Hello, and welcome to the Ledger source code! If you're reading this file, you have in your hands the Bleeding Edge. This may very well *NOT* be what you want, since it's not guaranteed to be in a functionally complete state. It's under active development, and may change in any way at any time. What you may prefer is the current stable release, or the current beta branch. At this moment, you can get there by one of two commands: BETA: git checkout -b v2.6.1b origin/v2.6.1b The BETA is what I prefer people use, since I still have a chance to fix major bugs that you find. Just e-mail me, or post to the mailing list, they'll become a part of my work list. RELEASE: git checkout v2.6.0.90 This is the same release code that you can download via tarball from the home page. It has some serious issues dealing with date/time handling, but at least its major flaws are mostly known by now. You can jump over to the current active development at any time by using this command: DEVEL: git checkout master There are also several topic branches which contain experimental features, though none of these are guaranteed even to compile. Best to chat with me on IRC or via the mailing list before going too much further with those. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Now, if you wish to proceed in this venture, you'll need a few dependencies: - GMP 4.2.2 -- for all builds - PCRE 7.7 -- if you're building BETA or RELEASE - Boost 1.35 -- if you're building DEVEL - CppUnit 1.12.1 -- if you're building DEVEL - Optionally, Python 2.4 or higher - Optionally, libofx * MacPorts If you build stuff using MacPorts, as I do, here is what you would run: sudo port install boost +complete+python25 sudo port install gmp pcre cppunit libofx * Ubuntu If you're going to be building with Ubuntu, "sudo apt-get install ..." the following packages (correct as of Ubuntu Hardy): build-essential libtool autoconf automake texinfo python-dev zlib1g-dev libbz2-dev stow libgmp3-dev bjam libboost-dev libboost-regex-dev libboost-date-time-dev libboost-filesystem-dev * Using my Git mirrors Finally, for the convenience of fellow developers on the master (DEVEL) branch, you may download and build some of these dependencies quite easily. Just run this command: git submodule init git submodule update cd lib make # it installs stuff into /usr/local/stow You'll now have a few extra source installations in /usr/local/stow/, most importantly Boost and CppUnit. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ The next step is preparing your environment for building. While you can just use 'autoreconf -fi', I've prepared a script that does a lot of the footwork for you: ./acprep If you want to run with complete debugging on, as I do, use this: ./acprep --devel Please read the contents of 'acprep' in this case, especially the section which documents the --devel option. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Once you have the dependencies installed and the source prepared for building, just run 'make'. If you have CppUnit installed, I prefer that you always run 'make fullcheck', as this will verify Ledger against the unit tests, the Python unit tests (if applicable), and the regression tests, for your platform. If you have extra CPU cycles to burn, try even 'make distcheck', which provides the most thorough shakedown of a healthy source tree. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Now that you're up and running, here are a few resources to keep in mind: Home page http://www.newartisans.com/software/ledger.html IRC channel #ledger on irc.freenode.net Mailing List / Forum http://groups.google.com/group/ledger-cli GitHub project page http://github.com/jwiegley/ledger/tree/master Buildbot display http://www.newartisans.com:9090 Ohloh code analysis http://www.ohloh.net/projects/ledger If you have coding ideas you want to share, the best way is either to e-mail me a patch (I prefer ttachments over pasted text), or to get an account on GitHub. Once you do, fork the Ledger project, hack as much as you like, then send me a message via GitHub asking me to check out your repository. I'm only too happy to do so for anyone who takes time out of their schedule to help the Ledger project. John