Some projects only give you .tar.gz, what am I supposed to do with them? Is this what people call building from source? Am I supposed to move it to /opt and extract it in Debian based distros? Does this also work on Arch based ones?
Some projects only give you .tar.gz, what am I supposed to do with them? Is this what people call building from source? Am I supposed to move it to /opt and extract it in Debian based distros? Does this also work on Arch based ones?
Yes, this is building from source. You extract it and build it with whatever instructions come with it; there should be documentation from the git page or possibly in the tar.
You choose where to put it, but most distros have general spots they put it. You can also use the AUR if you use Arch by using pikaur or yay
It is not necessarily building from source. It’s a compressed tarball, that’s all.
Well, I meant when you download it from a project’s repo, which is pretty much always the code.
Sure, if that’s where it’s from, that makes sense that’s what it would be.
If they don’t provide build instructions, you may be on your own.
What if it doesnt have any instructions?
What do you mean about using the AUR?
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Hmm, then it sort of depends on the project. And I mean the AUR might already have it compiled for you or in an easier form for Arch users. But if you are using Debian and your your question was “will this compile the same way on Arch and Debian” then the answer is simply yes!
What project are you trying to compile?
I am trying to install Foxit Reader and WineGUI for a friend on Manjaro, I found the latter on the AUR I think, so I should run
yay install wine-gui-git
?Manjaro is an Archlinux based Linux Distro. So you can install an UNTRUSTED user package like wine-gui-git with an AUR helper like yay/paru/… like you mentioned.
But please install not software you don’t understand how to build. It can be dangerous code.
For the package wine-gui-git the building script is https://aur.archlinux.org/cgit/aur.git/tree/PKGBUILD?h=wine-gui-git . So you can look and learn how to build the software by yourself.
And why do you want to install windows software on linux? Foxit Reader is a pdf viewer there are a lot of linux native applications https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/PDF,_PS_and_DjVu i use zathura. Don’t use wine …
Foxit Reader provides a tarball for Linux, I don’t want to install that with WineGUI, and what if I wanted to? I didn’t came here for someone to give me a lecture about libre software, I know how it works. It’s his first time into Linux, if he wants to install shitty fucking Foxit Reader I’ll do it, as long as he doesn’t switch back to shitdows. BTW he wants it because allows for PDF edition and also allows to insert images and text within the highlights.
Sorry i didn’t realize you want both software. There is also an AUR Package for foxit https://aur.archlinux.org/cgit/aur.git/tree/PKGBUILD?h=foxitreader and the package maintainer will update the package. Or you can
Well, if it’s a Foxit Reader tar.gz, that’s hardly going to be the source code. Just extract it into some directory and see if there’s a file in there to start it (probably called something like “foxit-reader”).
If that works, I would recommend moving the extracted folder to /opt and then making it available in the application menu. Some desktops, e.g. KDE Plasma, have a GUI to edit the applications. If you don’t have that, you’ll have to manually create a .desktop file: https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Desktop_entries
I think Okular can insert images and text within highlights and LibreOffice Draw can edit PDFs.
Apart from that, it’s OK to want specific Windows software on Linux, they just asked why and misunderstood that you want the Linux version, not install it through WINE. If you had provided links to the software you want to install that would have been clearer.
You can do that, but like the other users said, you should be wary of obscure packages because the AUR can be used to spread malware. You can check what the script does to make sure.
And I’d be surprised if you need WineGUI for that, but maybe it’s specifically necessary for how they want to use it. You could also just install WINE and use it to run the program; it will open the program’s GUI.