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121 lines
5.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
121 lines
5.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _packaging:
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Notes for Packagers
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===================
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If you are packaging qpdf for an operating system distribution, this
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chapter is for you. Otherwise, feel free to skip.
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Build Options
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-------------
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- Perl must be present at build time. Prior to qpdf version 9.1.1,
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there was a runtime dependency on perl, but this is no longer the
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case.
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- Make sure you are getting the intended behavior with regard to crypto
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providers. Read :ref:`crypto.build` for details.
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- Passing :samp:`--enable-show-failed-test-output` to
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:command:`./configure` will cause any failed test
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output to be written to the console. This can be very useful for
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seeing test failures generated by autobuilders where you can't access
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qtest.log after the fact.
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- If qpdf's build environment detects the presence of autoconf and
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related tools, it will check to ensure that automatically generated
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files are up-to-date with recorded checksums and fail if it detects a
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discrepancy. This feature is intended to prevent you from
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accidentally forgetting to regenerate automatic files after modifying
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their sources. If your packaging environment automatically refreshes
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automatic files, it can cause this check to fail. Suppress qpdf's
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checks by passing :samp:`--disable-check-autofiles`
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to :command:`/.configure`. This is safe since qpdf's
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:command:`autogen.sh` just runs autotools in the
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normal way.
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- QPDF's :command:`make install` does not install completion files by
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default, but as a packager, it's good if you install them wherever
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your distribution expects such files to go. You can find completion
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files to install in the :file:`completions` directory.
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- Packagers are encouraged to install the source files from the
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:file:`examples` directory along with qpdf development packages.
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.. _packaging-doc:
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Packaging Documentation
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-----------------------
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Starting in qpdf version 10.5, pre-built documentation is no longer
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distributed with the qpdf source distribution. Here are a few options
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you may want to consider for your packages:
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- **Do nothing**
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When you run ``make install``, the file :file:`README-doc.txt` is
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installed in ``$(docdir)``. That file tells the reader where to find
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the documentation online and where to go to download offline copies
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of the documentation. This is the option selected by the debian
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packages.
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- **Embed pre-built documentation**
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You can obtain pre-built documentation and extract its contents into
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your distribution. This is what the Windows binary distributions
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available from the qpdf release site do. You can find the pre-build
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documentation in the release area in the file
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:file:`qpdf-{version}-doc.zip`.
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- **Build the documentation yourself**
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You can build the documentation as part of your build process. Be
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sure to pass ``--enable-doc-maintenance`` to ``./configure``, and
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install it with ``make doc-dist DOC_DEST=...``. This is what the
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AppImage build does. The latest version of Sphinx at the time of the
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initial conversion a sphinx-based documentation was 4.3.2. Older
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versions are not guaranteed to work.
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Documentation Packaging Rationale
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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This section describes the reason for things being the way they are.
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It's for information only; you don't have to know any of this to
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package qpdf.
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What is the reason for this change? Prior to qpdf 10.5, the qpdf
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manual was a docbook XML file. The generated documents were the
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product of running the file through build-time style sheets and
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contained no copyrighted material of their own. Starting with version
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10.5, the manual is written produced with `Sphinx
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<https://www.sphinx-doc.org>`__. This change was made to make it much
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easier to automatically generate portions of the documentation and to
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make the documentation easier to work with. The HTML output of Sphinx
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is also much more readable, usable, and suitable for online
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consumption than the output of the docbook style sheets. The downsides
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are that the generated HTML documentation now contains Javascript code
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and embedded fonts, and the PDF version of the documentation is no
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longer as suitable for printing (at least as of the 10.5 distribution)
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since external link targets are no longer shown and cross references
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no longer contain page number information. The presence of copyrighted
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material in the generated documentation, even though things are
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licensed with MIT and BSD licenses, complicates the job of the
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packager in various ways. For one thing, it means the
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:file:`NOTICE.md` file in the source repository would have to keep up
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with the copyright information for files that are not controlled in
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the repository. Additionally, some distributions (notably
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Debian/Ubuntu) discourage inclusion of sphinx-generated documentation
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in packages, preferring you instead to build the documentation as part
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of the package build process and to depend at runtime on a shared
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package that contains the code. At the time of the conversion of the
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qpdf manual from docbook to sphinx, newer versions of both sphinx and
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the html theme were required than were available in some of most of
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the Debian/Ubuntu versions for which qpdf was packaged.
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Since always-on Internet connectivity is much more common than it used
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to be, many users of qpdf would prefer to consume the documentation
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online anyway, and the lack of pre-built documentation in the
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distribution won't be as big of a deal. However there are still some
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people who can't or choose not to view documentation online. For them,
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pre-built documentation is still available.
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