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Cross-compilation instructions for Raspberry Pi
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{{Languages}}
{{Languages|Installation}}
There are several possibilities to install ZNC on your machine. The latest version is always available using the source tarball from http://znc.in/releases.
There are several possibilities to install ZNC on your machine. The latest version is always available using the source tarball from https://znc.in/releases.


A [[ChangeLog]] is available in the wiki.
A [[:Category:ChangeLog|ChangeLog]] is available in the wiki.
You can also read more about [[Portability|ZNC's portability]].
You can also read more about [[Portability|ZNC's portability]].


;Which way should I choose for installing ZNC?
;Which way should I choose for installing ZNC?
:If you don't have root access, the only way is to use [[#Source Tarball|source tarball]]. You'll need to use <code>./configure --prefix="$HOME/.local"</code> as described.  
:If you don't have root access, the only way is to use [[#Source Tarball|source tarball]]. You'll need to use <code>cmake .. -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX="$HOME/.local"</code> as described.  
:If you have root access, you can use either [[#Source Tarball|source tarball]] or the convenient way for your distro. Check section about your distro for details, but be aware that these may contain old versions of ZNC!
:If you have root access, you can use either [[#Source Tarball|source tarball]] or the convenient way for your distro. Check section about your distro for details, but be aware that these may contain old versions of ZNC!


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== Source Tarball ==
== Source Tarball ==
Official source tarballs can be found [http://znc.in/releases/ here].
Official source tarballs can be found [https://znc.in/releases/ here].


If you want to compile ZNC with OpenSSL support, you need the OpenSSL development package. On Debian/Ubuntu this is called '''libssl-dev''', on CentOS/Fedora/Red Hat it's '''openssl-devel'''.
If you want to compile ZNC with OpenSSL support, you need the OpenSSL development package. On Debian/Ubuntu this is called '''libssl-dev''', on CentOS/Fedora/Red Hat it's '''openssl-devel''', and on openSUSE it's '''libopenssl-devel'''.
A good way to install this and other dependencies is the build dependency feature of package managers (<code>apt-get build-dep</code> / <code>yum-builddep</code> / <code>zypper source-install --build-deps-only</code>).


# Download the latest [http://znc.in/releases/znc-{{ZNC-Version}}.tar.gz source tarball]
# Download the latest [https://znc.in/releases/znc-{{ZNC-Version}}.tar.gz source tarball]
# <code>tar -xzvf znc*.*gz</code>
# <code>tar -xzvf znc-{{ZNC-Version}}.tar.gz</code>
# <code>cd znc*</code>
# <code>cd znc-{{ZNC-Version}}</code>
# <code>./configure</code><br />(use '''<code>--prefix="$HOME/.local"</code>''' if you don't want a system wide installation or simply don't have root access; use <code>--with-openssl=/path/to/openssl</code> if you have a non-standard SSL path)<br />(use <code>--help</code> to see other configure options)
# <code>mkdir build</code>
# <code>cd build</code>
# <code>cmake ..</code><br />(use <code>cmake .. -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX="$HOME/.local"</code> if you don't want a system wide installation or simply don't have root access; use <code>cmake -DOPENSSL_ROOT_DIR=/path/to/openssl</code> if you have a non-standard SSL path)<br />(use <code>ccmake</code> or <code>cmake-gui</code> to see other configure options)
# <code>make</code><br />(if you are on a dedicated server and your CPU has more than one core, you can use <code>make -jX</code> where X is the number of CPU cores to speed up compilation)
# <code>make</code><br />(if you are on a dedicated server and your CPU has more than one core, you can use <code>make -jX</code> where X is the number of CPU cores to speed up compilation)
# <code>make install</code>
# <code>make install</code>


''Please note that compiling can take 5-10mins or more.''
''Please note that compiling can take 5-10 minutes or more.''


Once you have installed znc, you can use <code>znc --makeconf</code> to make a configuration file for ZNC. This config is stored in ~/.znc under the user you run it as. You should create a dedicated non root user to run znc under.  
Once you have installed znc, you can use <code>znc --makeconf</code> to make a configuration file for ZNC. This config is stored in ~/.znc under the user you run it as. You should create a dedicated non root user to run znc under.  


