Please read the COPYING file first. Requirements -------------------------------- Python 1.5.2 or greater Gnome 1.2 or greater PyGnome 1.0.53 or greater If you are using python 1.5.2, you may also need PyXML 0.6.2 or greater. Many distributions already provide this, but if your installation does not have it, you can get it from http://sourceforge.net/project/showfiles.php?group_id=6473 Documentation --------------------------------- Gramps documentation is supplied in the form of SGML files, which will be installed in the GNOME help path(*). Recent versions of Nautilus and Galeon can generate HTML documents on-the-fly from these. To generate distinct HTML documentation follow these steps: 1) Ensure the following packages are installed: db2html >= 0.6.9 (jw >= 1.1) to convert the SGML -> HTML gnome-doc-tools-2-1 for the GNOME documentation style sheets The /etc/sgml/catalog file should contain an entry pointing to PNG support. If configured properly, your db2html should automatically look up and use the /etc/sgml/catalog file. If it doesn't you can try editing the DB2HTML line in Makefile.comm to explicitly use that file, DB2HTML = db2html -c /etc/sgml/catalog 2) Invoke configure with the --enable-html option: ./configure --enable-html 3) In addition to the normal 'make' and 'make install', you need to also execute 'make html && make install-html'. If all goes well and you do the happy dance, the HTML files should be built and installed successfully. Due to a wide variation in the implementation of db2html (and docbook-utils) across various Linux distributions, though, this is not guaranteed to work. Some configure-time checks are in place, and it _should_ work, but it is very ad-hoc at the moment. You have been warned. :-) Of course, current HTML documentation can also be found on the gramps website, http://gramps.sourceforge.net/help.html (*) More precisely, they are installed in ${prefix}/share/gnome/help, where ${prefix} is given by the --prefix= option to configure. If this is different from where your standard GNOME installation looks for help files and documentation, then set your GNOMEDIR environment variable to the ${prefix} path before starting gramps. For example, if you are installing gramps in /usr/local/, then type the following: in tcsh: setenv GNOMEDIR /usr/local/ in bash: GNOMEDIR=/usr/local/ ; export GNOMEDIR Building on non-Linux systems: i18n support and GNU make -------------------------------------------------------- Linux has libintl (GNU gettext) built-in the C library. Other systems are likely to have libintl as a separate or optional library. Also, other systems may have a different make utility. On those systems, like FreeBSD, you must tell configure where to find the libintl library and the libintl.h include file: CPPFLAGS="-I/usr/local/include -L/usr/local/lib" ./configure --prefix=/usr/local Once you have done this, if make fails, use gmake (the name FreeBSD gives to GNU make) instead. -------------------------------- Donald Allingham dallingham@users.sourceforge.net