Basic Installation ================== KPilot uses the CMake build system which is the native build system for KDE4; for KDE3 applications like KPilot, CMake is also useable. You need CMake installed on your system to compile KPilot, but CMake is becoming more widespread now. You can get it from www.cmake.org . First configure KPilot by running ./configure [options] If you run configure with no options it will tell you which ones are available; you *must* provide at least one for configure to work. A most-vanilla configure looks like this: ./configure --enable-tests=no Suggested options are at least: ./configure --enable-debug=yes --enable-tests=yes You may need to specify a prefix or a location where pilot-link is installed; run ./configure --show for a summary of options. Once configure is done, compile KPilot, by running make -f Makefile.cmake in the KPilot source directory (that is the one containing this INSTALL file). This will run CMake to generate the real Makefiles, then run make again to build the project in a build-* subdirectory. Once it is done, you can run make -f Makefile.cmake install to install KPilot in the KDE directory. Advanced Installation ===================== In order to build KPilot somewhere else, or if the sources are on read-only media, use CMake directly instead of using the basic Makefile included with KPilot. To do this, 1) Create a build directory somewhere 2) cd into that build directory 3) Run cmake /path/to/kpilot/sources 4) Run make In order to install KPilot somewhere else, use -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX .