CompileOnUnix

On recent linux distributions, FreeCAD is generally easy to build, since all dependencies are usually provided by the package manager. Basically, you'll just need to get the FreeCAD source, then install the dependencies listed below, then issue: ./autogen.sh && ./configure && make to get FreeCAD built. Below, you'll find detailed explanations of the whole process and particularities you might encounter. Before you get too bogged down in details, there is also a shellscript that you can use to follow along. If you find anything wrong in it or here below, please correct it.

Get the source
Before you can compile FreeCAD, you must get the source code. First install subversion. Then, in the appropriate directory, do: svn co https://free-cad.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/free-cad/trunk freecad This will give you an anonymous checkout of the current development version in a new directory "freecad". Alternatively you can download a source tarball but they could be already quite old so it's probably better to always get the latest sources via subversion.

Prerequisites
To compile FreeCAD under Linux you have to install all libraries mentioned in Third Party Libraries first. As compiler you should have installed gcc in a version equal to 3.x.y or newer, especially g++ is needed because FreeCAD is completely written in C++. Both gcc and g++ are included in the build-essential package listed below. During the compilation some Python scripts get executed. So the Python interpreter has to work properly.

To avoid any linker problems during the build process it would be a good idea to have the library paths either in your LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable or in your ld.so.conf file. This is normally already the case in recent distributions.

For more details have also a look to README.Linux in your sources.

Prerequisites on Debian/Ubuntu
On Debian based systems it is quite easy to get all needed libraries installed. Most of the libraries are available via apt-get or synaptic package manager. Below are listed all packgages you need to install:

build-essential python libcoin40-dev libsoqt4-dev libxerces28-dev libboost-dev libboost-date-time-dev libboost-filesystem-dev libboost-graph-dev libboost-iostreams-dev libboost-program-options-dev libboost-serialization-dev libboost-signals-dev libboost-regex-dev libgts-dev libqt4-dev qt4-dev-tools python2.5-dev libcv-dev libhighgui-dev python-opencv libopencascade-dev libsoqt4-dev

To simply install all these libraries in one step, just copy/paste the following text in a terminal (only for debian/ubuntu based systems) as root:

apt-get install build-essential python libcoin40-dev libsoqt4-dev libxerces28-dev libboost-dev libboost-date-time-dev libboost-filesystem-dev libboost-graph-dev libboost-iostreams-dev libboost-program-options-dev libboost-serialization-dev libboost-signals-dev libboost-regex-dev libgts-dev libqt4-dev qt4-dev-tools python2.5-dev libcv-dev libhighgui-dev python-opencv libsimage-dev libopencascade-dev libsoqt4-dev

optionally you can also install libsimage-dev checkinstall the first one to make Coin to support additinal image file formats, the second one to register your installed files into your system's package manager, so yo can easily uninstall later.

However you might encounter problems with the following libraries:

OpenCASCADE
Not all Linux distributions have an official OpenCASCADE package in their repositories. You have to check yourself for your distribution if one is available. At least from Debian Lenny and Ubuntu Intrepid on an official .deb package is provided. For older Debian or Ubuntu releases you may get unofficial packages from here. To build your own private .deb packages follow these steps:

wget http://lyre.mit.edu/~powell/opencascade/opencascade_6.2.0.orig.tar.gz wget http://lyre.mit.edu/~powell/opencascade/opencascade_6.2.0-7.dsc wget http://lyre.mit.edu/~powell/opencascade/opencascade_6.2.0-7.diff.gz

dpkg-source -x opencascade_6.2.0-7.dsc

sudo apt-get install build-essential devscripts debhelper autoconf automake libtool bison libx11-dev tcl8.4-dev tk8.4-dev libgl1-mesa-dev libglu1-mesa-dev java-gcj-compat-dev libxmu-dev
 * 1) Install OCC build-deps

cd opencascade-6.2.0 ; debuild
 * 1) Build Opencascade packages. This takes hours and requires
 * 2) at least 8 GB of free disk space

sudo dpkg -i libopencascade6.2-0_6.2.0-7_i386.deb libopencascade6.2-dev_6.2.0-7_i386.deb
 * 1) Install the resulting library debs

Alternatively, you can download and compile the latest version from opencascade.org:

Install the package normally, be aware that the installer is a java program that requires the official java runtime edition from Sun (package name: sun-java6-jre), not the open-source java (gij) that is bundled with Ubuntu. Install it if needed: sudo apt-get remove gij sudo apt-get install sun-java6-jre Be careful, if you use gij java with other things like a browser plugin, they won't work anymore. If the installer doesn't work, try: java -cp path_to_file_setup.jar <-Dtemp.dir=path_to_tmp_directory> run

SoQt
The SoQt library must be compiled against Qt4, which is the case in most recent distributions. But at the time of writing this article there were only SoQt4 packages for Debian itself available but not for all Ubuntu versions. To get the packages built do the following steps:

wget http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/pool/main/s/soqt/soqt_1.4.1.orig.tar.gz wget http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/pool/main/s/soqt/soqt_1.4.1-6.dsc wget http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian/pool/main/s/soqt/soqt_1.4.1-6.diff.gz dpkg-source -x soqt_1.4.1-6.dsc sudo apt-get install doxygen devscripts fakeroot debhelper libqt3-mt-dev qt3-dev-tools libqt4-opengl-dev (cd soqt-1.4.1 ; debuild) sudo dpkg -i libsoqt4-20_1.4.1-6_i386.deb libsoqt4-dev_1.4.1-6_i386.deb libsoqt-dev-common_1.4.1-6_i386.deb

Compile FreeCAD
If you got the sources with subversion then the very first step must be ./autogen.sh that creates the configure script and more. Therefore you must have automake and libtool installed on your system

For the build process of FreeCAD we provide a configure script. Just type ./configure To get an overview of all options you can specify, you can type ./configure --help. Normally you need none of them - unless you have one of your libraries installed in a really uncommon directory. After configuration has finished, compiling FreeCAD is as simple as make If any error occurs while building from sources, please double-check this page and README.Linux file, then you could jump to the Bug Tracker on SourceForge, choose Any for status and click the Browse button to see previous reports on compile problems.

