Compiling the Zandronum server on a Raspberry Pi
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It is possible to compile zandronum-server
on a Raspberry Pi. It is mostly the same as compiling on Linux, but we have to disable some things first.
You can not combine the Zandronum client on a Raspberry Pi, as:
- The software renderer requires assembly files, and assembly files are only available for the
ia32
andx86_64
CPU architectures, and not the Raspberry Pi's ARM architecture. - The OpenGL renderer uses normal OpenGL, which is not supported by the Raspberry Pi. The Raspberry Pi only supports OpenGL ES.
Getting Started
You will need:
- A Raspberry Pi.
- Access to a terminal on your Raspberry Pi.
This guide was written for the Raspberry Pi Model 2B, but should work on all models.
Install Dependencies
Raspbian
$ sudo apt-get install build-essential zlib1g-dev libsdl1.2-dev libjpeg-dev \ nasm tar libbz2-dev libgtk2.0-dev cmake mercurial libfluidsynth-dev libgl1-mesa-dev \ libssl-dev
Arch Linux ARM
$ sudo pacman -S --needed gcc make zlib sdl libjpeg-turbo nasm tar bzip2 gtk2 cmake mercurial \ fluidsynth mesa glu openssl
Prepare Environment
Create and cd
to your working directory:
$ mkdir $HOME/zandronum-build && cd $HOME/zandronum-build
Clone the Zandronum repository:
$ hg clone https://bitbucket.org/Torr_Samaho/zandronum .
Get the latest stable release (for other versions replace "max(tagged())"
with one of the tags found in the repository):
$ hg update -cr "max(tagged())"
Apply patch that fixes compilation under Raspberry Pi:
$ wget -O raspi.patch "https://gist.githubusercontent.com/csnxs/0e4ce613a5d1736ead593500ca5a9df0/raw/330a41c796bdca88b5040bedf9e6a568ec567e7f/-" && \ hg import --no-commit raspi.patch && \ rm raspi.patch
Create and cd
to the directory where build files will be outputted:
$ mkdir buildserver && cd buildserver
Generate Makefile
s
Run cmake
, this generates the Makefile
s.
$ make clean; \ cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DSERVERONLY=ON -DNO_ASM=1 ..
The -DNO_ASM=1
argument is important as it doesn't compile the architecture-dependent assembly code.
Compile Zandronum
Now, run this command to build Zandronum.
$ make -j$(nproc)
This compile Zandronum using all of your Raspberry Pi's CPUs.
Run Zandronum
Assuming all went well, you should now have a zandronum-server
binary in your working directory.
To launch it:
./zandronum-server
You'll probably want to add the -iwad
parameter to get it to successfully launch, though.
Once you've set it all up, enjoy playing on your Pi-powered server!