========================== Deluge BitTorrent Client ========================== Authors: Zach Tibbitts, aka zachtib Alon Zakai, aka kripkenstein Marcos Pinto, aka markybob Andrew Resch, aka andar Alex Dedul, aka plisk Homepage: http://deluge-torrent.org ========================== Contact/Support: ========================== We have two options available for support: Our Forum, at http://forum.deluge-torrent.org or Our IRC Channel, at #deluge on Freenode ========================== Installation Instructions: ========================== First, make sure you have the proper build dependencies installed. On a normal Debian or Ubuntu system, those dependencies are: g++ make python-all-dev python-all version >= 2.4 python-dbus python-gnome2-extras python-gtk2 version >= 2.9 python-notify python-pyopenssl librsvg2-common python-xdg python-support libboost-dev >= 1.33.1 libboost-thread-dev libboost-date-time-dev libboost-filesystem-dev libboost-serialization-dev libssl-dev zlib1g-dev But the names of the packages may vary depending on your OS / distro. Once you have the needed libraries installed, build Deluge by running: $ make You shouldn't get any errors. Then run, as root (or by using sudo): $ make install and Deluge will be installed. By default, Deluge will be installed to the prefix /usr. If you wish, you can install Deluge to a different prefix by specifying it when you install it: $ PREFIX=yourprefixhere make install So, to install to /usr/local, run: $ PREFIX=/usr/local make install You can then run Deluge by executing: $ deluge ========================== Uninstallation/Upgrading: ========================== If you wish to upgrade from the older Deluge version please remove it first, then install the latest version as per "Installation Instructions". If you installed via the tarball, cd into the unpacked source tarball and then run, as root (or by using sudo): $ make uninstall If you installed via the deb package, run as root (or by using sudo:) $ dpkg --purge remove deluge-torrent Now install the latest version (and check out the additional notes). ========================== Additional Notes: ========================== 1) On some distributions, boost libraries are renamed to have "-mt" at the end (boost_thread_mt instead of boost_thread, for example), the "mt" indicating "multithreaded". In some cases it appears the distros lack symlinks to connect things. The solution is to either add symlinks from the short names to those with "-mt", or to alter setup.py to look for the "-mt" versions. 2) After upgrading your Deluge installation, it may fail to start. If this happens to you, you need to remove your ~/.config/deluge directory to allow Deluge to rebuild it's configuration file.