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update install instructions in README

This commit is contained in:
Hans-Christoph Steiner 2015-07-31 16:23:05 +02:00
parent f38619ef5f
commit 45ffaac3f2

30
README
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@ -18,16 +18,36 @@ Installing
The easiest way to install the `fdroidserver` tools is on Debian, Ubuntu, Mint
or other Debian based distributions, you can install using:
sudo apt-get install fdroidserver
For older Ubuntu releases or to get the latest version, you can get
`fdroidserver` from the Guardian Project PPA (the signing key
fingerprint is `6B80 A842 07B3 0AC9 DEE2 35FE F50E ADDD 2234 F563`)
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:guardianproject/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install fdroidserver
But you can also use `virtualenv` and `pip` python tools that also work on other
distributions.
On OSX, `fdroidserver` is available from third party package managers,
like Homebrew, MacPorts, and Fink:
First, make sure you have installed the python header files, virtualenv and pip.
They should be included in your OS's default package manager or you can install
them via other mechanisms like Brew/dnf/pacman/emerge/Fink/MacPorts.
sudo brew install fdroidserver
For any platform where Python's `easy_install` is an option (e.g. OSX
or Cygwin, you can use it:
sudo easy_install fdroidserver
Python's `pip` also works:
sudo pip install fdroidserver
The combination of `virtualenv` and `pip` is great for testing out the
latest versions of `fdroidserver`. Using `pip`, `fdroidserver` can
even be installed straight from git. First, make sure you have
installed the python header files, virtualenv and pip. They should be
included in your OS's default package manager or you can install them
via other mechanisms like Brew/dnf/pacman/emerge/Fink/MacPorts.
For Debian based distributions: