You can find the Linux binary distribution
of XFree86 on a number of FTP sites. On
ftp://ftp.xfree86.org, you can
find it in the directory
/pub/XFree86/4.2.0/binaries
; there you will find
systems for various architectures in subdirectories. (At the time of
this writing, the current version is 4.2.0; newer versions are
released periodically.)
It’s quite likely you obtained XFree86 as part of a Linux distribution, in which case downloading the software separately is not necessary. If you are downloading XFree86 directly, see Tables 10.1 and 10.2, which list the files in the XFree86-4.2.0 distribution.
In order to find out the set of files you need to download, we highly
advise that you download a small shell script called
Xinstall.sh
first and run it as follows:
sh Xinstall.sh -check
This will output the directory containing the set of binaries you need to download.
Table 10-1 lists the required files.
Table 10-1. Files required for installing XFree86
File |
Description |
---|---|
|
The installation program |
|
An unpacking utility |
|
X clients and utilities as well as the run-time libraries |
|
Datafiles needed at runtime |
|
Manual pages |
|
Documentation |
|
The base font set |
|
The base set of font encoding data |
|
Runtime configuration files |
|
Runtime data |
|
The X server itself |
|
The various driver modules |
There are also a number of optional files that you should download only if you need them, as shown in Table 10-2.
Table 10-2. Optional files for installing XFree86
File |
Description |
---|---|
|
The font server |
|
A nested X server |
|
Header files for X programming, configuration files, and compile-time libraries |
|
The X Print server |
|
An X server for the virtual framebuffer |
|
Fonts in 100 dpi resolution |
|
Cyrillic fonts |
|
Scalable fonts |
|
An HTML version of the documentation |
|
A PostScript version of the documentation |
|
A Japanese version of the documentation |
The XFree86 directory should contain README
files and installation notes for the current version.
Obtain these files and save them in
the directory /var/tmp
(you can use any other
directory; just change the pathname accordingly in the following
examples). Now run the installation script again, this time without
the -check
option:
sh Xinstall.sh
This will ask you a number of questions. Usually, you can just press the Enter key in order to accept the defaults. Particularly, when asked whether you want to create links for OpenGL, say yes. This will install a compatible version. OpenGL is a library for fast 3D graphics; applications that display 3D graphics often use it, other applications never do. If you plan to run any 3D graphics applications, you should enable this. The installer will also ask you whether you want a link to the rstart utility to be created. If you do not know what rstart is, you can safely say no here.
Once the script is done running, XFree86 is installed, and you can start configuring it. This is covered in the next section.