-\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
+@node
+@comment node-name, next, previous, up\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
@setfilename INSTALL.info
@settitle INSTALL - compiling and installing GNU LilyPond
+@html
+<!--- @@WEB-TITLE@@=Installation Instructions --->
+@end html
+
@node Top, , , (dir)
@top
+@contents
+
@chapter INSTALL - compiling and installing GNU LilyPond
-@section Obtaining
-You can get the latest version of LilyPond at
-@uref{ftp://ftp.cs.uu.nl/pub/GNU/LilyPond/,
-ftp://ftp.cs.uu.nl/pub/GNU/LilyPond/}.
+This document describes how to build LilyPond on Unix platforms. It
+is also known to run and compile on Windows NT/95/98/ME/XP as well.
+More information on this topic can be found at the
+@uref{http://www.lilypond.org/cygwin/, LilyPond on Windows page}.
-There are three options for downloading sources.
-@itemize
-@item if you don't have any version, then you can download
- the entire @file{.tar.gz} file.
+@html
+<a name="download-source">
+@end html
+
+@section Downloading
+
+Even numbered versions are `stable'. The webpages for the stable version
+(1.4) reside @uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/lilypond, on the GNU
+servers}. Big enhancements go into the latest odd numbered version
+(1.5), whose webpages are on @uref{http://www.lilypond.org/,the lilypond
+site}.
+
+@subsection Source code
+
+If you want to compile LilyPond from source, download here:
+@itemize @bullet
+@item Download development releases from
+@c Hmm, these won't show up in lilypond.org/stats
+@c Otoh, lilypond.org is not updated when release mail arrives
+@uref{ftp://ftp.cs.uu.nl/pub/GNU/LilyPond/} by FTP and
+@uref{http://ftp.cs.uu.nl/pub/GNU/LilyPond/}, by HTTP.
+@item @uref{ftp://sca.uwaterloo.ca/pub/} by FTP (Canadian mirror)
+@item at @code{lilypond.org}
+@uref{ftp://ftp.lilypond.org/pub/LilyPond/} by FTP and
+@uref{http://www.lilypond.org/ftp/} by HTTP.
+@end itemize
+
+
+For Red Hat Linux and SuSE Linux, @file{.spec} files are included in the
+tarball; see instructions below.
+
+
+
+Of course, if your platform supports LilyPond, such as Debian GNU/Linux,
+FreeBSD, OpenBSD or NetBSD, you're encouraged to use the native build
+from source drill.
+
+The latest development version is also available through anonymous
+CVS. See @uref{http://savannah.gnu.org/cvs/?group=lilypond}.
+
+
+@html
+<a name="download-binaries">
+@end html
-@item if you have an unpacked source tree of a previous version, you
-may use the diffs .
+@subsection Precompiled binaries
+
+If you want to track bleeding edge development, try:
+
+@itemize @bullet
+@item @uref{ftp://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/l/lilypond/, Debian
+GNU/Linux} usually has the latest binaries for the most useful stable
+and development versions, while
+@item @uref{http://rpmfind.net/linux/mandrake/cooker/contrib/RPMS/,
+Mandrake Cooker} also provides fairly recent versions.
+@end itemize
+
+Binaries are made available for other popular platforms, but as we need
+to compile them ourselves, they are not updated for every version
+released.
+
+@itemize @bullet
+@item @uref{ftp://ftp.cs.uu.nl/pub/GNU/LilyPond/binaries/RedHat/RPMS/, Red Hat i386}
+@item @uref{ftp://ftp.lilypond.org/pub/LilyPond/binaries/SuSE, SuSE}
+@item @uref{ftp://ftp.lilypond.org/pub/LilyPond/binaries/linuxppc/,
+LinuxPPC}
+@item
+@uref{http://www.lilypond.org/gnu-windows/, Windows}
+@end itemize
+
+@subsection Upgrading
+
+There are two options for upgrading sources.
+
+@itemize
+@item if you have an unpacked source tree of a previous version, you
+may the patches.
+
@emph{If you upgrade by patching do remember to rerun autoconf after
applying the patch}.
-
@item if you have the @code{.tar.gz} file of a previous release, you can
use
@uref{ftp://ftp.xcf.berkeley.edu/pub/xdelta/, xdelta}.
