Difference between revisions of "OpenBSD installation"
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== Introduction == | == Introduction == | ||
− | The easiest way to install the latest ConTeXt on OpenBSD is using [[ConTeXt_Standalone|ConTeXt Standalone]]'s | + | The easiest way to install the latest ConTeXt on OpenBSD is using [[ConTeXt_Standalone|ConTeXt Standalone]]'s Linux version and use it with OpenBSD's Linux emulation layer. Alternative, native methods may be described on this page in the future. The full installation is ~210M (without the 3rd party modules ~185M). |
== Using Linux Emulation == | == Using Linux Emulation == |
Revision as of 22:04, 26 December 2011
Introduction
The easiest way to install the latest ConTeXt on OpenBSD is using ConTeXt Standalone's Linux version and use it with OpenBSD's Linux emulation layer. Alternative, native methods may be described on this page in the future. The full installation is ~210M (without the 3rd party modules ~185M).
Using Linux Emulation
$ sudo pkg_add rsync fedora_base
$ sudo sysctl kern.emul.linux=1
$ mkdir $HOME/context
$ cd $HOME/context
$ ftp http://minimals.contextgarden.net/setup/first-setup.sh
Modify this script to override platform=linux.
$ sh ./first-setup.sh --modules=all
$ export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/context/tex/texmf-linux/bin"
$ context --make
$ context --version
This setup will use mkiv (the luatex version) and does not need either pdftex, or ruby.