Updated for OpenBSD 7.3
This guide describes how to build digibyted, command-line utilities, and GUI on OpenBSD.
Run the following as root to install the base dependencies for building.
pkg_add bash git gmake libevent libtool boost
# Select the newest version of the following packages:
pkg_add autoconf automake pythonSee dependencies.md for a complete overview.
Clone the DigiByte Core repository to a directory. All build scripts and commands will run from this directory.
git clone https://github.com/digibyte/digibyte.gitIt is not necessary to build wallet functionality to run either digibyted or digibyte-qt.
sqlite3 is required to support descriptor wallets.
pkg_add sqlite3BerkeleyDB is only required to support legacy wallets.
It is recommended to use Berkeley DB 4.8. You cannot use the BerkeleyDB library from ports. However you can build it yourself, using depends.
gmake -C depends NO_BOOST=1 NO_LIBEVENT=1 NO_QT=1 NO_SQLITE=1 NO_NATPMP=1 NO_UPNP=1 NO_ZMQ=1 NO_USDT=1
...
to: /path/to/digibyte/depends/x86_64-unknown-openbsdThen set BDB_PREFIX:
export BDB_PREFIX="/path/to/digibyte/depends/x86_64-unknown-openbsd"DigiByte Core includes a GUI built with the cross-platform Qt Framework. To compile the GUI, Qt 5 is required.
pkg_add qt5Important: Use gmake (the non-GNU make will exit with an error).
Preparation:
# Adapt the following for the version you installed (major.minor only):
export AUTOCONF_VERSION=2.71
export AUTOMAKE_VERSION=1.16
./autogen.shThere are many ways to configure DigiByte Core, here are a few common examples:
This enables the GUI and descriptor wallet support, assuming sqlite and qt5 are installed.
./configure MAKE=gmakeThis enables support for both wallet types and disables the GUI:
./configure --with-gui=no \
BDB_LIBS="-L${BDB_PREFIX}/lib -ldb_cxx-4.8" \
BDB_CFLAGS="-I${BDB_PREFIX}/include" \
MAKE=gmakeImportant: Use gmake (the non-GNU make will exit with an error).
gmake # use "-j N" for N parallel jobs
gmake check # Run tests if Python 3 is availableIf the build runs into out-of-memory errors, the instructions in this section might help.
The standard ulimit restrictions in OpenBSD are very strict:
data(kbytes) 1572864This is, unfortunately, in some cases not enough to compile some .cpp files in the project,
(see issue #6658).
If your user is in the staff group the limit can be raised with:
ulimit -d 3000000The change will only affect the current shell and processes spawned by it. To
make the change system-wide, change datasize-cur and datasize-max in
/etc/login.conf, and reboot.