- This is much safer than using normal diffs, and is the recommended way.
+ This is much safer than using patches, and is the recommended way.
-The following command produces @file{lilypond-1.3.122.tar.gz} from
-@file{lilypond-1.3.121} identical (up to compression dates) to the .122
+The following command produces @file{lilypond-1.4.3.tar.gz} from
+@file{lilypond-1.4.2.tar.gz} identical (up to compression dates) to the .3
on the FTP site.
@example
- xdelta patch lilypond-1.3.121-1.3.122.xd lilypond-1.3.121.tar.gz
+ xdelta patch lilypond-1.4.2-1.4.3.xd lilypond-1.4.2.tar.gz
@end example
@end itemize
-@section Build requirements
+@section Requirements
-This document describes how to build LilyPond on Unix platforms. It is
-also known to run and compile on Windows NT/95/98 as well. More
-information on this topic can be found at
-@uref{http://appel.lilypond.org/lilypond/gnu-windows/, Jan's windows
-page}.
+@subsection Compilation
You need the following packages to compile Lilypond.
@itemize
-@item A reasonably new C++ compiler: EGCS 1.1, GCC 2.95.2 or
-newer. Check out @uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gcc/, the gcc site}.
+@item The GNU c++ compiler (version 2.95.2 or newer).
+EGCS 1.1 may work, but is no longer supported.
+Check out @uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/gcc/, the gcc site}.
-@item Python 1.5,
+WARNING: if you choose to upgrade to GCC 3.x, enquire if your
+distribution supports g++ 3.x and flex. At the time of writing (Fri
+Jul 5 2002), @strong{no} distribution that we know of ships a flex
+that generates gcc-3.1.x compliant C++ code.
+
+@item Python (version 1.5 or newer).
Check out @uref{http://www.python.org, the python website}.
-@item GUILE 1.3.4 or newer, check out
+@item GUILE (version 1.4 or newer).
+Check out
@uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/guile/guile.html,the GUILE webpage}.
-Version 1.4 is recommended for better performance.
@item GNU Make.
Check out
@item Flex (version 2.5.4a or newer).
Check out @uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/flex/,the Flex webpage}.
+WARNING: plain Flex 2.5.4(a) generates invalid C++ code. GCC 3.x
+chokes on this. If you wish to use GCC 3.x, make sure that your
+distribution supports g++ 3.x and flex. For workarounds, see
+lexer-gcc-3.0.patch and lexer-gcc-3.1.sh in the source directory.
+
@item Bison (version 1.25 or newer).
Check out @uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/bison/,the bison webpage}
@TeX{} is used as an output backend.
-Also, @TeX{}'s libkpathsea is used to find the fonts (.mf, .afm, .tfm).
+Also, @TeX{}'s libkpathsea is used to find the fonts (@file{.mf}, @file{.afm}, @file{.tfm}).
Make sure you have tetex 1.0 or newer (1.0.6 is known to work). You may
need to install a tetex-devel or tetex-dev package too.
-@item Texinfo (version 4.0 or newer).
+@item Texinfo (version 4.2 or newer).
The documentation of lily is written in texinfo. Check out
@uref{ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/texinfo/,the texinfo FTP directory}.
FTP directory for @code{geometry}}. This package is normally included
with the @TeX{} distribution.
-@item MetaPost, needed for generating PostScript fonts. Please
-note that tetex-0.4pl8 (included with Red Hat 5.x) does not include
-@file{mfplain.mp}, which is needed for producing the scalable font
-files.
-
-If you don't have MetaPost and don't want to use PostScript output, then
-edit @file{mf/GNUmakefile}, removing the line saying @code{PFA_FILES=}.
-
-@item kpathsea, a library for searching (TeX) files. @code{kpathsea} is
-usually included with your installation of TeX. You may need to install
-a tetex-devel or tetex-dev package too.
+@item kpathsea, a library for searching (@TeX{}) files. @code{kpathsea} is
+usually included with your installation of @TeX{}. You may need to install
+a tetex-devel or tetex-dev package too. If kpathsea is not installed in
+a directory where the compiler normally looks, read the hints for
+Slackware below.
