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mads
scripts/i18n: introduce --merge-pot-file to control normalization

There are actually *two* kinds of normalization:

- in main branches, where we just want the translations - not any trivially
derived information or temporary or unstructured data.
- in i18n branches, where we want the trivially derived information, and also
want to preserve any other information there might be in the .po files.

If no pot file is specifed, do it as on the main branches and strip everything
but actual translations. This mode will primarily be used when grafting or
rebasing changes from i18n branches.

When a pot file is specified, run GNU msgmerge with it on the po files. The pot
file should ideally be fully updated (as done by extract_messages). That will
establish a common baseline, leaving only the essential changes as needing merge.

If merging from default branches to 18n, it is better to skip .po and .pot in
first 'hg merge' pass, while resolving everything else. Then, with the
uncommitted merge, run 'extract_messages', and then merge the .po files using
--merge-pot-file kallithea/i18n/kallithea.pot .

(Actually, these two different modes could perhaps be auto detected ...)
.. _installation:

==========================
Installation on Unix/Linux
==========================

The following describes three different ways of installing Kallithea:

- :ref:`installation-source`: The simplest way to keep the installation
  up-to-date and track any local customizations is to run directly from
  source in a Kallithea repository clone, preferably inside a virtualenv
  virtual Python environment.

- :ref:`installation-virtualenv`: If you prefer to only use released versions
  of Kallithea, the recommended method is to install Kallithea in a virtual
  Python environment using `virtualenv`. The advantages of this method over
  direct installation is that Kallithea and its dependencies are completely
  contained inside the virtualenv (which also means you can have multiple
  installations side by side or remove it entirely by just removing the
  virtualenv directory) and does not require root privileges.

- :ref:`installation-without-virtualenv`: The alternative method of installing
  a Kallithea release is using standard pip. The package will be installed in
  the same location as all other Python packages you have ever installed. As a
  result, removing it is not as straightforward as with a virtualenv, as you'd
  have to remove its dependencies manually and make sure that they are not
  needed by other packages.

Regardless of the installation method you may need to make sure you have
appropriate development packages installed, as installation of some of the
Kallithea dependencies requires a working C compiler and libffi library
headers. Depending on your configuration, you may also need to install
Git and development packages for the database of your choice.

For Debian and Ubuntu, the following command will ensure that a reasonable
set of dependencies is installed::

    sudo apt-get install build-essential git libffi-dev python3-dev

For Fedora and RHEL-derivatives, the following command will ensure that a
reasonable set of dependencies is installed::

    sudo yum install gcc git libffi-devel python3-devel

.. _installation-source:


Installation from repository source
-----------------------------------

To install Kallithea in a virtualenv using the stable branch of the development
repository, follow the instructions below::

        hg clone https://kallithea-scm.org/repos/kallithea -u stable
        cd kallithea
        python3 -m venv ../kallithea-venv
        . ../kallithea-venv/bin/activate
        pip install --upgrade pip setuptools
        pip install --upgrade -e .
        python3 setup.py compile_catalog   # for translation of the UI

You can now proceed to :ref:`setup`.

.. _installation-virtualenv:


Installing a released version in a virtualenv
---------------------------------------------

It is highly recommended to use a separate virtualenv for installing Kallithea.
This way, all libraries required by Kallithea will be installed separately from your
main Python installation and other applications and things will be less
problematic when upgrading the system or Kallithea.
An additional benefit of virtualenv is that it doesn't require root privileges.

- Assuming you have installed virtualenv, create a new virtual environment
  for example, in `/srv/kallithea/venv`, using the venv command::

    python3 -m venv /srv/kallithea/venv

- Activate the virtualenv in your current shell session and make sure the
  basic requirements are up-to-date by running::

    . /srv/kallithea/venv/bin/activate
    pip install --upgrade pip setuptools

.. note:: You can't use UNIX ``sudo`` to source the ``virtualenv`` script; it
   will "activate" a shell that terminates immediately. It is also perfectly
   acceptable (and desirable) to create a virtualenv as a normal user.

- Make a folder for Kallithea data files, and configuration somewhere on the
  filesystem. For example::

    mkdir /srv/kallithea

- Go into the created directory and run this command to install Kallithea::

    pip install --upgrade kallithea

.. note:: Some dependencies are optional. If you need them, install them in
   the virtualenv too::

     pip install --upgrade kallithea python-ldap python-pam psycopg2

   This might require installation of development packages using your
   distribution's package manager.

  Alternatively, download a .tar.gz from http://pypi.python.org/pypi/Kallithea,
  extract it and install from source by running::

    pip install --upgrade .

- This will install Kallithea together with all other required
  Python libraries into the activated virtualenv.

You can now proceed to :ref:`setup`.

.. _installation-without-virtualenv:


Installing a released version without virtualenv
------------------------------------------------

For installation without virtualenv, 'just' use::

    pip install kallithea

Note that this method requires root privileges and will install packages
globally without using the system's package manager.

To install as a regular user in ``~/.local``, you can use::

    pip install --user kallithea

You can now proceed to :ref:`setup`.