These are instructions for performing a regular build using the libraries that are shipped with your distribution. For instructions to build a static version of Mumble, checkout this file.
In order to install the needed dependencies on Ubuntu, you have to run the following command:
sudo apt install \
build-essential \
cmake \
pkg-config \
qt5-default \
qttools5-dev \
qttools5-dev-tools \
libqt5svg5-dev \
libboost-dev \
libssl-dev \
libprotobuf-dev \
protobuf-compiler \
libprotoc-dev \
libcap-dev \
libxi-dev \
libasound2-dev \
libogg-dev \
libsndfile1-dev \
libspeechd-dev \
libavahi-compat-libdnssd-dev \
libzeroc-ice-dev \
g++-multilib
If you intend to include grpc-support for the Mumble server (murmur), you also have to install the following packages: libgrpc++-dev
and
protobuf-compiler-grpc
The dependence on g++-multilib
only applies if you are on a 64bit system and want to cross-compile overlay support for 32bit applications as well
(which is enabled by default). If you don't do this (-Doverlay-xcompile=OFF
when invoking cmake), you also don't have to install g++-multilib
.
If you are using a distribution that is not based on Ubuntu, you probably have to change the command accordingly.
You will need cmake
v3.15 or later. If the version shipped by your distribution is not recent enough, you can install a recent one via the
official PPA or from the linked page.
It is recommended to perform a so-called "out-of-source-build". In order to do so, navigate to the root of the Mumble directory and then issue the following commands:
mkdir build
(Creates a build directory)cd build
(Switches into the build directory)cmake ..
(Actually runs cmake)
This will cause cmake to create the necessary build files for you. If you want to customize your build, you can pass special flags to cmake in step 3. For all available build options, have a look here.
E.g. if you only want to build the server, use cmake -Dclient=OFF ..
.
By default cmake will create Makefiles if run on Linux, so in order to build, you can simply run make
in the build directory. If you want to
parallelize the build (to speed things up), you can use make -j $(nproc)
.
If you want to stay independent of the type of the generated build files, you should issue cmake --build .
(from the build directory) in order to
start the compilation. If you want to parallelize the build, use cmake --build . -j <jobs>
where <jobs>
is the amount of parallel jobs to be run
concurrently. A good choice usually is <jobs> = $(nproc)
.
See the general build-FAQ.