mirror of
https://github.com/LadybirdBrowser/ladybird.git
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b4af851c74
The project can no longer be compiled with gcc-12.
239 lines
9.2 KiB
Markdown
239 lines
9.2 KiB
Markdown
# Ladybird browser build instructions
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## Build Prerequisites
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Qt6 development packages and a C++23 capable compiler are required. g++-13 or clang-17 are required at a minimum for c++23 support.
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NOTE: In all of the below lists of packages, the Qt6 multimedia package is not needed if your Linux system supports PulseAudio.
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On Debian/Ubuntu required packages include, but are not limited to:
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```
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sudo apt install build-essential cmake libgl1-mesa-dev ninja-build qt6-base-dev qt6-tools-dev-tools qt6-multimedia-dev ccache
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```
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For Ubuntu 20.04 and above, ensure that the Qt6 Wayland packages are available:
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```
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sudo apt install qt6-wayland
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```
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On Arch Linux/Manjaro:
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```
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sudo pacman -S --needed base-devel cmake libgl ninja qt6-base qt6-tools qt6-wayland qt6-multimedia ccache
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```
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On Fedora or derivatives:
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```
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sudo dnf install cmake libglvnd-devel ninja-build qt6-qtbase-devel qt6-qttools-devel qt6-qtwayland-devel qt6-qtmultimedia-devel ccache
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```
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On openSUSE:
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```
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sudo zypper install cmake libglvnd-devel ninja qt6-base-devel qt6-multimedia-devel qt6-tools-devel qt6-wayland-devel ccache
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```
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On NixOS or with Nix:
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```console
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nix develop .#ladybird
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# With a custom entrypoint, for example your favorite shell
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nix develop .#ladybird --command bash
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```
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On NixOS or with Nix using your host `nixpkgs` and the legacy `nix-shell` tool:
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```console
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nix-shell Ladybird
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# With a custom entrypoint, for example your favorite shell
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nix-shell --command bash Ladybird
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```
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On macOS:
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Xcode 14 versions before 14.3 might crash while building ladybird. Xcode 14.3 or clang from homebrew may be required to successfully build ladybird.
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```
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xcode-select --install
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brew install cmake ninja ccache
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```
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If you also plan to use the Qt chrome on macOS:
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```
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brew install qt
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```
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On OpenIndiana:
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Note that OpenIndiana's latest GCC port (GCC 11) is too old to build Ladybird, so you need Clang, which is available in the repository.
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```
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pfexec pkg install cmake ninja clang-17 libglvnd qt6
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```
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On Haiku:
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```
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pkgman install cmake ninja cmd:python3 qt6_base_devel qt6_multimedia_devel qt6_tools_devel openal_devel
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```
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On Windows:
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WSL2/WSLg are preferred, as they provide a linux environment that matches one of the above distributions.
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MinGW/MSYS2 are not supported, but may work with sufficient elbow grease. Native Windows builds are not supported with either clang-cl or MSVC.
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For Android:
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On a Unix-like platform, install the prerequisites for that platform and then see the [Android Studio guide](AndroidStudioConfiguration.md).
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Or, download a version of Gradle >= 8.0.0, and run the ``gradlew`` program in ``Ladybird/Android``
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## Build steps
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### Using serenity.sh
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The simplest way to build and run ladybird is via the serenity.sh script:
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```bash
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# From /path/to/serenity
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./Meta/serenity.sh run lagom ladybird
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./Meta/serenity.sh gdb lagom ladybird
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```
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The above commands will build Ladybird with one of the following browser chromes, depending on the platform:
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* [Android UI](https://developer.android.com/develop/ui) - The native chrome on Android.
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* [AppKit](https://developer.apple.com/documentation/appkit?language=objc) - The native chrome on macOS.
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* [Qt](https://doc.qt.io/qt-6/) - The chrome used on all other platforms.
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The Qt chrome is available on platforms where it is not the default as well (except on Android). To build the
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Qt chrome, install the Qt dependencies for your platform, and enable the Qt chrome via CMake:
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```bash
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# From /path/to/serenity
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cmake -S Meta/Lagom -B Build/lagom -DENABLE_QT=ON
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```
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To re-disable the Qt chrome, run the above command with `-DENABLE_QT=OFF`.
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### Disabling Ladybird
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Note that running ladybird from the script will change the CMake cache in your Build/lagom build
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directory to always build LibWeb and Ladybird for Lagom when rebuilding SerenityOS using the
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serenity.sh script to run a qemu instance.
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To restore the previous behavior that only builds code generators and tools from Lagom when
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rebuilding serenity, you must modify the CMake cache back to the default.
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```bash
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cmake -S Meta/Lagom -B Build/lagom -DENABLE_LAGOM_LADYBIRD=OFF -DENABLE_LAGOM_LIBWEB=OFF -DBUILD_LAGOM=OFF
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```
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### Resource files
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Ladybird requires resource files from the serenity/Base/res directory in order to properly load
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icons, fonts, and other theming information. The serenity.sh script calls into custom CMake targets
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that set these variables, and ensure that the $PWD is set properly to allow execution from the build
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directory. To run the built binary without using the script, one can either directly invoke the
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ninja rules or install ladybird using the provided CMake install rules. See the ``Custom CMake build directory``
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section below for details.