After having built FreeCAD successfully, do make install to install it onto your machine.The default install directory is $(HOME)/FreeCAD It will be installed in a FreeCAD folder in your home folder, so you don't need root privileges.

Instead of make install, you can also do checkinstall So FreeCAD will be installed by your package management system, so you can uninstall it easily later. But since all of FreeCAD installation resides into one single directory, just removing the FreeCAD directory is a valid way to uninstall too.

Optional parts
If you want to develop Qt stuff for FreeCAD, you'll need the Qt Designer plugin that provides all custom widgets of FreeCAD. Go to freecad/src/Tools/plugins/widget So far we don't provide a makefile -- but calling qmake plugin.pro creates it. Once that's done, calling make will create the library libFreeCAD_widgets.so. To make this library known to Qt Designer you have to copy the file to $QTDIR/plugin/designer

Compile on 64 bits systems
Compiling on a 64-bit machine happens basically the same way as above, but there might be a couple of specific steps to do:

Additional Libraries
You need all the FreeCAD Third Party Libraries listed above, plus a couple of extra ones if you are going to compile opencascade yourself, they are usually available in your package manager:

tcl8.4 (needed only by opencascade) tcl8.4-dev (needed only by opencascade) tk8.4 (needed only by opencascade) tk8.4-dev (needed only by opencascade)

Compiling OpenCascade
The Opencascade you downloaded above contains libraries compiled in 32 bits and the sources, which we will use to recompile the libraries in 64 bits. Before anything, be aware that you will need several (>7) Gigabytes free at the moment you compile.

Install the package normally as described above.

Once the package is installed, go into the "ros" directory inside the opencascade dir, and do ./configure --with-tcl=/usr/lib/tcl8.4 --with-tk=/usr/lib/tk8.4 Now you can build. Go back to the ros folder and do: make It will take a long time, maybe several hours.

Possible error 1: If you are using OCC version 6.2, it is likely that the compiler will stop right after the beginning of the "make" operation. If it happens, edit the "configure" script, locate the CXXFLAGS="$CXXFLAGS " statement, and replace it by CXXFLAGS="$CXXFLAGS -ffriend-injection -fpermissive". Then do the configure step again.

Possible error 2: Possibly several modules (WOKSH, WOKLibs, TKWOKTcl, TKViewerTest and TKDraw) will complain that they couldn't find the tcl/tk headers. In that case, since the option is not offered in the configure script, you will have to edit manually the makefile of each of those modules: Go into adm/make and into each of the bad modules folders. Edit the Makefile, and locate the lines CSF_TclLibs_INCLUDES = -I/usr/include and CSF_TclTkLibs_INCLUDES = -I/usr/include and add /tcl8.4 and /tk8.4 to it so they read: CSF_TclLibs_INCLUDES = -I/usr/include/tcl8.4 and CSF_TclTkLibs_INCLUDES = -I/usr/include/tk8.4

When it is done, just install by doing sudo make install The library files will be copied into /usr/local/lib which is fine because there they will be found automatically by any program. Alternatively, you can also do sudo checkinstall which will do the same as make install but create an entry in your package management system so you can easily uninstall later. Now clean up the enormous temporary compilation files by doing make clean

Configuring FreeCAD
When building FreeCAD for 64-bit there is a known issue with the OpenCASCADE 64-bit package. To get it properly running you must run ./configure with the additional define _OCC64 set, ./configure CXXFLAGS="-D_OCC64". For Debian based systems this workaround is not needed when using the prebuilt package because there the OpenCASCADE package is built to set internally this define. Now you just need to compile FreeCAD the same way as described above.

Automake macros
The configure script of FreeCAD makes use of several automake macros that are sometimes not installed with their packages: bnv_have_qt.m4, coin.m4, and gts.m4. If needed (error while configuring), google for them and you will find them easily. They are just simple scripts that you need to put in your /usr/share/aclocal folder.

Making a debian package
If you plan to build a Debian package out of the sources you need to install further packages first. Required are dh-make devscripts and optional but recommended package is lintian To build a package open a console, go to the FreeCAD directory and call debuild Once the package is built, you can use lintian to check if the package contains errors lintian your-fresh-new-freecad-package.deb (replace by the package you just created)

Build scripts
Here all you need for a complete build of FreeCAD together:

Ubuntu 9.4
sudo apt-get install build-essential python libcoin40-dev libsoqt4-dev \ libxerces-c2-dev libboost-dev libboost-date-time-dev libboost-filesystem-dev \ libboost-graph-dev libboost-iostreams-dev libboost-program-options-dev \ libboost-serialization-dev libboost-signals-dev libboost-regex-dev \ libgts-dev libqt4-dev qt4-dev-tools python2.5-dev libcv-dev \ libhighgui-dev python-opencv libsimage-dev libopencascade-dev \ libsoqt4-dev libode0-dev subversion cmake svn co https://free-cad.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/free-cad/trunk freecad cd freecad cmake. nice make cd bin ./FreeCAD -t 0
 * 1) get the needed tools and libs
 * 1) checkout the latest source
 * 1) go to source dir
 * 1) build configuration
 * 1) build FreeCAD
 * 1) test FreeCAD