Building Krita from Source¶
If you want to help developing Krita, you need to know how to build Krita yourself. If you merely want to run the latest version of Krita, to test a bug or play with, you can use the nightly build for Windows the nightly build for Linux, or the nightly build for macOS.
You can build Krita on Linux, Windows, macOS and on Linux for Android. The libraries Krita needs (for instance to load and save various image types) are called dependencies.
Linux is the easiest operating system to build Krita on because all the libraries that Krita needs are available on most recent Linux distributions. For an easy guide to building Krita see Building Krita on Linux for Cats.
On macOS you can use tools like homebrew to get the dependencies, or build the dependencies manually. Building the dependencies manually is recommended because we have a number of changes to the source for libraries to make them function better with Krita.
On Windows you can either reuse the dependencies from the KDE Binary Factory, or build the dependencies yourself.
On all operating systems, you need to be familiar with using a terminal. Building Krita is a technical task and demands accuracy in following instructions and intelligence in understanding what happens.
Building on Linux¶
In general, there are two options for building Krita on Linux. One using the docker environment (recommended) and the other is by manually building all the Krita dependencies on the host linux system (unsupported).
Building on Windows¶
On Windows, you can either reuse the dependencies from the KDE Binary Factory, or build the dependencies yourself. If you decide to build all the dependencies yourself, this will take a long time. Note that you will do all your work in a CMD command window.
This is also more difficult than building Krita on Linux, so you need to pay attention to details. If you follow the guide closely, install correct dependencies and make sure your PATH doesn’t contain anything unwanted, there should be no issues.
Prerequisites¶
CMake 3.21.0 or later, the latest is usually fine - https://cmake.org/download/
Ninja build system - https://github.com/ninja-build/ninja/releases
Since Ninja is a single executable, you can place it in the bin folder of CMake, next to
cmake.exe
for convenience.
LLVM MinGW compiler toolchain
Informacja
On 17.10.2024 we updated our Windows toolchain from clang-15 („llvm-mingw-20220906-ucrt”) to clang-18 („llvm-mingw-20240619-ucrt”). One of the reasons was ASAN support on Windows 11.
Can be downloaded here: https://github.com/mstorsjo/llvm-mingw/releases/download/20240619/llvm-mingw-20240619-ucrt-x86_64.zip
Unzip the archive with 7zip into a folder like
C:\llvm-mingw
; the full path must not contain any spaces.We are using the tagged release 20240619 with LLVM 18.1.8 on the CI workers. In theory a newer version should be compatible, but use at your own risk.
If you really want to use other compilers, see below.
You will also need a release of Python 3.10 (not 3.7, not 3.8, not 3.9, not 3.11) - https://www.python.org.
Make sure to have that version of python.exe in your path. This version of Python will be used for two things to configure Qt and to build the Python scripting module. Do not set PYTHONHOME or PYTHONPATH.
Make sure that your Python will have the correct architecture for the version you are trying to build. If building for 32-bit target, you need the 32-bit release of Python.
It is useful to install Qt Creator - https://download.qt.io/official_releases/qtcreator/
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Make double plus sure you do not have any other compilers or development environments or Python installation in your PATH!
Other Compilers¶
In the past we used mingw-w64 gcc 7.3.0 (mingw-builds). This version is no longer supported because our dependencies started requiring a more updated compiler to work.
It is possible to build Krita with a newer mingw-w64 gcc toolchain, for example gcc 11.2.0 by niXman on GitHub (mingw-builds), or the one from MSYS2.
MSYS2 can build Krita with the MINGW64, UCRT64 or CLANG64 environments.
Krita can also be built with MSVC (check the batch file in
build-tools\windows
). Krita built with MSVC has suboptimal performance due to codegen issues so we can’t use it.
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If you use these compilers, you must build the dependencies yourself. Trying to mix dependencies built with a different compiler may outright fail to configure, or Krita may appear to build successfully but you get random crashes wuen running it.
