Download a tarball from http://jonas.nitro.dk/tig/releases or clone the Tig repository git://github.com/jonas/tig.git.
NB: Do not use tig-2.0.tar because it will fail to compile due to these issues jonas#283 and jonas#337
The quick and simple way to install Tig is:
$ make $ make install
By default, tig
is installed in $HOME/bin
. To install tig
elsewhere set
prefix
to the desired path:
$ make prefix=/usr/local $ sudo make install prefix=/usr/local
Documentation files, such as manpages, are distributed in the release tarballs, and can be installed using:
$ make install-doc
When installing directly from the Tig repository, make install-doc
will assume
that the documentation tool chain is available and build the documentation
locally. In case you do not wish to install the required tools, documentation
can be installed from the release branch using:
$ make install-release-doc
Before upgrading, you are advised to read the release notes.
Optionally, you can use the configure
script to detect dependencies:
$ ./configure $ make $ make install
If your iconv
library is not in the default library and include path, you need
to pass the --with-libiconv
option to configure
to tell it where to look.
Note, if you are building from the Tig repository, you need to generate
configure
yourself. First, ensure that autoconf
is installed on your system,
and then run the following command:
$ make configure
You can use Homebrew to install Tig on OS X:
$ brew install tig
Build settings are read from the file config.make
and for certain systems also
from contrib/config.make-$kernel
. An example of the latter is Mac OS X, where
contrib/config.make-Darwin
provides out-of-the-box configuration for using the
system ncurses library and linking with the iconv library. This makes it easy to
configure the build without having to use the configure
script. As a side
note, configure
itself generates a config.make
file.
Apart from the different standard make
build variables (CC
, CFLAGS
, etc.)
and standard configure
variables (prefix
, bindir
, etc.), build settings
can be one of the following flags:
-
NO_SETENV
: Define this variable to enable work-around for missingsetenv()
. -
NO_MKSTEMPS
: Define this variable to enable work-around for missingmkstemps()
. -
NO_BUILTIN_TIGRC
: Reduce the size of the binary by not including a built-in tigrc. The built-in tigrc is used as a fallback when notigrc
is found in the system configuration directory (e.g./etc
).
The following example config.make
manually configures Tig to use the ncurses
library with wide character support and include the proper ncurses header file
(see tig.h for more information):
LDLIBS = -lncursesw CPPFLAGS = -DHAVE_NCURSESW_CURSES_H
For more examples of build settings, see contrib/config.make
and
config.make.in
.
The following tools and packages are needed:
Tool | Description |
---|---|
git-core |
Tig is just a frontend for Git. |
ncurses or ncursesw |
Be sure to have the development files
installed. Usually they are available in a
separate package ending with Ncurses with wide character support (ncursesw) is required to properly handle UTF-8 encoded strings. Note for packagers: For Tig’s |
iconv |
If iconv is not provided by the c library you need to change the Makefile to link it into the binary. |
The following tools and packages are optional and mainly needed for creating the configure script and building documentation:
Tool | Description |
---|---|
readline |
Adds support for completion and history in search and command prompts. |
autoconf |
Contains autoreconf for generating configure from configure.ac. |
asciidoc (>= 8.4) |
Generates HTML and (DocBook) XML from text. |
xmlto |
Generates manpages and chunked HTML from XML. |
DocBook XSL (>= 1.72.0) |
Used by xmlto for building manpages. |
DocBook (DSSL/Jade) tools |
Generates PDF from XML. Also known as docbook-utils. |