, 11.2 and 11.3, 12-STABLE and 12.0 only. Earlier FreeBSD versions are end-of-life and not supported.

via the Ports tree

The latest version of Lazarus available in the FreeBSD port tree is v 2.0.4. We can use that to install Lazarus (GTK2 or QT5).

# cd /usr/ports/editors/lazarus && make install clean

or

# cd /usr/ports/editors/lazarus-qt5 && make install clean

If you start Lazarus IDE at this point by typing lazarus you will get a dialog which needs you to input the directory in which the Free Pascal sources are located. Small problem, they have not been installed. You can, however, find a compressed tar file of the sources in the /usr/ports/distfiles/freepascal directory.

You can either install the sources in your home directory or in the system-wide /usr/local/share/fpsrc directory. You will need to do this as root if you use the system-wide directory.

Installing FPC sources

# cd /usr/ports/lang/fpc-source && make install clean

or

# pkg install lang/fpc-source

via the pkg system

# pkg install editors/lazarus

or

# pkg install editors/lazarus-qt5

At this point Lazarus will complain about the missing Free Pascal source files. If you don't have them:

  fetch http://distcache.freebsd.org/ports-distfiles/freepascal/fpc-3.0.4.source.tar.gz

You can either install the sources in your home directory or in the system-wide /usr/local/share/fpsrc directory. You will need to do this as root if you use the system-wide directory.

Installing FPC sources in home directory

Create a directory to hold the Free Pascal sources under your home directory. Note that when you extract the compressed tar file, it will include a directory of fpc-3.0.4, so if that is good enough for you go ahead and:

tar xvzf /usr/ports/distfiles/freepascal/fpc-3.0.4.source.tar.gz

Installing FPC sources in system-wide directory

As root, create the fpcsrc directory in /usr/local/share, change to the new directory and:

tar xvzf /usr/ports/distfiles/freepascal/fpc-3.0.4.source.tar.gz

via the Lazarus repository

This option will often be used if you want to follow Lazarus trunk, a Fixes branch, or some other release (eg compiling from a source tarball).

  • Use the SubVersion or Git repositories to checkout a copy of the source code you want, or unpack a downloaded source archive into a suitable location. Recent versions of FreeBSD include the svn command as svnlite, so you do not need to install full Subversion package to checkout a copy of the source code.
  • The readme.txt file in Lazarus directory mentions make clean all. This only works if you are using Linux. Under FreeBSD you need to replace make with gmake.
  cd /path/to/lazarus_source
  gmake clean all

Installation troubleshooting

Troubleshooting details that should (hopefully) be applicable across platforms may be found in the article Installation Troubleshooting.

Some additional notes for FreeBSD installations can be found in the article FreeBSD.