Preparation¶
After installing the Prerequisites, prepare your working directory somewhere, like C:\krita-dev
. Keep this short (30 characters in the prefix path is fine, but longer than this and you may get build errors). Makes sure the path does not contain whitespace. If you use a different path, remember to adjust the paths in the later steps.
mkdir C:\krita-dev
cd /d C:\krita-dev
Set up python environment (you don’t need to hand-craft the bat file with the predefined PATH variables):
git clone https://invent.kde.org/dkazakov/krita-deps-management.git
git clone https://invent.kde.org/dkazakov/ci-utilities.git krita-deps-management/ci-utilities
c:\Python310\python.exe -m venv PythonEnv --upgrade-deps
PythonEnv\Scripts\activate.bat
python -m pip install -r krita-deps-management\requirements.txt
Getting the dependencies¶
Download the dependencies and generate the environment file. Make sure you replace the paths to llvm-mingw and ninja:
python krita-deps-management\tools\setup-env.py --full-krita-env -v PythonEnv -p c:\deps\llvm-mingw-20240619-ucrt-x86_64\bin\ -p c:\deps\llvm-mingw-20240619-ucrt-x86_64\x86_64-w64-mingw32\bin\ -p c:\deps\Ninja\
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If you happen to decide to hand-craft the PATH
variable, make sure your PATH
variable does not have double backslash symbols \\
. Especially as a result of multiple path variables concatenation.
If it has, ASAN symbolizer will crash when parsing error-reports.
Every time you want to build or run your home-grown Krita, open the CMD window, change to the C:\krita-dev
folder and run the env.bat
file generated by the script above:
cd /d C:\krita-dev
env.bat
You will note that most command samples below contain these two lines, but the truth is you only need to run env.bat
once for each CMD window.
Then get the source code of Krita:
cd /d C:\krita-dev
git clone https://invent.kde.org/graphics/krita.git
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If you build Krita with ASAN, make sure you don’t use prebuilt deps, or at least manually rebuild Qt with
ASAN support as well (-DQT_ENABLE_ASAN=ON
). There is a know issue in LLVM’s linker,
which causes Qt be loaded before ASAN and, therefore, causing some allocations confuse ASAN. Until this issue is fixed,
build Qt with ASAN as a workaround.
Building Krita¶
Again, on the command line, configure the build:
cd /d C:\krita-dev
env.bat
mkdir -p C:\krita-dev\b_krita
cd b_krita
cmake C:\krita-dev\krita ^
-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=C:/krita-dev/_install ^
-DBUILD_TESTING=ON ^
-DINSTALL_BENCHMARKS=ON ^
-DKRITA_ENABLE_PCH=OFF ^
-DHIDE_SAFE_ASSERTS=OFF ^
-G Ninja ^
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo
ninja -j8 install
If you are hacking on Krita, you can rebuild Krita without running the full build by entering the build directory and running mingw32-make -j8 install
or ninja -j8 install
.
cd /d C:\krita-dev
env.bat
cd b_krita
ninja -j8 install
Running Krita¶
You must start Krita from the command prompt, after having run env.bat
:
cd /d C:\krita-dev
env.bat
_install\bin\krita
:: or
_install\bin\krita.exe
Building on macOS¶
We will build Krita on macOS with the same scripts that are used to build the nightly builds and the releases. We will NOT be building krita from within XCode, but from within the terminal.
