QtRadio Installation
Contents
- 1 Installation on Linux
- 1.1 Installation from PPA
- 1.2 Installation from Git
- 1.2.1 Installing compiler and autotool
- 1.2.2 Installing prerequisite packages
- 1.2.3 Installing Git
- 1.2.4 Cloning the repository
- 1.2.5 Obtaining an up-level libevent library
- 1.2.6 Installing codec2 low bit rate audio encoding and decoding
- 1.2.7 Building the rxtx-event branch
- 1.2.8 Refresh to a Newer Version
- 2 Installation on Windows
Installation on Linux
The instructions below are for Debian based distributions like Ubuntu but you should be able to compile on any Linux distribution with the correct libraries installed.
Installation from PPA
For Ubuntu Users there is a ppa for the binaries produced from the master branch, maintained by Andrea.
Supported versions are:
Ubuntu Lucid,
Ubuntu Natty,
Ubuntu Oneiric, and known to work, Linux Mint 11
At the time of this writing, (Nov 12 2011) PPA release 1.7 is online.
This is the easiest way to install QtRadio, dspserver and the softrock server. The code base is taken from the master branch and in the "about" panel there is some additional information in order to show where the source is coming from.
text mode installation
In order to add this repository to your apt system (U11.10, U11.04, U10.04) enter the following commands in a terminal.
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:andrew-montefusco/ghpsdr3 sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install ghpsdr3
graphical installation
Ubuntu 11.04 and older
- Start the Synaptic Package Manager from the System->Administration menu
- From the menu Settings select Repositories, a dialog box Software Sources will be shown
- On the first pane Ubuntu Software check the Community-maintaned Open Source Software (universe) tick
- On the second pane Other Software click on the add button, and, in the dialog software-properties-gtk enter
ppa:andrew-montefusco/ghpsdr3 - Back to the Software sources dialog, press Close
- Press the Reload button on the top bar of main window
- Press the Section button (bottom left pane) and next select Amateur Radio and, on the right pane, the ghpsdr3 package
- Press Apply button on the top bar: answer yes, if so requested, in order to install the required dependencies
Ubuntu 11.10
- Open the Ubuntu Software Center (from the 'shopper' icon on the left bar)
- Maximize the window, on the top bar the program menu will be shown
- Select the menu Edit->Software Sources, a dialog box Software Sources will be shown
- On the first pane Ubuntu Software check the Community-maintaned Open Source Software (universe) tick
- On the second pane Other Software click on the add button, and, in the dialog software-properties-gtk enter
ppa:andrew-montefusco/ghpsdr3 - Press Close
- Back to the Software sources dialog, press Close again
- Into the Search entry field (top right), write down 'ghpsdr3' and press Enter, or pull down the menu 'All Software', should be there too
- Click on the name 'ghpsdr3' in order to select it and press the 'Install' button
If the program refuses to install ghpsdr3 complaining that the repository is not found, close it, start a terminal (Ctrl+Alt+T), run sudo apt-get update and retry with Ubuntu Software Center.
You will then find the QtRadio app in the Applications, Internet menu. If you have the Hamradio menu installed you will find it there also.
Subsequently you can use the Ubuntu software update process to update to the latest ppa version.
More information about Andrea's PPA is at https://launchpad.net/~andrew-montefusco/+archive/ghpsdr3
Installation from Git
Installing from git involves building or compiling from source. This is required if you want to use one of the various branches to work the "bleeding edge" branches like Alex's rxtx-event branch where the current (Nov 12 2011) TX work is being done. The PPA install is never more than a few days behind master so there is not much to gain from building from git unless you want to work with the source code your self.
Installing compiler and autotool
First off, install the compiler; depending on which distribution are you using, some or all of this stuff could be already installed:
sudo apt-get install make gcc g++ sudo apt-get install autoconf automake autotools-dev libtool
Installing prerequisite packages
Ubuntu 11.04 and older
First of all, you have to check that the universe repository is enabled. Please see the procedure in the previous section #graphical installation .
