lbrycrd/doc/build-openbsd.md
Wladimir J. van der Laan 76ae7a1ac9
Merge #14515: doc: Update OpenBSD build guide for 6.4
33ae985912 doc: Update OpenBSD build guide for 6.4 (fanquake)
6d247b1148 gitignore contents of db4 folder (Marty Jones)

Pull request description:

  Includes a commit from #14314.
  The `disable-dependency-tracking ` workaround is still required to run `./configure` (cc #14404).
  `gmake check -j4` pass.
  `src/bitcoind` runs and "starts" syncing.

Tree-SHA512: 72d78eb0d94fc4f2bbcf901d867f10f0e85d8a4f43969c598953278343ed826a26d1ebe6772dcc0fbd1fc608e88b7c86e31656232c1efb0656c537176fb9de4c
2018-11-05 13:26:37 +01:00

3.2 KiB

OpenBSD build guide

(updated for OpenBSD 6.4)

This guide describes how to build bitcoind and command-line utilities on OpenBSD.

OpenBSD is most commonly used as a server OS, so this guide does not contain instructions for building the GUI.

Preparation

Run the following as root to install the base dependencies for building:

pkg_add git gmake libevent libtool boost
pkg_add autoconf # (select highest version, e.g. 2.69)
pkg_add automake # (select highest version, e.g. 1.16)
pkg_add python # (select highest version, e.g. 3.6)

git clone https://github.com/bitcoin/bitcoin.git

See dependencies.md for a complete overview.

Important: From OpenBSD 6.2 onwards a C++11-supporting clang compiler is part of the base image, and while building it is necessary to make sure that this compiler is used and not ancient g++ 4.2.1. This is done by appending CC=cc CXX=c++ to configuration commands. Mixing different compilers within the same executable will result in linker errors.

Building BerkeleyDB

BerkeleyDB is only necessary for the wallet functionality. To skip this, pass --disable-wallet to ./configure and skip to the next section.

It is recommended to use Berkeley DB 4.8. You cannot use the BerkeleyDB library from ports, for the same reason as boost above (g++/libstd++ incompatibility). If you have to build it yourself, you can use the installation script included in contrib/ like so:

./contrib/install_db4.sh `pwd` CC=cc CXX=c++

from the root of the repository. Then set BDB_PREFIX for the next section:

export BDB_PREFIX="$PWD/db4"

Building Bitcoin Core

Important: use gmake, not make. The non-GNU make will exit with a horrible error.

Preparation:


# Replace this with the autoconf version that you installed. Include only
# the major and minor parts of the version: use "2.69" for "autoconf-2.69p2".
export AUTOCONF_VERSION=2.69

# Replace this with the automake version that you installed. Include only
# the major and minor parts of the version: use "1.16" for "automake-1.16.1".
export AUTOMAKE_VERSION=1.16

./autogen.sh

Make sure BDB_PREFIX is set to the appropriate path from the above steps.

To configure with wallet:

./configure --with-gui=no CC=cc CXX=c++ \
    BDB_LIBS="-L${BDB_PREFIX}/lib -ldb_cxx-4.8" BDB_CFLAGS="-I${BDB_PREFIX}/include"

To configure without wallet:

./configure --disable-wallet --with-gui=no CC=cc CXX=c++

Build and run the tests:

gmake # use -jX here for parallelism
gmake check

Resource limits

If the build runs into out-of-memory errors, the instructions in this section might help.

The standard ulimit restrictions in OpenBSD are very strict:

data(kbytes)         1572864

This is, unfortunately, in some cases not enough to compile some .cpp files in the project, (see issue #6658). If your user is in the staff group the limit can be raised with:

ulimit -d 3000000

The change will only affect the current shell and processes spawned by it. To make the change system-wide, change datasize-cur and datasize-max in /etc/login.conf, and reboot.