# The Servo Parallel Browser Engine Project [![Linux Build Status](https://img.shields.io/travis/servo/servo/master.svg?label=Linux%20build)](https://travis-ci.org/servo/servo) [![Windows Build Status](https://img.shields.io/appveyor/ci/servo/servo/master.svg?label=Windows%20build)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/servo/servo/branch/master) Servo is a prototype web browser engine written in the [Rust](https://github.com/rust-lang/rust) language. It is currently developed on 64bit OS X, 64bit Linux, and Android. Servo welcomes contribution from everyone. See [`CONTRIBUTING.md`](CONTRIBUTING.md) and [`HACKING_QUICKSTART.md`](docs/HACKING_QUICKSTART.md) for help getting started. Visit the [Servo Project page](https://servo.org/) for news and guides. ## Prerequisites On OS X (homebrew): ``` sh brew install automake pkg-config python cmake pip install virtualenv ``` On OS X (MacPorts): ``` sh sudo port install python27 py27-virtualenv cmake ``` On OS X 10.11 (El Capitan), you also have to install openssl: ``` sh brew install openssl brew link --force openssl ``` If you've already partially compiled servo but forgot to do this step, run ./mach clean, link openssl, and recompile. On Debian-based Linuxes: ``` sh sudo apt-get install git curl freeglut3-dev autoconf \ libfreetype6-dev libgl1-mesa-dri libglib2.0-dev xorg-dev \ gperf g++ build-essential cmake virtualenv python-pip \ libssl-dev libbz2-dev libosmesa6-dev libxmu6 libxmu-dev \ libglu1-mesa-dev libgles2-mesa-dev libegl1-mesa-dev libdbus-1-dev ``` If you are on **Ubuntu 14.04** and encountered errors on installing these dependencies involving `libcheese`, see [#6158](https://github.com/servo/servo/issues/6158) for a workaround. If `virtualenv` does not exist, try `python-virtualenv`. On Fedora: ``` sh sudo dnf install curl freeglut-devel libtool gcc-c++ libXi-devel \ freetype-devel mesa-libGL-devel mesa-libEGL-devel glib2-devel libX11-devel libXrandr-devel gperf \ fontconfig-devel cabextract ttmkfdir python python-virtualenv python-pip expat-devel \ rpm-build openssl-devel cmake bzip2-devel libXcursor-devel libXmu-devel mesa-libOSMesa-devel \ dbus-devel ``` On Arch Linux: ``` sh sudo pacman -S --needed base-devel git python2 python2-virtualenv python2-pip mesa cmake bzip2 libxmu glu pkg-config ``` On Gentoo Linux: ```sh sudo emerge net-misc/curl media-libs/freeglut \ media-libs/freetype media-libs/mesa dev-util/gperf \ dev-python/virtualenv dev-python/pip dev-libs/openssl \ x11-libs/libXmu media-libs/glu x11-base/xorg-server ``` On Windows: Download Python for Windows [here](https://www.python.org/downloads/release/python-2711/). This is required for the SpiderMonkey build on Windows. Install MSYS2 from [here](https://msys2.github.io/). After you have done so, open an MSYS shell window and update the core libraries and install new packages. The extra step at the end is to downgrate GCC to 5.4, as the GCC6 versions in mingw currently fail to compile some of our dependencies. We are upgrading to a gcc-free build on Windows as soon as possible: ```sh pacman -Su pacman -Sy git mingw-w64-x86_64-toolchain mingw-w64-x86_64-freetype \ mingw-w64-x86_64-icu mingw-w64-x86_64-nspr mingw-w64-x86_64-ca-certificates \ mingw-w64-x86_64-expat mingw-w64-x86_64-cmake tar diffutils patch \ patchutils make python2-setuptools export GCC_URL=http://repo.msys2.org/mingw/x86_64/mingw-w64-x86_64-gcc export GCC_EXT=5.4.0-1-any.pkg.tar.xz pacman -U --noconfirm $GCC_URL-$GCC_EXT $GCC_URL-ada-$GCC_EXT \ $GCC_URL-fortran-$GCC_EXT $GCC_URL-libgfortran-$GCC_EXT $GCC_URL-libs-$GCC_EXT \ $GCC_URL-objc-$GCC_EXT easy_install-2.7 pip virtualenv ``` Open a new MSYS shell window as Administrator and remove the Python binaries (they are not compatible with our `mach` driver script yet, unfortunately): ```sh cd /mingw64/bin mv python2.exe python2-mingw64.exe mv python2.7.exe python2.7-mingw64.exe ``` Now, open a MINGW64 (not MSYS!) shell window, and you should be able to build servo as usual! Cross-compilation for Android: Pre-installed Android tools are needed. See wiki for [details](https://github.com/servo/servo/wiki/Building-for-Android) ## The Rust compiler Servo's build system automatically downloads a Rust compiler to build itself. This is normally a specific revision of Rust upstream, but sometimes has a backported patch or two. If you'd like to know which nightly build of Rust we use, see [`rust-nightly-date`](https://github.com/servo/servo/blob/master/rust-nightly-date). ## Building Servo is built with Cargo, the Rust package manager. We also use Mozilla's Mach tools to orchestrate the build and other tasks. ### Normal build To build Servo in development mode. This is useful for development, but the resulting binary is very slow. ``` sh git clone https://github.com/servo/servo cd servo ./mach build --dev ./mach run tests/html/about-mozilla.html ``` For benchmarking, performance testing, or real-world use, add the `--release` flag to create an optimized build: ``` sh ./mach build --release ./mach run --release tests/html/about-mozilla.html ``` ### Building for Android target ``` sh git clone https://github.com/servo/servo cd servo export ANDROID_SDK="/path/to/sdk" export ANDROID_NDK="/path/to/ndk" export ANDROID_TOOLCHAIN="/path/to/toolchain" export PATH="$PATH:/path/to/toolchain/bin" ./mach build --release --android ./mach package --release --android ``` Rather than setting the `ANDROID_*` environment variables every time, you can also create a `.servobuild` file and then edit it to contain the correct paths to the Android SDK/NDK tools: ``` cp servobuild.example .servobuild # edit .servobuild ``` ## Running Use `./mach run [url]` to run Servo. Also, don't miss the info on the [browserhtml page](https://github.com/browserhtml/browserhtml) on how to run the Browser.html full tech demo (it provides a more browser-like experience than just browsing a single URL with servo). ### Commandline Arguments - `-p INTERVAL` turns on the profiler and dumps info to the console every `INTERVAL` seconds - `-s SIZE` sets the tile size for painting; defaults to 512 - `-z` disables all graphical output; useful for running JS / layout tests - `-Z help` displays useful output to debug servo ### Keyboard Shortcuts - `Ctrl--` zooms out - `Ctrl-=` zooms in - `Alt`+`left arrow` goes backwards in the history - `Alt`+`right arrow` goes forwards in the history - `Esc` exits servo ## Developing There are lots of mach commands you can use. You can list them with `./mach --help`. The generated documentation can be found on http://doc.servo.org/servo/index.html