| BlueZ - Bluetooth protocol stack for Linux |
| ****************************************** |
| |
| Copyright (C) 2000-2001 Qualcomm Incorporated |
| Copyright (C) 2002-2003 Maxim Krasnyansky <maxk@qualcomm.com> |
| Copyright (C) 2002-2010 Marcel Holtmann <marcel@holtmann.org> |
| |
| |
| Compilation and installation |
| ============================ |
| |
| In order to compile Bluetooth utilities you need following software packages: |
| - GCC compiler |
| - GLib library |
| - D-Bus library |
| - udev library (optional) |
| - readline (command line clients) |
| |
| To configure run: |
| ./configure --prefix=/usr --mandir=/usr/share/man \ |
| --sysconfdir=/etc --localstatedir=/var |
| |
| Configure automatically searches for all required components and packages. |
| |
| To compile and install run: |
| make && make install |
| |
| |
| Configuration and options |
| ========================= |
| |
| For a working system, certain configuration options need to be enabled: |
| |
| --enable-library |
| |
| Enable installation of Bluetooth library |
| |
| By default the Bluetooth library is no longer installed. |
| |
| The user interfaces or command line utilities do not |
| require an installed Bluetooth library anymore. This |
| option is provided for legacy third party applications |
| that still depend on the library. |
| |
| When the library installation is enabled, it is a good |
| idea to use a separate bluez-library or libbluetooth |
| package for it. |
| |
| --disable-tools |
| |
| Disable support for Bluetooth utilities |
| |
| By default the Bluetooth utilities are built and also |
| installed. For production systems the tools are not |
| needed and this option allows to disable them to save |
| build time and disk space. |
| |
| When the tools are selected, it is a good idea to |
| use a separate bluez-tools package for them. |
| |
| --disable-cups |
| |
| Disable support for CUPS printer backend |
| |
| By default the printer backend for CUPS is build and |
| also installed. For systems that do not require printing |
| over Bluetooth, this options allows to disable it. |
| |
| When the CUPS backend is selected, it is a good idea to |
| use a separate bluez-cups package for it. |
| |
| --disable-monitor |
| |
| Disable support for the Bluetooth monitor utility |
| |
| By default the monitor utility is enabled. It provides |
| support for HCI level tracing and debugging. For systems |
| that don't require any kind of tracing or debugging |
| capabilities, this options allows to disable it. |
| |
| The monitor utility should be placed in the main package |
| along with the daemons. It is universally useful. |
| |
| --disable-client |
| |
| Disable support for the command line client |
| |
| By default the command line client is enabled and uses the |
| readline library. For specific systems where BlueZ is |
| configured by other means, the command line client can be |
| disabled and the dependency on readline is removed. |
| |
| The client should be placed in the main package along |
| with the daemons. It is universally useful. |
| |
| --disable-systemd |
| |
| Disable integration with systemd |
| |
| By default the integration with systemd is enabled and |
| installed. This gives the best integration into all |
| distributions based on systemd. |
| |
| This option is provided for distributions that do not |
| support systemd. In that case all integration with the |
| init system is up to the package. |
| |
| --enable-experimental |
| |
| Enable experimental plugins |
| |
| By default all plugins that are still in development |
| are disabled. This option can be used to enable them. |
| |
| It is not recommended to enable this option for production |
| systems. The APIs or behavior of the experimental plugins |
| is unstable and might still change. |
| |
| |
| Information |
| =========== |
| |
| Mailing lists: |
| linux-bluetooth@vger.kernel.org |
| |
| For additional information about the project visit BlueZ web site: |
| http://www.bluez.org |