ZNC is run by just executing znc under the dedicated znc user, at which stage it goes to background. It does not make an init.d service for itself nor does it need to be run in screen or something similar.
ZNC is run by just executing <code>znc</code> under the dedicated znc user, at which stage it goes to background. It does not automatically make an init.d service for itself (which can be done by following the instructions to [[running ZNC as a system daemon]]) nor does it need to be run in screen or something similar.


;See the [[FAQ|FAQ page]] if you encounter problems.
;See the [[FAQ|FAQ page]] if you encounter problems.


== Linux ==
== Linux ==
=== Docker ===
ZNC is available as an image in [https://hub.docker.com/_/znc/ Docker Hub], and can be downloaded with:
<code>docker pull znc</code>
Follow the link above for additional instructions.
If you want to test great new features (and bugs!), unstable ZNC image is [https://hub.docker.com/r/zncbouncer/znc-git/ here].


=== Debian ===
=== Debian ===
Debian provides [http://packages.debian.org/znc ZNC packages] which may be installed using:
{{ambox | type = delete | text = Prior to Debian Sid (Unstable) including Wheezy the ZNC packages included in the repositories for those older releases are '''extremely old'''. There could be '''security issues and even bugs in the code'''. If you are having issues with ZNC from your Debian package manager (prior to Sid), it is recommended to uninstall that package and build from source, or use the third-party repository (noted below).}}
  aptitude install znc
 
Debian provides [http://packages.debian.org/znc ZNC packages] which may be installed using (stretch/stable, buster/testing, sid)
apt install znc
 
Debian Jessie LTS [https://wiki.debian.org/Backports#Using_the_command_line backports]
  apt -t jessie-backports install znc


If you want to build znc from source to get a newer version than Debian provides, you may need the following packages:
If you want to build znc from source to get a newer version than Debian provides, you may need the following packages:
Line 44: Line 61:
  libssl-dev
  libssl-dev
  libperl-dev
  libperl-dev
pkg-config
libicu-dev


You can use the command
You can use the command
Line 49: Line 68:
to install build dependencies automatically. Note that sometimes these build-depedencies are outdated and won't work with the current version of ZNC.
to install build dependencies automatically. Note that sometimes these build-depedencies are outdated and won't work with the current version of ZNC.


<code>''!!!!!! Please note that prior to Debian Sid(Testing) including Wheezy, Squeeze, and Lenny; The ZNC packages are extremely old in the package manager. There could be security issues and even bugs in the code. If you are having issues with ZNC from your debian package manager prior to Sid it is recommended to uninstall that package and build from source. !!!!!!''</code>
=== Fedora/CentOS/Red Hat Enterprise Linux ===
 
=== Fedora/Red Hat Enterprise Linux ===
Fedora has znc packaged in it's main repository and their Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL) repository provides them for CentOS/RHEL.
Fedora has znc packaged in it's main repository and their Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL) repository provides them for CentOS/RHEL.


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Once you have EPEL installed (or are on Fedora), execute:
Once you have EPEL installed (or are on Fedora), execute:
  sudo yum install znc
  sudo yum install znc
or dnf
sudo dnf install znc


Once installed you can configure znc by running:
Once installed you can configure znc by running:
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Then finally to start it you can run:
Then finally to start it you can run:
  sudo systemctl start znc # or ''enable'' if you want it to autostart
  sudo systemctl start znc # or ''enable'' if you want it to autostart
==== Build from Source: CentOS 7+ only ====
If you really wish to build from source, then please follow the instructions [https://wiki.znc.in/User:Teward/ZNC_From_Source:_CentOS_7 here, written by Thomas Ward].  Note that these instructions do utilize the EPEL repository in order to get all the necessary build dependencies (and there's a lot of them).  These instructions work properly to create a basic ZNC installation.  CentOS 7 or newer is needed because of the C++ standards being used, and older CentOS not having the required compilers for those standards.