In the very unlikely case that kpathsea is not available for your
platform (ie, you're not running GNU/Linux, Windows, or any recent
you'll probably have to indicate where @TeX{}'s tfm files live. Invoke
configure something like:
+@quotation
@example
./configure --without-kpathsea --enable-tfm-path=/usr/share/texmf/fonts/tfm/public/cm/:/usr/share/texmf/fonts/tfm/ams/symbols
@end example
+@end quotation
@end itemize
-@section Running requirements
+@subsection Running requirements
GNU LilyPond does use a lot of resources. For operation you need the
following software
@itemize @bullet
-@item TeX.
-@item Xdvi and ghostscript
-@item GUILE 1.3.4, or newer. Check out
+@item @TeX{}.
+@item Xdvi and Ghostscript
+@item GUILE 1.4, or newer.
+Check out
@uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/guile.html,the GUILE webpage}
@end itemize
-For running LilyPond successfully you have to help TeX and MetaFont find
+For running LilyPond successfully you have to help @TeX{} and MetaFont find
various files. The recommended way of doing so is adjusting the
environment variables in the start-up scripts of your shell. Appropriate
Csh and bourne sh scripts are left in
LilyPond is a big and slow program. A fast CPU and plenty of RAM is
recommended for comfortable use.
-@section Website requirements
+@subsection Website requirements
The documentation comes in the form of a website. You can view this
website on the internet, but you can also build it locally. This process
@end example
-Building the website requires some additional tools:
+Building the website requires some additional tools:
@itemize @bullet
-@item xpmtoppm (from the netpbm package: the Portable Bitmap Utilities).
- The original is at
-@uref{ftp://ftp.x.org/contrib/utilities/netpbm-1mar1994.p1.tar.gz,the
-netpbm FTP site}
-
-@item pnmtopng. The original is
-at
-@uref{ftp://swrinde.nde.swri.edu/pub/png/applications/pnmtopng-2.37.2.tar.gz,in
-the pnmtopng FTP site}.
-
-@item @uref{http://www.lri.fr/~filliatr/ftp/bibtex2html/, Bibtex2html}, or
-@uref{http://www.uni-koblenz.de/ag-ki/ftp/bib2html/, Bib2html}.
-Bibtex2html is available in debian, while bib2html is in some rpm based
-distributions.
-Bib2html, in turn depends on man2html for proper installation.
-man2html can be had from @uref{http://askdonald.ask.uni-karlsruhe.de/hppd/hpux/Networking/WWW/Man2html-1.05,http://askdonald.ask.uni-karlsruhe.de/hppd/hpux/Networking/WWW/Man2html-1.05}.
-
-The website will build without bib converter utility, but you will not
-see our hypertextified bibliography.
-
+@item The netpbm utilities, see @uref{http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/}
+@item mftrace 1.0 or newer, needed for generating PostScript Type1
+fonts. Get it from @uref{http://www.cs.uu.nl/~hanwen/mftrace/}. You
+will need to install some additional packages to get mftrace to work.
@end itemize
-@section Configuring and compiling
+@section Building LilyPond
to install GNU LilyPond, type:
@example
-@section Configuring for multiple platforms
+@subsection Configuring for multiple platforms
If you want to build multiple versions of LilyPond with different
configuration settings, you can use the @code{--enable-config=CONF}
option of configure. You should use @samp{make conf=CONF} to generate
the output in @file{out-CONF}. Example: suppose I want to build with
-and without profiling. Then I'd use the following for the normal build,
+and without profiling. Then I'd use the following for the normal
+build,
+@c prefix=~ ?
@example
./configure --prefix=~ --enable-checking
+@section Emacs mode
+An Emacs mode for entering music and running LilyPond is included with
+the source archive as @file{lilypond-mode.el},
+@file{lilypond-indent.el} and @file{lilypond-font-lock.el}. You
+should install these files somewhere in your @var{load-path}. If you
+have installed a precompiled LilyPond package, these files can be
+found in @file{/usr/share/doc/lilypond-x.y.z/}.
