b6d504f5c2d360462b22669af01ca0b94af55a48
Andrew Lewman add vidalia instructions fo...

Andrew Lewman authored 14 years ago

1) ## translation metadata
2) # Revision: $Revision: 19802 $
3) # Translation-Priority: 3-low
4) 
5) #include "head.wmi" TITLE="Vidalia: Debian/Ubuntu Instructions" CHARSET="UTF-8"
6) 
7) <div class="center">
8) 
9) <div class="main-column">
10) 
11) <a id="debian"></a>
12) <a id="packages"></a>
13) <h2><a class="anchor" href="#debian">Vidalia on Ubuntu or Debian</a></h2>
14) <br />
15) 
16) <p>
17) <b>Do not use the packages in Ubuntu's universe.</b> They are unmaintained
18) and out of date. That means you'll be missing stability and security
19) fixes.
20) </p>
21) 
22) <p>
23) You'll need to set up our package repository before you can fetch
24) Vidalia. First, you need to figure out the name of your distribution. If
25) you're using Ubuntu 9.10, it's  "karmic", while 9.04 is "jaunty",
26) 8.10 is "intrepid", and 8.04 is "hardy". If you're using Debian
27) Etch, it's "etch", and Debian Lenny is "lenny". Then add this line to your
28) <tt>/etc/apt/sources.list</tt>
29) file:<br />
30) <pre>
31) deb     http://deb.torproject.org/torproject.org &lt;DISTRIBUTION&gt; main
32) </pre>
33) where you substitute the above word (etch, lenny, sid, karmic, jaunty,
34) intrepid, hardy) in place of &lt;DISTRIBUTION&gt;.
35) </p>
36) 
37) <p>
38) Then add the gpg key used to sign the packages by running
39) <pre>
40) gpg --keyserver keys.gnupg.net --recv 886DDD89
41) gpg --export A3C4F0F979CAA22CDBA8F512EE8CBC9E886DDD89 | sudo apt-key add -
42) </pre>
43) Now refresh your sources and install Vidalia by running
44) <pre>
45) apt-get update
46) apt-get install vidalia 
47) </pre>
48) </p>
49) 
50) <p>
51) Now Vidalia is installed and running. Move on to <a href="<page
Andrew Lewman regexs gone crazy.

Andrew Lewman authored 14 years ago

52) docs/tor-doc-unix>#polipo">step two</a> of the "Vidalia on Linux/Unix"
Andrew Lewman add vidalia instructions fo...

Andrew Lewman authored 14 years ago

53) instructions.
54) </p>
55) 
56) <p style="font-size: small">
57) The DNS name <code>deb.torproject.org</code> is actually a set of independent
58) servers in a DNS round robin configuration.  If you for some reason cannot
59) access it you might try to use the name of one of its part instead.  Try
60) <code>deb-master.torproject.org</code>,
61) <code>mirror.netcologne.de</code> or
62) <code>vidalia.mirror.youam.de</code>.
63) </p>
64) 
65) <hr />
66) 
67) <p>
68) Now Vidalia is installed and running. Move on to <a href="<page
Andrew Lewman regexs gone crazy.

Andrew Lewman authored 14 years ago

69) docs/tor-doc-unix>#polipo">step two</a> of the "Vidalia on Linux/Unix"
Andrew Lewman add vidalia instructions fo...

Andrew Lewman authored 14 years ago

70) instructions.
71) </p>
72) 
73) <hr />
74) 
75) <a id="source"></a>
76) <h2><a class="anchor" href="#source">Building from source</a></h2>
77) <br />
78) 
79) <p>
80) If you want to build your own debs from source you must first add an
81) appropriate <tt>deb-src</tt> line to <tt>sources.list</tt>.
82) <pre>
83) deb-src http://deb.torproject.org/torproject.org &lt;DISTRIBUTION&gt; main
84) </pre>
85) You also need to install the necessary packages to build your own debs and the
86) packages needed to build Vidalia:
87) <pre>
88) apt-get install build-essential fakeroot devscripts qt4-dev-tools qt4-designer libqt4-dev g++ cmake
89) apt-get build-dep vidalia
90) </pre>
91) Then you can build Vidalia in ~/debian-packages:
92) <pre>
93) mkdir ~/debian-packages; cd ~/debian-packages
94) apt-get source vidalia
95) cd vidalia-*
96) debuild -rfakeroot -uc -us
97) cd ..
98) </pre>
99) Now you can install the new package:
100) <pre>
101) sudo dpkg -i vidalia_*.deb
102) </pre>
103) </p>
104) 
105) <p>
106) Now Vidalia is installed and running. Move on to <a href="<page
Andrew Lewman regexs gone crazy.

Andrew Lewman authored 14 years ago

107) docs/tor-doc-unix>#polipo">step two</a> of the "Vidalia on Linux/Unix"