Installation¶
Many major Linux distribution might already package rmlint
– but watch out for
the version. If possible, we recommend using the newest version available.
If there is no package yet or you want to try a development version, you gonna
need to compile rmlint
from source.
Dependencies¶
Hard dependencies:¶
- glib \(\geq 2.32\) (general C Utility Library)
Soft dependencies:¶
- libblkid (detecting mountpoints)
- libelf (nonstripped binary detection)
- libjson-glib (parsing rmlint’s own json as caching layer)
Build dependencies:¶
- git (version control)
- scons (build system)
- sphinx (manpage/documentation generation)
- gettext (support for localization)
Here’s a list of readily prepared commands for known operating systems:
Fedora \(\geq 21\):
$ yum -y install pkgconf git scons python3-sphinx gettext json-glib-devel $ yum -y install glib2-devel libblkid-devel elfutils-libelf-devel # Optional dependencies for the GUI: $ yum -y install pygobject3 gtk3 librsvg2
There are also pre-built packages on Fedora Copr:
$ dnf copr enable eclipseo/rmlint $ dnf install rmlint
Since Fedora 29 we also have an official package.
ArchLinux:
There is an official package in
[community]
here:$ pacman -S rmlint
Alternatively you can use
rmlint-git
in the AUR:$ pacman -S pkgconf git scons python-sphinx $ pacman -S glib2 libutil-linux elfutils json-glib # Optional dependencies for the GUI: $ pacman -S gtk3 python-gobject librsvg
There is also a PKGBUILD on the ArchLinux AUR:
$ # Use your favourite AUR Helper. $ yaourt -S rmlint-git
It is built from git
master
, not from thedevelop
branch.
Debian / Ubuntu \(\geq 12.04\):
Note: Debian also ships an official package. Use the below instructions if you need a more recent version.
This most likely applies to most distributions that are derived from Ubuntu. Note that the
GUI
depends onGTK+ >= 3.12
! Ubuntu 14.04 LTS and earlier still ships with3.10
.$ apt-get install pkg-config git scons python3-sphinx python3-nose gettext build-essential # Optional dependencies for more features: $ apt-get install libelf-dev libglib2.0-dev libblkid-dev libjson-glib-1.0 libjson-glib-dev # Optional dependencies for the GUI: $ apt-get install python3-gi gir1.2-rsvg gir1.2-gtk-3.0 python-cairo gir1.2-polkit-1.0 gir1.2-gtksource-3.0
macOS
rmlint
can be installed via homebrew:Prerequisite: If homebrew has not already been installed on the system, execute:
$ /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)".
With homebrew installed, execute:
$ brew install rmlint
See also this issue for more information on the homebrew formula.
FreeBSD \(\geq 10.1\):
$ pkg install git scons py27-sphinx pkgconf $ pkg install glib gettext libelf json-glib
Send us a note if you want to see your distribution here or the instructions
need an update. The commands above install the full dependencies, therefore
some packages might be stripped if you do not need the feature
they enable. Only hard requirement for the commandline is glib
.
Also be aware that the GUI needs at least \(gtk \geq 3.12\) to work!
Compilation¶
Compilation consists of getting the source and translating it into a usable
binary. We use the build system scons
. Note that the following instructions
build the software from the potentially unstable develop
branch:
$ # Omit -b develop if you want to build from the stable master
$ git clone -b develop https://github.com/sahib/rmlint.git
$ cd rmlint/
$ scons config # Look what features scons would compile
$ scons DEBUG=1 # Optional, build locally.
# Install (and build if necessary). For releases you can omit DEBUG=1
$ sudo scons DEBUG=1 --prefix=/usr install
Done!
You should be now able to see the manpage with rmlint --help
or man 1
rmlint
.
Uninstall with sudo scons uninstall
and clean with scons -c
.
You can also only type the install
command above. The buildsystem is clever
enough to figure out which targets need to be built beforehand.
Troubleshooting¶
On some distributions (especially Debian derived) rmlint --gui
might fail
with /usr/bin/python3: No module named shredder
(or similar). This is due
some incompatible changes on Debian’s side.
See this thread for a workaround using PYTHONPATH
.