Compilation Installation
From AMule Project FAQ
English | Français | Nederlands | Português | Deutsch
Contents
Manual Installation
To install aMule you can either install it from scratch, as described in Compiling From Sources, or use RPMs, as described in the Installing using RPMs section. Using RPMs will speed things up a lot but is not available by default with all linux distributions.
Compiling From Sources
WARNING: Make sure you have no copies of wxWidgets installed. If you already have wxWidgets installed, check How to uninstall wxWidgets before starting a new installation. If you continue have problems, then check if wx is installed twice, since that's a common compilation and runtime problem.
NOTE: In wxWidgets >= 2.5.1, wxBase is not distributed as a separate tarball.
Step 1: wxGTK
- Download wxGTK ->
- Compile wxGTK
- As root:
- make install
- ldconfig
Step 2: wxBase
- Since wxGTK 2.5.x, you don't need wxBase anymore unless you want to compile aMule daemon without X.
Step 3: aMule
- Download the latest aMule version ->
- Compile aMule (please check the configure article) ->
- tar -zxvf aMule-X.X.X.tar.gz (replace X with the right version number..)
- cd aMule-X.X.X
- ./configure --disable-debug --enable-optimize && make
- As root:
- make install
- Run aMule as a regular user from console by typing -> amule
Installing using RPMs
Step 1: wxGTK
- Install wxGTK ->
- As root:
- rpm -Uvh wxGTK-2.6.1-X.rpm (replace X with the right name..)
- ldconfig
- As root:
Step 2: aMule
- Download latest aMule version ->
- Install aMule ->
- As root:
- rpm -Uvh aMule-X.rpm (replace X with the right name and version number..)
- As root:
- Run aMule as a regular user from your console by typing -> amule