Provided by: virt-p2v_1.42.3-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       p2v-building - How to build virt-p2v from source

DESCRIPTION

       This manual page describes how to build virt-p2v from source.

       The main steps are:

       •   Install the requirements.

       •   Build, either from the git repository or from a tarball.

       •   Run the tests.

       •   Run the tools from the source directory, or install.

REQUIREMENTS

   Full list of requirements
       qemu-img ≥ 2.2.0
           Required.

       Gcc or Clang
           Required.  We use "__attribute__((cleanup))" which is a GCC extension also supported
           by Clang.

       Perl
           Required.  Various build steps and tests are written in Perl.  Perl is not needed at
           runtime.

       Perl "Pod::Man"
       Perl "Pod::Simple"
           Required.  Part of Perl core.

       autoconf
       automake
           Required if compiling from git.  Optional if compiling from tarball.

       Perl-compatible Regular Expressions (PCRE2) library
           Required.

       libxml2
           Required.

       xz  Required.

       nbdkit
           Optional.

           virt-p2v(1) requires nbdkit, but it only needs to be present on the virt-p2v ISO, it
           does not need to be installed at compile time.

       Glib ≥ 2.56
           Required.

       Gtk ≥ 3.22
           Required.

       D-Bus
           Optional.

           If the D-Bus low level C API is available, virt-p2v can send a D-Bus message to logind
           to inhibit power saving (sleep, suspend, etc) during P2V conversions.

           If this API is not available at build time, then very long conversions might be
           interrupted if the physical machine goes to sleep.

       valgrind
           Optional.  For testing memory problems.

       bash-completion
           Optional.  For tab-completion of commands in bash.

BUILDING FROM GIT

       You will need to install additional dependencies "autoconf", and "automake" when building
       from git.

        git clone https://github.com/libguestfs/virt-p2v
        cd virt-p2v
        autoreconf -i
        ./configure
        make

BUILDING FROM TARBALLS

       Tarballs are downloaded from http://download.libguestfs.org/.  Stable tarballs are signed
       with the GnuPG key for "rich@annexia.org", see
       https://pgp.mit.edu/pks/lookup?op=vindex&search=0x91738F73E1B768A0.  The fingerprint is
       "F777 4FB1 AD07 4A7E 8C87 67EA 9173 8F73 E1B7 68A0".

       Download and unpack the tarball.

        cd virt-p2v-1.xx.yy
        ./configure
        make

RUNNING THE TESTS

       DO NOT run the tests as root!  Virt-p2v can be built and tested as non-root.  Running the
       tests as root could even be dangerous, don't do it.

       To run the tests, do:

        make check

       There are many more tests you can run.  See p2v-hacking(1) for details.

INSTALLING

       DO NOT use "make install"!  You'll end up with conflicting versions of virt-p2v installed,
       and this causes constant headaches for users.  See the next section for how to use the
       ./run script instead.

       Distro packagers can use:

        make DESTDIR=[temp-build-dir] install

THE ./run SCRIPT

       You can test virt-p2v(1) and the other tools without needing to install them by using the
       ./run script in the top directory.  This script works by setting several environment
       variables.

       For example:

        ./run virt-p2v-make-disk [usual virt-p2v-make-disk args ...]

       The ./run script adds every virt-p2v binary to the $PATH, so the above example run
       virt-p2v-make-disk from the build directory (not the globally installed virt-p2v-make-disk
       if there is one).

SELECTED ./configure SETTINGS

       There are many "./configure" options.  Use:

        ./configure --help

       to list them all.  This section covers some of the more important ones.

       --enable-werror
           This turns compiler warnings into errors (ie. "-Werror").  Use this for development,
           especially when submitting patches.  It should generally not be used for production or
           distro builds.

       --with-extra="distroname=version,..."
       --with-extra="local"
           This option appends a text to the version of the virt-p2v tools.  It is a free text
           field, but a good idea is to encode a comma-separated list of facts such as the distro
           name and version, and anything else that may help with debugging problems raised by
           users.

           For custom and/or local builds, this can be set to "local" to indicate this is not a
           distro build.

USING CLANG (LLVM) INSTEAD OF GCC

        export CC=clang
        ./configure
        make

BUILDING i686 32 BIT VIRT-P2V

       (This section only applies on the x86-64 architecture.)

       Building a 32 bit virt-p2v (i686) binary improves compatibility with older hardware.  See
       virt-p2v-make-disk(1) for details.  Although virt-p2v is a simple Gtk application, it is
       not especially easy to build just virt-p2v as a 32 bit application on a 64 bit host.
       Usually the simplest way is to use a 32 bit chroot or even a 32 bit virtual machine to
       build virt-p2v.

       On Fedora you can use the mock(1) tool.  For example:

        fedpkg mockbuild --root fedora-23-i386

       This will result in a virt-v2v-*.i686.rpm file which can be unpacked to extract the 32 bit
       virt-p2v binary.

       The binary may be compressed to either virt-p2v.i686.xz, or
       $libdir/virt-p2v/virt-p2v.i686.xz or $VIRT_P2V_DATA_DIR/virt-p2v.i686.xz as appropriate.
       This enables the virt-p2v-make-disk(1) --arch option.

SEE ALSO

       p2v-hacking(1), p2v-release-notes(1), http://libguestfs.org/.

AUTHORS

       Richard W.M. Jones ("rjones at redhat dot com")

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2009-2019 Red Hat Inc.

LICENSE

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
       the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
       version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.

       This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY;
       without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
       See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this
       program.  If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.

BUGS

       To get a list of bugs against libguestfs (which include virt-p2v), use this link:
       https://bugzilla.redhat.com/buglist.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools

       To report a new bug against libguestfs, use this link:
       https://bugzilla.redhat.com/enter_bug.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools

       When reporting a bug, please supply:

       •   The version of virt-p2v.

       •   Where you got virt-p2v (eg. which Linux distro, compiled from source, etc)

       •   Describe the bug accurately and give a way to reproduce it.