This guide will walk you through the requirements to build dotnet/runtime on Linux. Before building there is environment setup that needs to happen to pull in all the dependencies required by the build.
There are two suggested ways to go about doing this. You can use the Docker images used in the official builds, or you can set up the environment yourself. The documentation will go over both ways. Using Docker allows you to leverage our existing images which already have an environment set up, while using your own environment grants you better flexibility on having other tools at hand you might need.
Install Docker. For further installation instructions, see here. Details on the images used by the official builds can be found in the Linux building instructions doc. All the required build tools are included in the Docker images used to do the build, so no additional setup is required.
These instructions are written assuming the current Ubuntu LTS. Pull Requests are welcome to address other environments.
Minimum RAM required to build is 1GB. The build is known to fail on 512 MB VMs (dotnet/runtime#4069).
Install the following packages for the toolchain:
- CMake 3.20 or newer
- llvm
- lld
- clang
- build-essential
- python-is-python3
- curl
- git
- lldb
- libicu-dev
- liblttng-ust-dev
- libssl-dev
- libkrb5-dev
- zlib1g-dev
- ninja-build (optional, enables building native code with ninja instead of make)
NOTE: If you have an Ubuntu version older than 22.04 LTS, or Debian version older than 12, don't install cmake
using apt
directly. Follow the note written down below.
sudo apt install -y cmake llvm lld clang build-essential \
python-is-python3 curl git lldb libicu-dev liblttng-ust-dev \
libssl-dev libkrb5-dev zlib1g-dev ninja-build
NOTE: As of now, Ubuntu's apt
only has until CMake version 3.16.3 if you're using Ubuntu 20.04 LTS (less in older Ubuntu versions), and version 3.18.4 in Debian 11 (less in older Debian versions). This is lower than the required 3.20, which in turn makes it incompatible with the repo. For this case, we can use the snap
package manager or the Kitware APT feed to get a new enough version of CMake.
For snap:
sudo snap install cmake
For the Kitware APT feed, follow its instructions here.
You now have all the required components.
If you are planning to use your Linux environment to do cross-building for other architectures (e.g. Arm32, Arm64) and/or other operating systems (e.g. Alpine, FreeBSD), you need to install these additional dependencies:
- qemu
- qemu-user-static
- binfmt-support
- debootstrap
NOTE: These dependencies are used to build the crossrootfs
, not the runtime itself.
In case you have Gentoo you can run following command:
emerge --ask clang dev-util/lttng-ust app-crypt/mit-krb5