=== Ubuntu ===
=== Ubuntu ===
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==== Build From Source ====
==== Build From Source ====
If you want to build znc from source to get a newer version than Ubuntu provides, you need the following packages:
If you want to build znc from source to get a newer version than Ubuntu provides, you may need to determine capability of your system to build ZNC 1.6.0 (and newer) based on the version of Ubuntu.
  build-essential
 
  libssl-dev
===== Building from Git Master =====
  libperl-dev
{{ambox | type = notice | text = If you are building from a source tarball for a stable release, '''skip this section'''''. It is only needed for those building the development release (the master branch) on [[Git]].}}
 
If you are trying to use the Git master version of the source code, then you will also need to ensure the following packages are also installed. You will '''not''' need to install these if you are using a stable release tarball, only if you are using Git master:
  aclocal
  pkg-config
  pkg-config
automake
autoconf


You can also run the command
After you have installed these packages, then continue onward for the additional dependencies you will need.
sudo apt-get build-dep znc
if you want to get the build dependencies installed automatically.


After you have done this, you can follow the instructions on this page for compiling from the source tarball.
After installing dependencies, you will have to run autogen.sh to generate the configure script.


==== Install via PPA ====
===== Add Build Dependency Sources =====
A Personal Package Archive (PPA) has been created by [https://launchpad.net/~teward Thomas W.], and contains the latest stable ZNC release as exists in Debian.  It contains packages for all releases of Ubuntu that are currently supported.  It does not contain packages for versions of Ubuntu that are past their [https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Releases end of life dates].  [https://launchpad.net/~teward/+archive/znc/+packages Click here if you wish to see the details of the packages in the PPA].  '''NOTE: This PPA contains packages for only certain Ubuntu releases, as detailed [[User:Resistance/Ubuntu_PPA_for_ZNC_-_Supported_Versons_of_Ubuntu|here]].'''


The version currently available in the PPA is detailed [[User:Resistance/Ubuntu_PPA_for_ZNC_-_Supported_Versons_of_Ubuntu|on this page]].
{{ambox | type = delete | text = '''DO NOT''' add these dependency sources or PPAs if you are only trying to install from the ZNC PPA; instead skip this section and go to the [[Installation#Install_via_PPA|Install via PPA]] second instead.  This section is only for those intending to compile themselves from-source.}}


First, make sure you have the python-software-properties package installed:
====== Ubuntu 14.04 ======
  sudo apt-get install python-software-properties
If you are on Ubuntu 14.04, you will need to add one PPA to your system, with the following command:
  sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:teward/swig3.0


Then, add the PPA to your sources, and update the apt information:
====== Newer than Ubuntu 14.04 ======
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:teward/znc
You will not need any additional PPAs or sources for build dependencies.
sudo apt-get update


Then, install the znc packages:
===== Other Build Dependencies =====
  sudo apt-get install znc znc-dbg znc-dev znc-perl znc-python znc-tcl
After verifying you have the required build dependency sources, you will need to install the following packages:
  build-essential
libssl-dev
libperl-dev
pkg-config
swig3.0
libicu-dev


ZNC is now installed.  You can create the configuration normally with this, when run on the user that you want to run ZNC as:
After you have done this, you can follow the instructions on this page for compiling from the source tarball.
znc --makeconf


=== (Open)SuSE ===
=== (open)SUSE ===
ZNC is part of the [http://software.opensuse.org/search?q=znc official repositories]. To install, use the YaST GUI or install via commandline by typing
ZNC is part of the [https://software.opensuse.org/package/znc official repositories]. To install, use the YaST GUI or install via commandline by typing
  yast -i znc
  zypper install znc


=== Gentoo ===
=== Gentoo ===
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Several USE Flags can be used for znc:
Several USE Flags can be used for znc:


* ares (global/local): enables using the c-ares library (for stable versions predating 1.0 only; deprecated in favor of dns-threads)
* argon2: store password hashes using Argon2id instead of SHA-256
* debug (global): enable debug
* icu: character encodings support
* dns-threads (local): use threads for DNS resolving (for v1.0)
* perl: adds support for writing [[modperl|perl modules]]
* extras (global/local): enable additional modules
* python: adds support for writing [[modpython|python 3 modules]]
* ipv6 (global): adds support for ipv6
** python_single_target_python3_NN: use the specific python version
* perl (global): adds support for writing perl modules
* ssl: enable secure socket layer connections
* python (global): adds support for writing python 3 modules  
* sasl: build [[cyrusauth]] module
* ssl (global): enable secure socket layer connections
* tcl: adds support for writing [[modtcl|tcl modules]]
* sasl (global): sasl support
* zlib: compression for HTML in [[webadmin|web UI]]
* tcl (global): adds support for writing tcl modules