-@section Emacs mode
+Add this to your @file{~/.emacs} or @file{~/.emacs.el}, or install this
+file in Emacs' @file{site-start.d}:
+@quotation
+@example
+ ;;; lilypond-init.el --- Startup code for LilyPond mode
-An emacs mode for LilyPond is included with the source archive as
-@file{lilypond-mode.el} and @file{lilypond-font-lock.el}. If you have
-an RPM, it is in @file{/usr/share/doc/lilypond-X/}. You have to install
-it yourself.
+ (autoload 'LilyPond-mode "lilypond-mode")
+ (setq auto-mode-alist
+ (cons '("\\.ly$" . LilyPond-mode) auto-mode-alist))
-Add this to your ~/.emacs or ~/.emacs.el:
-@example
- (load-library "lilypond-mode.el")
- (setq auto-mode-alist
- (cons '("\\.ly$" . LilyPond-mode) auto-mode-alist))
- (add-hook 'LilyPond-mode-hook (lambda () (turn-on-font-lock)))
+ (add-hook 'LilyPond-mode-hook (lambda () (turn-on-font-lock)))
@end example
+@end quotation
-If you have the latest LilyPond-1.3.x Debian package, LilyPond-mode is
-automatically loaded, so you need not modify your @code{~/.emacs} file.
+If you have the latest LilyPond-1.4.x Debian package, LilyPond-mode is
+automatically loaded, you not even need to modify your @code{~/.emacs}
+file.
+@section Compiling for distributions
-@section Red Hat Linux
+@subsection Red Hat Linux
-Red Hat 7.0 i386 RPMS are available from
-@uref{ftp://ftp.cs.uu.nl/pub/GNU/LilyPond/RedHat/}.
+Red Hat 7.x i386 RPMS are available from
+@uref{ftp://ftp.cs.uu.nl/pub/GNU/LilyPond/binaries/}. For running on
+a Red Hat system you need these packages: guile, tetex, tetex-latex,
+tetex-dvips, libstdc++, python, ghostscript.
You can also compile them yourself. A spec file is in
-@file{make/out/lilypond.spec}. This file is distributed along with the
-sources. You can make the rpm by issuing
+@file{make/out/lilypond.redhat.spec}. This file is distributed along
+with the sources. You can make the rpm by issuing
@example
- rpm -tb lilypond-x.y.z.tar.gz
+ tar xfz lilypond-x.y.z.tar.gz
+ rpm -bb lilypond-x.y.z/make/out/lilypond.redhat.spec
rpm -i /usr/src/redhat/RPMS/i386/lilypond-x.y.z
-
+
@end example
-For running on a Red Hat system you need these packages: guile, tetex,
-tetex-dvips, libstdc++, python, ghostscript.
+For compilation on a Red Hat system you need these packages, in
+addition to the those needed for running: glibc-devel, gcc-c++,
+libstdc++-devel, guile-devel, flex, bison, texinfo, groff, mftrace,
+netpbm-progs, autotrace, t1utils.
+
+
+
+@subsection LinuxPPC
+
+
+Some LinuxPPC RPMS should available from
+@uref{ftp://ftp.cs.uu.nl/pub/GNU/LilyPond/binaries/}.
+
+A LinuxPPC RPM can be made using the @file{lilypond.redhat.spec} file.
+
+@subsection SuSE
-For compilation on a Red Hat system you need these packages, in addition
-to the those needed for running: glibc-devel, gcc-c++, libstdc++-devel,
-guile-devel, flex, bison, texinfo, tetex-devel, groff, libgr-progs.
+Some SUSE RPMS should available from
+@uref{ftp://ftp.lilypond.org/pub/LilyPond/binaries/SuSE}.
-@section SuSE
+You can also compile a RPM for SUSE yourself. A spec file is in
+@file{make/out/lilypond.suse.spec}, see the instructions for building
+the Red Hat RPM.
-[TODO: document this]
+You must have the following packages: guile tcsh tetex te_latex te_kpath
+te_mpost libpng python gpp libgpp gettext autoconf netpbm libnetpb
+gs_serv gs_lib gs_fonts guile
-Install @code{tetex}, @code{te_mpost}, @code{te_kpath}.
+@subsection Slackware
+No precompiled packages for Slackware are available.
-@section Mandrake
+Problems have been reported with Slackware 7.0; apparently, it ships
+with a faulty compiler. Do not compile LilyPond with -O2 on this
+platform.