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### Custom CMake build directory
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If you want to build ladybird on its own, or are interested in packaging ladybird for distribution,
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then a separate CMake build directory may be desired. Note that ladybird can be build via the Lagom
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CMakeLists.txt, or via the CMakeLists.txt found in the Ladybird directory. For distributions, using
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Ladybird as the source directory will give the desired results.
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The install rules in Ladybird/cmake/InstallRules.cmake define which binaries and libraries will be
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installed into the configured CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH or path passed to ``cmake --install``.
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Note that when using a custom build directory rather than Meta/serenity.sh, the user may need to provide
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a suitable C++ compiler (g++ >= 13, clang >= 14, Apple Clang >= 14.3) via the CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER and
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CMAKE_C_COMPILER cmake options.
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```
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cmake -GNinja -S Ladybird -B Build/ladybird
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# optionally, add -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=<suitable compiler> -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=<matching c compiler>
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cmake --build Build/ladybird
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ninja -C Build/ladybird run
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```
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To automatically run in gdb:
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```
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ninja -C Build/ladybird debug
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```
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To run without ninja rule on non-macOS systems:
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```
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./Build/ladybird/bin/Ladybird
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```
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To run without ninja rule on macOS:
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```
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open -W --stdout $(tty) --stderr $(tty) ./Build/ladybird/bin/Ladybird.app
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# Or to launch with arguments:
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open -W --stdout $(tty) --stderr $(tty) ./Build/ladybird/bin/Ladybird.app --args https://ladybird.dev
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```
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### Experimental GN build
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There is an experimental GN build for Ladybird. It is not officially supported, but it is kept up to date on a best-effort
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basis by interested contributors. See the [GN build instructions](../Meta/gn/README.md) for more information.
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In general, the GN build organizes ninja rules in a more compact way than the CMake build, and it may be faster on some systems.
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GN also allows building host and cross-targets in the same build directory, which is useful for managing dependencies on host tools when
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cross-compiling to other platforms.
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### Debugging with CLion
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Ladybird should be built with debug symbols first. In `Meta/CMake/lagom_compile_options.cmake` remove the optimizations by changing `-O2` to `-O0`. For macOS also change the debug option from `-g1` to `-g` so that lldb is happy with the emitted symbols. In linux `-g1` can be changed to `-ggdb3` for maximum debug info.
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After running Ladybird as suggested above with `./Meta/serenity.sh run lagom ladybird`, you can now in CLion use Run -> Attach to Process to connect. If debugging layouting and rendering issues, filter the listing that opens for `WebContent` and attach to that.
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Now breakpoints, stepping and variable inspection will work.
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### Debugging with Xcode on macOS
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The `serenity.sh` build script does not know how to generate Xcode projects, so creating the project must be done manually.
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To be compatible with the `serenity.sh` script, a few extra options are required. If there is a previous Lagom build directory, CMake will likely complain that the generator has changed.
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```
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cmake -GXcode -S Meta/Lagom -B Build/lagom -DBUILD_LAGOM=ON -DENABLE_LAGOM_LADYBIRD=ON
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```
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Alternatively, if you don't need your ladybird build to be compatible with `serenity.sh`, you can use Ladybird as the source directory like so:
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```
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cmake -GXcode -S Ladybird -B Build/ladybird
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```
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After generating an Xcode project into the specified build directory, you can open `ladybird.xcodeproj` in Xcode. The project has a ton of targets, many of which are generated code.
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The only target that needs a scheme is the ladybird app bundle.
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### Building on OpenIndiana
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OpenIndiana needs some extra environment variables set to make sure it finds all the executables
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and directories it needs for the build to work. The cmake files are in a non-standard path that
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contains the Qt version (replace 6.2 with the Qt version you have installed) and you need to tell
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it to use clang and clang++, or it will use gcc and g++ from GCC 10 which is currently the default
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to build packages on OpenIndiana.
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When running Ladybird, make sure that XDG_RUNTIME_DIR is set, or it will immediately crash as it
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doesn't find a writable directory for its sockets.
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```
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CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/usr/lib/qt/6.2/lib/amd64/cmake cmake -GNinja -S Ladybird -B Build/ladybird -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=/usr/bin/clang -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=/usr/bin/clang++
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cmake --build Build/ladybird
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XDG_RUNTIME_DIR=/var/tmp ninja -C Build/ladybird run
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```
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### Building on Haiku
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Haiku is supported by Ladybird out of the box. The steps are the same as on OpenIndiana, but no
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additional environment variables are required.
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```
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cmake -GNinja -S Ladybird -B Build/ladybird
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cmake --build Build/ladybird
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ninja -C Build/ladybird run
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```
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