Building Tahoe-LAFS on Linux

Tahoe-LAFS has made packages available for installing on many linux and BSD distributions. Debian and Ubuntu users can use apt-get install tahoe-lafs. If you are working on a Linux distribution which does not have Tahoe-LAFS or are looking to hack on the source code, you can build Tahoe-LAFS yourself:

Prerequisites

Make sure the following are installed:

  • Python 3’s latest version: Check for the version by running python --version.

  • pip: Most python installations already include pip. However, if your installation does not, see pip installation.

  • virtualenv: Use pip to install virtualenv:

    pip install --user virtualenv
    
  • C compiler and libraries:

    • python-dev: Python development headers.

    • libffi-dev: Foreign Functions Interface library.

    • libssl-dev: SSL library, Tahoe-LAFS needs OpenSSL version 1.1.1c or greater.

    Note

    If you are working on Debian or Ubuntu, you can install the necessary libraries using apt-get:

    apt-get install python-dev libffi-dev libssl-dev
    

    On an RPM-based system such as Fedora, you can install the necessary libraries using yum or rpm. However, the packages may be named differently.

Install the Latest Tahoe-LAFS Release

If you are looking to hack on the source code or run pre-release code, we recommend you install Tahoe-LAFS directly from source by creating a virtualenv instance:

  1. Clone the Tahoe-LAFS repository:

    git clone https://github.com/tahoe-lafs/tahoe-lafs.git
    
  2. Move into the tahoe-lafs directory:

    cd tahoe-lafs
    
  3. Create a fresh virtualenv for your Tahoe-LAFS install:

    virtualenv venv
    

Note

venv is the name of the virtual environment in this example. Use any name for your environment.

  1. Upgrade pip and setuptools on the newly created virtual environment:

    venv/bin/pip install -U pip setuptools
    
  2. If you’d like to modify the Tahoe source code, you need to install Tahoe-LAFS with the --editable flag with the test extra:

    venv/bin/pip install --editable .[test]
    

Note

Tahoe-LAFS provides extra functionality when requested explicitly at installation using the “extras” feature of setuptools. To learn more about the extras which Tahoe supports, see Tahoe extras.

  1. Verify installation by checking for the version:

    venv/bin/tahoe --version
    

If you do not want to use the full path, i.e., venv/bin/tahoe everytime you want to run tahoe, you can activate the virtualenv:

 . venv/bin/activate

This will generate a subshell with a ``$PATH`` that includes the ``venv/bin/`` directory.