-[TODO]
+At least on Slackware 8.0, you have to manually specify the paths to the
+Kpathsea library, using
+@itemize
+@item @code{rm config.cache}
+@item @code{export LDFLAGS=-L/usr/share/texmf/lib}
+@item @code{export CPPFLAGS=-I/usr/share/texmf/include}
+@item @code{./configure}
+@end itemize
+
+
+@subsection Mandrake
-@section Debian GNU/Linux
+Some binaries are available at rpmfind.net. Refer to
+@uref{http://rpmfind.net/linux/mandrake/cooker/contrib/RPMS/}.
-A Debian package is also available. You may install it easily by using
-apt-get as root:
+You can also compile a RPM for Mandrake yourself. A spec file is in
+@file{make/out/lilypond.mandrake.spec}, see the instructions for building
+the Red Hat RPM.
+@subsection Debian GNU/Linux
+
+A Debian package is also available. You may install it easily by running
+@command{apt-get} as root:
@example
- apt-get install lilypond1.3
+
+ apt-get install lilypond lilypond-doc
@end example
+You can also compile the .deb for Debian yourself, do:
+@example
+
+ apt-get -b source lilypond
+@end example
+
+If you're real impatient, you may even do:
+@example
+
+ cd lilypond-x.y.z # a previous version
+ uscan # download and build latest directly from upstream
+@end example
+
+
+Debian's @TeX{} installation is a bit short on memory, you may want to
+increase it like this:
+@example
+--- texmf.cnf.orig Sun Dec 16 23:47:07 2001
++++ texmf.cnf Sun Dec 16 23:46:34 2001
+@@ -411,8 +411,8 @@
+ main_memory.context = 1500000
+ main_memory.mpost = 1000000
+ main_memory = 263000 % words of inimemory available; also applies to inimf&mp
+-extra_mem_top = 0 % extra high memory for chars, tokens, etc.
+-extra_mem_bot = 0 % extra low memory for boxes, glue, breakpoints, etc.
++extra_mem_top = 1000000 % extra high memory for chars, tokens, etc.
++extra_mem_bot = 1000000 % extra low memory for boxes, glue, breakpoints, etc.
+
+ obj_tab_size.context = 300000
+
+@@ -430,7 +430,7 @@
+ % Max number of characters in all strings, including all error messages,
+ % help texts, font names, control sequences. These values apply to TeX and MP.
+ pool_size.context = 750000
+-pool_size = 125000
++pool_size = 250000
+ % Minimum pool space after TeX/MP's own strings; must be at least
+ % 25000 less than pool_size, but doesn't need to be nearly that large.
+ string_vacancies.context = 45000
+@end example
+
+You could also export @env{extra_mem_top} and @env{extra_mem_bot} as
+environment variables if you do not want to or cannot modify
+@file{/etc/texmf/texmf.cnf}.
+
Alternatively, visit
@itemize @bullet
@item @uref{http://packages.debian.org/lilypond,http://packages.debian.org/lilypond}
-@item @uref{http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/l/lilypond1.3/,http://ftp.debian.org/debian/pool/main/l/lilypond1.3/}
-for latest package uploaded to Debian unstable;
@item @uref{http://people.debian.org/~foka/lilypond/,http://people.debian.org/~foka/lilypond/}
-for latest semi-unofficial build of LilyPond 1.3.121 for Debian 2.2r2 (potato) users.
-The official stable Debian 2.2r2 is stuck with the old LilyPond-1.3.24.
+for latest semi-unofficial build of LilyPond 1.4.2 for Debian 2.2 (potato) users.
+The official stable Debian 2.2 is stuck with the old LilyPond-1.3.24.
+Since LilyPond-1.4 has been released, the older lilypond1.3 Debian
+package is now obsolete.
@end itemize
-You may contact Anthony Fok @email{foka@@debian.org} for more information.
+Please contact Anthony Fok @email{lilypond@@packages.debian.org} for more
+information.
The build scripts are in the subdirectory @file{debian/}; you can
make the .deb by doing, for example:
$ su - root
# dpkg --purge lilypond lilypond1.3
# exit
- $ tar xzf lilypond-1.3.122.tar.gz
- $ cd lilypond-1.3.122
- $ dch -p -v 1.3.122-0.local.1 "Local build."