Prequisites¶
You will need to install:
CMake: https://cmake.org
Python 3.10 or higher
XCode: get it from the app store
Qt Creator: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/qtcreator/
Preparation¶
Open Terminal.app. First you need to create buildroot folder:
export BUILDROOT=$HOME/dev
mkdir -p $BUILDROOT
cd $BUILDROOT
Now fetch Krita sources, build scripts and set up virtual environment for Python:
cd $BUILDROOT
git clone https://invent.kde.org/graphics/krita.git
# fetch environment scripts under Krita's source directory
cd krita
git clone https://invent.kde.org/dkazakov/krita-deps-management.git krita-deps-management --depth=1
git clone https://invent.kde.org/dkazakov/ci-utilities.git krita-deps-management/ci-utilities --depth=1
# create venv environemnt for running build scripts
python3 -m venv $BUILDROOT/venv --upgrade-deps
source $BUILDROOT/venv/bin/activate
pip install -r krita-deps-management/requirements.txt
Install build tools (CMake, Ninja, CCache) that we use for Krita builds on CI. If you have these tools installed separately, then you can skip this step:
cd $BUILDROOT
python3 $BUILDROOT/krita/krita-deps-management/tools/download-macos-tools.py
source $BUILDROOT/_krita-tools/activate
Fetching prebuilt dependencies¶
Now set up the environment for building Krita and download all the dependencies in a prebuilt form:
cd $BUILDROOT/krita
source $BUILDROOT/venv/bin/activate
source $BUILDROOT/_krita-tools/activate # if you used CI build tools
python krita-deps-management/tools/setup-env.py --full-krita-env -v $BUILDROOT/venv -p $BUILDROOT/$KDECI_CRAFT_PLATFORM/dev-utils/bin/
The script will generate the following environment for you:
$BUILDROOT/krita/_install
— the install prefix for Krita with all the deps preinstalled
$BUILDROOT/krita/_build
— the build folder for Krita
$BUILDROOT/krita/env
— a script for build environment activation
$BUILDROOT/krita/env_deactivate
— a script for build environment de-activation
The steps above should be done only once when you set up the environement for the first time. Next time
you open the console you should just source the env-file at $BUILDROOT/krita/env
, you don’t have to
repeat all these steps with craft and python’s environment.
Building Krita¶
Building Krita is straightforward, just activate the environment and do the build. Everything will be activated automatically.
# go to the Krita source directory
cd $BUILDROOT/krita
# activate the build environment (you don't need to activate
# any previous environments, like Python's venv environment;
# everything is included in this ``env`` file)
source $BUILDROOT/krita/env
source $BUILDROOT/_krita-tools/activate # if you used CI build tools
mkdir -p _build
cd _build
# configure Krita as usual
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo \
-DHIDE_SAFE_ASSERTS=OFF \
-DBUILD_TESTING=ON \
-DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=$BUILDROOT/krita/_install \
-DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=$BUILDROOT/krita/krita-deps-management/tools/macos-toolchain-krita.cmake \
$BUILDROOT/krita
# build and install
ninja -j8 install
This will build and install Krita to $BUILDROOT/krita/_install/bin/krita.app
Running Krita¶
You can run krita in the same terminal window:
$BUILDROOT/krita/_install/bin/krita.app/Contents/MacOS/krita
If you want to debug krita with lldb:
cd $BUILDROOT/krita
lldb ./_install/bin/krita.app/Contents/MacOS/krita
(lldb) target create "./_install/bin/krita.app/Contents/MacOS/krita"
Current executable set to './_install/bin/krita.app/Contents/MacOS/krita' (x86_64).
(lldb) r
Troubleshooting¶
Testing code signing with rcodesign
¶
Our CI system uses rcodesign
to sign the binaries instead of the official tool provided
by Apple. The reason is, official codesign
tool requires MacOS to run, but KDE’s signing
service uses a dedicated machine with security keys that runs Linux. Hence it can sign our
binaries with rcodesign
only.
To test signing with rcodesign
use our standard docker container:
# install Rust as a superuser
./bin/sudoenter
apt install rust-1.80-all
# install rcodesign as non-priviliged `appimage` user
./bin/enter
cargo-1.80 install apple-codesign
prepend PATH /home/appimage/.cargo/bin
# generate self-signed certificates
echo 123456 > test-cert.pass
rcodesign generate-self-signed-certificate --p12-file test-cert.p12 --p12-password `cat test-cert.pass` --person-name "TestDevXX"
# sign the .app bundle
rcodesign sign -v --code-signature-flags runtime --p12-file test-cert.p12 --p12-password-file test-cert.pass ~/persistent/krita.app/ ./signed.app
Now ./signed.app
has all the files signed. In the next step our CI copies the signed data over the original package
cp -r ./signed.app ~/persistent/krita.app/
I don’t really know why it was originaly planned, but it allows catching cases when rcodesign
silently drops the files from the signed package
(copying the files back will leave some files unsigned, and therefore fail the following verification step).
To verify the final package you need to use a real MacOS device:
# on MacOS!
codesign --verify --deep --strict --verbose=2 ./krita.app
Building on Android¶
See a dedicated page for building Krita on Android
Building Krita’s dependencies manually¶
See a dedicated page for building Krita’s dependencies manually