Reacting to suggestion in #6615
4.0 KiB
Building PrusaSlicer on UNIX/Linux
PrusaSlicer uses the CMake build system and requires several dependencies.
The dependencies can be listed in the deps
directory in individual subdirectories, although they don't necessarily need to be as recent
as the versions listed - generally versions available on conservative Linux distros such as Debian stable, Ubuntu LTS releases or Fedora are likely sufficient.
Perl is not required anymore.
In a typical situation, one would open a command line, go to the PrusaSlicer sources (the root directory of the repository), create a directory called build
or similar,
cd
into it and call:
cmake ..
make -jN
where N
is the number of CPU cores available.
Additional CMake flags may be applicable as explained below.
Dependency resolution
By default PrusaSlicer looks for dependencies the default way CMake looks for them, i.e. in default system locations.
On Linux this will typically make PrusaSlicer depend on dynamically loaded libraries from the system, however, PrusaSlicer can be told
to specifically look for static libraries with the SLIC3R_STATIC
flag passed to cmake:
cmake .. -DSLIC3R_STATIC=1
Additionally, PrusaSlicer can be built in a static manner mostly independent of the system libraries with a dependencies bundle
created using CMake script in the deps
directory (these are not interconnected with the rest of the CMake scripts).
Note: We say mostly independent because it's still expected the system will provide some transitive dependencies, such as GTK for wxWidgets.
To do this, go to the deps
directory, create a build
subdirectory (or the like) and use:
cmake .. -DDESTDIR=<target destdir>
where the target destdir is a directory of your choosing where the dependencies will be installed.
You can also omit the DESTDIR
option to use the default, in that case the destdir
will be created inside the build
directory where cmake
is run.
Once the dependencies have been built, in order to pass the destdir path to the top-level PrusaSlicer CMakeLists.txt
script, use the CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
option along with turning on SLIC3R_STATIC
:
cmake .. -DSLIC3R_STATIC=1 -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=<path to destdir>/usr/local
Note that /usr/local
needs to be appended to the destdir path and also the prefix path should be absolute.
Warning: Once the dependency bundle is installed in a destdir, the destdir cannot be moved elsewhere. This is because wxWidgets hardcode the installation path.
wxWidgets version
By default, PrusaSlicer looks for wxWidgets 3.1, this is because the 3.1 version has a number of bugfixes and improvements not found in 3.0. However, it can also be built with wxWidgets 3.0. This is done by passing this option to CMake:
-DSLIC3R_WX_STABLE=1
Note that PrusaSlicer is tested with wxWidgets 3.0 somewhat sporadically and so there may be bugs in bleeding edge releases.
When building on ubuntu 20.04 focal fossa, the package libwxgtk3.0-gtk3-dev needs to be installed instead of libwxgtk3.0-dev and you should use:
-DSLIC3R_WX_STABLE=1 -DSLIC3R_GTK=3
Build variant
By default PrusaSlicer builds the release variant. To create a debug build, use the following CMake flag:
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug
Enabling address sanitizer
If you're using GCC/Clang compiler, it is possible to build PrusaSlicer with the built-in address sanitizer enabled to help detect memory-corruption issues. To enable it, simply use the following CMake flag:
-DSLIC3R_ASAN=1
This requires GCC>4.8 or Clang>3.1.
Installation
At runtime, PrusaSlicer needs a way to access its resource files. By default, it looks for a resources
directory relative to its binary.
If you instead want PrusaSlicer installed in a structure according to the File System Hierarchy Standard, use the SLIC3R_FHS
flag
cmake .. -DSLIC3R_FHS=1
This will make PrusaSlicer look for a fixed-location share/slic3r-prusa3d
directory instead (note that the location becomes hardcoded).
You can then use the make install
target to install PrusaSlicer.