- $ debuild
+ $ tar xzf lilypond-1.4.3.tar.gz
+ $ cd lilypond-1.4.3
+ $ dch -p -v 1.4.3-0.local.1 "Local build."
+ $ debuild -B
$ su - root
- # dpkg -i ../lilypond1.3_1.3.122*.deb
+ # dpkg -i ../lilypond_1.4.3*.deb
# exit
$
@end example
+Use command @command{debuild} instead of @command{debuild -B} if you have
+a very fast machine and want to build the HTML, PS and DVI documentation
+too.
+
For compilation on a Debian GNU/Linux system you need these packages,
in addition to the those needed for running:
@itemize @bullet
-@item g++, cpp, libc6-dev, libstdc++<your-libstdc++-version-here>-dev
-@item libguile<your-libguile-version-here>-dev
+@item g++, cpp, libc6-dev, libstdc++<@var{your-libstdc++-version-here}>-dev
+@item libguile<@var{your-libguile-version-here}>-dev
@item make, m4, flex, bison
@item gettext
-@item groff, texinfo, bibtex2html (not in 2.2r2)
+@item groff, texinfo
@item tetex-base, tetex-bin, tetex-extra, libkpathsea-dev or tetex-dev
@item dpkg-dev, debhelper, fakeroot
-@item gs, netpbm, pnmtopng
+@item gs, netpbm
+@item pnmtopng (only in Debian 2.2; pnmtopng has been merged with netpbm
+ in Debian testing/unstable.)
@end itemize
-Most of these are listed on the Build-Depends line in the
-debian/control file. To ensure the creation of the lilypond deb is
+Most of these are listed on the @samp{Build-Depends} line in the
+@file{debian/control} file. To ensure the creation of the lilypond deb is
trouble-free, we recommend that you first install the following packages
-before starting dpkg-buildpackage by running apt-get as root.
+by running \@command{apt-get} as root before building the package:
-For Debian 2.2 (or 2.2r2, 2.2r3):
+For Debian 2.2:
@example
apt-get install task-debian-devel task-c++-dev \
For Debian in development ("unstable", the future 2.3 or 3.0):
@example
- apt-get install task-debian-devel task-c++-dev \
- python-base libguile9-dev tetex-bin libkpathsea-dev \
- tetex-extra flex bison texinfo bibtex2html groff gs \
- netpbm pnmtopng m4 gettext
+ apt-get install binutils cpp gcc libc6-dev \
+ g++ libstdc++2.10-dev \
+ python-base libguile-dev tetex-bin libkpathsea-dev \
+ tetex-extra flex bison texinfo groff gs \
+ netpbm m4 gettext
@end example
And, just so that old fonts from previous versions of LilyPond won't
dpkg --purge lilypond lilypond1.3
@end example
+@subsection MacOS X
+
+LilyPond is available through fink, in the unstable cvs distribution.
+You need to:
+@itemize @bullet
+@item Get the Fink package manager from @uref{http://fink.sourceforge.net}
+@item Get the Lilypond package description by enabling the "unstable" tree
+in fink and executing @command{fink selfupdate-cvs}.
+@end itemize
+
+Then do:
+@quotation
+@example
+ fink install lilypond-unstable
+@end example
+@end quotation
+
+That's it! The command should compile and install all LilyPond
+prerequisites (python, TeX, X11, ghostscript) and then LilyPond
+itself.
+
+
+@subsubsection compiling on MacOS X
+LilyPond has been built on Darwin, to be precise, on:
+@example
+ Darwin buoux.aspiratie.nl 5.3 Darwin Kernel Version 5.3: Thu Jan 24
+ 22:06:02 PST 2002; root:xnu/xnu-201.19.obj~1/RELEASE_PPC Power Macintosh powerpc
+@end example
+
+using:
+
+@example
+ Apple Computer, Inc. version gcc-932.1, based on gcc version 2.95.2 19991024 (release)
+@end example
+To make sure you have all packages needed to build LilyPond installed,
+run as root:
+
+@example
+ apt-get install bash python guile debianutils flex bison texinfo \
+ ghostscript6 netpbm m4 gettext
+@end example
+
+and:
+
+@example
+ fink install tetex
+@end example
+
+For more information about @file{apt-get} and @file{fink}, see
+@uref{http://fink.sf.net,fink.sourceforge.net}.