Next, you will need the following packages installed:
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install \ libqt4-opengl-dev \ qtmobility-dev \ libusb-0.1-4 \ libusb-dev \ libfftw3-dev \ portaudio19-dev \ libpulse-dev \ libsamplerate0-dev \ libusb-1.0-0-dev \ libconfig8-dev \ libtool
Ubuntu 11.10
First of all, you have to check that the universe repository is enabled. Click on the gear shaped icon (bottom into left side bar): the System Settings menu will shown, click on Software Sources and finally check the Community-maintaned Open Source Software (universe) tick. Next, submit the following commands into a terminal window:
sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install \ libqt4-opengl-dev \ qtmobility-dev \ libusb-0.1-4 \ libusb-dev \ libfftw3-dev \ portaudio19-dev \ libpulse-dev \ libsamplerate0-dev \ libusb-1.0-0-dev \ libconfig8-dev \ libtool \ xdg-utils
Fedora 16
sudo yum install gcc gcc-c++ man-pages autoconf automake subversion sudo yum install git sudo yum install fftw fftw-devel sudo yum install libtool sudo yum install libusb-devel libusb1-devel sudo yum install portaudio-devel sudo yum install pulseaudio sudo yum install jack-audio-connection-kit jack-audio-connection-kit-devel sudo yum install qt4
Installing Git
Now you can install git
sudo apt-get install git
Cloning the repository
How to build the latest rxtx-event branch on Ubuntu 11.04
First a new libevent will need to be downloaded and installed, then the actual QtRadio source can be downloaded and built.
Obtaining an up-level libevent library
For the rxtx-event branch of the software, you will also need a version of libevent that is newer than what is available from the Ubuntu distribution. Go to synaptic and completely remove the stock libevent (v1.4) from Ubuntu. (Completely remove is an uninstall option in Synaptic. Additional dependent libraries may also be removed)
Then download the new version from:
libevent-2.0.15-stable.tar.gz
wget https://github.com/downloads/libevent/libevent/libevent-2.0.15-stable.tar.gz
Move the tarball from the Downloads directory to a working directory. A suggestion is to create a src directory within your home directory and move it there. Uncompress and follow the instructions to build and install:
cd tar -zxvf libevent-2.0.15-stable.tar.gz cd libevent-2.0.15-stable ./configure make sudo make install sudo ldconfig
Installing codec2 low bit rate audio encoding and decoding
We are adding a low bit rate audio codec called codec 2 to QtRadio/dspserver. You need to download and build the codec2 library. See:
http://www.rowetel.com/blog/?page_id=452
If you don't have subversion installed you will need to get it
sudo apt-get install subversion
Now go get codec2 using subversion
cd svn co https://freetel.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/freetel/codec2 cd codec2 autoreconf -i ./configure make sudo make install sudo ldconfig
Building the rxtx-event branch
This branch is the latest code that contains both RX and TX capability.
Create a new directory or cd to the ~/src directory created for libevent and cd into it.
git clone git://github.com/alexlee188/ghpsdr3-alex
Depending on your Internet connection thorughput, it will take several minute to download. cd into the new directory ghpsdr3-alex:
cd ghpsdr3-alex git checkout rxtx-event
You are now working with Alex's latest and greatest!
autoreconf -i ./configure make -j4 all sudo make install
(If you do not want to actually install the executable binaries, skip the sudo make install and just cd into the following directories and run them from there)
Terminal 1 $ cd ghpsdr3-alex/trunk/src/softrock $ ./softrock ...options ... Terminal 2 $ cd ghpsdr3-alex/trunk/src/dspserver $ ./dspserver ..options... Terminal 3 $ cd ghpsdr3-alex/trunk/src/QtRadio $ ./QtRadio
Refresh to a Newer Version
To pull a new version to build
$ git pull $ make all $ sudo make install