+
+@c brokenness of autoconf; don't ask
+Then, configure, patch, make and install LilyPond using these commands:
+
+@example
+ CC="cc -I/sw/include" CXX="c++ -I/sw/include" LDFLAGS="-L/sw/lib" \
+ ./configure --prefix=/sw
+ make -C lily out/parser.hh out/parser.cc out/config.h
+ patch -p0 < darwin.patch
+ make -C lily out/parser.o
+ make DEPENDENCIES_OUTPUT=/dev/null all
+ make install
+@end example
+
+For installing, you must be root, of course.
+
+@c Why isn't this in BUGS (where it belongs?)
@section Problems
-For help and questions use @email{help-gnu-music@@gnu.org} and
-@email{gnu-music-discuss@@gnu.org}. Please consult the faq before
-mailing your problems. If you find bugs, please send bug reports to
-@email{bug-gnu-music@@gnu.org}.
+For help and questions use @email{lilypond-user@@gnu.org}. Please
+consult the FAQ before mailing your problems. If you find bugs, please
+send bug reports to @email{bug-lilypond@@gnu.org}.
Bugs that are not fault of LilyPond are documented here.
-@unnumbered NetBSD
+@unnumberedsubsec Gcc-3.0.4
+
+Gcc 3.0.4, is a bit flaky. Try downgrading to 2.95.x, or if you're
+adventurous (see below), upgrading to 3.1.x.
+
+@unnumberedsubsec Flex-2.5.4a and gcc-3.x
+
+Flex 2.5.4a does not produce g++-3.0 compliant C++ code. To compile
+LilyPond with gcc-3.0 you may do:
+
+@example
+ CC=gcc-3.0 CXX=g++-3.0 ./configure --enable-config=gcc-3.0
+ make conf=gcc-3.0 -C lily out-gcc-3.0/lexer.cc
+ patch -p1 < lexer-gcc-3.0.patch
+ make conf=gcc-3.0 -C lily
+@end example
+
+Note that this is fixed in Debian/unstable for flex >= 2.5.4a-13.
+
+@unnumberedsubsec Flex-2.5.4a and gcc-3.1.x
+
+Flex 2.5.4a does not produce g++-3.1.1 compliant C++ code. To compile
+LilyPond with gcc-3.1.1 you may do:
+
+@example
+ CONF=gcc-3.1 ./lexer-gcc-3.1.sh
+ CPPFLAGS=$(pwd)/lily/out-gcc-3.1 CC=gcc-3.1 CXX=g++-3.1 \
+ ./configure --enable-config=gcc-3.1
+ CONF=gcc-3.1 ./lexer-gcc-3.1.sh
+ make conf=gcc-3.1
+@end example
+
+Note that this is @strong{not} fixed in Debian/unstable for flex <=
+2.5.4a-26.
+
+@unnumberedsubsec Linux-2.4.0, Guile-1.4 --with-threads
+
+There's a bug in certain kernels around version 2.4.0, that is
+triggered when using Guile 1.4 compiled with pthreads. You'll see
+random segmentation fault crashes of LilyPond. Upgrade to a newer
+version of Linux. If you can't do that, you may try to recompiling
+Guile without threads (YMMV):
+
+@example
+ guile-1.4$ ./configure --without-threads; make all install
+@end example
+
+
+@unnumberedsubsec NetBSD
@itemize @bullet
@item The flex precompiled in NetBSD-1.4.2 is broken.
@end itemize
-@unnumbered Solaris:
+@unnumberedsubsec Solaris:
@itemize @bullet
@item Sparc64/Solaris 2.6, GNU make-3.77
GNU make-3.77 is buggy on this platform, upgrade to 3.78.1 or newer.
-
@item Sparc64/Solaris 2.6, ld
Not yet resolved.
@end itemize
-@unnumbered AIX
+@unnumberedsubsec AIX
@itemize @bullet
@item AIX 4.3 ld