<pre>equery uses znc -a</pre> Will print you a list of USE flags that will be used for znc
<pre>equery uses znc -a</pre> Will print you a list of USE flags that will be used for znc
Line 130: Line 159:


To install znc from the package manager, enter the following command:
To install znc from the package manager, enter the following command:
  sudo apk add znc znc-modperl znc-modtcl
<!--- Some modules exist in znc-extra. This is by design on this OS. --->
  sudo apk add znc znc-extra znc-modperl znc-modpython znc-modtcl ca-certificates


If you want to build znc from source to get a newer version than Alpine provides, you need to install packages with the following command:
If you want to build znc from source to get a newer version than Alpine provides, you need to install packages with the following command:
  sudo apk add autoconf automake gettext-dev g++ make openssl-dev pkgconfig zlib-dev  
  sudo apk add autoconf automake gettext-dev g++ make openssl-dev pkgconfig zlib-dev  


If you want to run [[git]], [[Debugging]], [[modperl|perl]], (requires swig), [[modtcl|tcl]], or [[cyrusauth|cyrus]] then install the packages that correspond:
If you want to run [[git]], [[Debugging]], [[modperl|perl]], (requires swig), [[modpython|python]], (requires swig), [[modtcl|tcl]], or [[cyrusauth|cyrus]] then install the packages that correspond:
  sudo apk add git gdb perl-dev swig tcl-dev cyrus-sasl-dev
  sudo apk add git gdb perl-dev python3-dev swig tcl-dev cyrus-sasl-dev
 
Note: Python3 does not exist in Alpine.


=== Archlinux ===
=== Archlinux ===
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* '''python''' - modpython module
* '''python''' - modpython module
* '''tcl''' - modtcl module
* '''tcl''' - modtcl module
==== rc.d scripts (deprecated)====
You may also be interested in rc.d scripts for znc which can be installed with:
pacman -U https://github.com/downloads/kylef/znc-arch/znc-system-wide-1.0-1-any.pkg.tar.xz
You can read more about these scripts [https://github.com/kylef/znc-arch here]. As of November 2012, initscripts support is being phased-out and expected to be totally deprecated in early 2013. Systemd scripts are already distributed in the package. The Archlinux wiki has some helpful information for new users who are getting started with [https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Znc znc].


==== Unstable/Testing ====
==== Unstable/Testing ====
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  make install clean
  make install clean


or  
or pkg_add


  pkg_add -r znc
  pkg_add -r znc
or pkgng
pkg install znc


== Mac OS X ==
== Mac OS X ==
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For more information about Homebrew see [http://mxcl.github.com/homebrew/ here]. The following command will install Homebrew to /usr/local
For more information about Homebrew see [http://mxcl.github.com/homebrew/ here]. The following command will install Homebrew to /usr/local


   ruby -e "$(curl -fsSkL raw.github.com/mxcl/homebrew/go)"
   /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"


Homebrew requires Xcode and Mac OS X >= 10.5
Homebrew requires Xcode and Mac OS X >= 10.5
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   port install znc
   port install znc


== Cygwin ==
Download [http://www.cygwin.com/ Cygwin], and install.
In the setup, do a search for the following packages and install them:
Getting the ZNC source code:
  git
  wget
Compiling:
  automake
  gcc-g++
  libicu-devel
  make
  mpfr
  pkg-config
  openssl-devel
  zlib-devel
Debugging:
  gdb
After installing these packages proceed to [[#Source Tarball|source tarball]] section (or [[git]])
== Raspberry Pi (cross-compilation) ==
Install fuse-sshfs:
    sudo <pkg-manager> install fuse-sshfs
Mount the target sysroot over SSHFS:
    mkdir -p ~/rpi/sysroot
    sudo sshfs pi@192.168.0.123:/ ~/rpi/sysroot/ -o transform_symlinks -o allow_other
Get RPi cross-compiler (~325mb):
    git clone git://github.com/raspberrypi/tools.git ~/rpi/tools
Create ~/rpi/rpi-g++.sh (chmod +x) with the following content (drop "-x64" if the host is 32-bit):
    exec ~/rpi/tools/arm-bcm2708/gcc-linaro-arm-linux-gnueabihf-raspbian-x64/bin/arm-linux-gnueabihf-g++ --sysroot=$HOME/rpi/sysroot "$@"
Check that the cross-compiler works:


    ~/rpi/rpi-g++.sh -v
== Microsoft Windows ==
    gcc version 4.8.3 20140303 (prerelease) (crosstool-NG linaro-1.13.1+bzr2650 - Linaro GCC 2014.03)


Configure, build & install ZNC (prefix on the target):
'''Warning: If you're going to install ZNC on your local Windows machine, it will probably be useless. You should run it on some machine (Windows or not), which is connected to internet 24/7.'''


    CXX=~/rpi/rpi-g++.sh ./configure --prefix /home/pi/znc --host x86_64
=== Cygwin ===
    make -j4
    DESTDIR=~/rpi/sysroot make install


Missing support for SSL, ICU, zlib? Install the development packages on the target.
ZNC is available in list of cygwin packages.


Unmount the sysroot:
Download [http://www.cygwin.com/ Cygwin], install it. When choosing list of packages to install, search for "znc".


    fusermount -u $HOME/rpi/sysroot
If you don't want to use the provided packages, you can compile ZNC from source; for that you'll need the dependencies installed, which you can see in BUILD_REQUIRES in [https://cygwin.com/cgit/cygwin-packages/znc/tree/znc.cygport znc.cygport] which is used to build the cygwin ZNC package. After installing these packages proceed to [[#Source Tarball|source tarball]] section (or [[git]])


Thanks to:
ZNC is run by just executing <code>znc</code>, at which stage it goes to background. It does not automatically make a service by itself (which can be done by following the instructions in [[running ZNC as a system daemon#Windows]]) nor does it need to be run in screen or something similar.
- http://hertaville.com/2012/09/28/development-environment-raspberry-pi-cross-compiler/
- http://hertaville.com/2014/04/12/cross-compiling-qt4-app/


== Unofficial, user contributed binaries ==
=== WSL ===
The following installation sources are created and maintained by users!
After ensuring that WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux) itself works, follow the [[#Linux|Linux]] instructions above.


=== Microsoft Windows ===
However note that it is not suitable for services unless you enable a currently experimental option/setting which you can then follow the [[Running ZNC as a system daemon#Linux]] instructions
[http://code.google.com/p/znc-msvc/ ZNC as a native Windows program, compiled with Microsoft Visual C++]
Includes the main program and around 40 modules. Supports SSL and IPv6.


[[Category:ZNC]]
[[Category:ZNC]]

Latest revision as of 23:52, 24 November 2024

There are several possibilities to install ZNC on your machine. The latest version is always available using the source tarball from https://znc.in/releases.

A ChangeLog is available in the wiki. You can also read more about ZNC's portability.

Which way should I choose for installing ZNC?
If you don't have root access, the only way is to use source tarball. You'll need to use cmake .. -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX="$HOME/.local" as described.
If you have root access, you can use either source tarball or the convenient way for your distro. Check section about your distro for details, but be aware that these may contain old versions of ZNC!

Once you have installed ZNC, you can create a config file with znc --makeconf.

Development Versions

Read the git page if you want to get the current development version. Beware that this might have more bugs, more features, be a little unstable and eat your first born. You have been warned!

Source Tarball

Official source tarballs can be found here.

If you want to compile ZNC with OpenSSL support, you need the OpenSSL development package. On Debian/Ubuntu this is called libssl-dev, on CentOS/Fedora/Red Hat it's openssl-devel, and on openSUSE it's libopenssl-devel. A good way to install this and other dependencies is the build dependency feature of package managers (apt-get build-dep / yum-builddep / zypper source-install --build-deps-only).

  1. Download the latest source tarball
  2. tar -xzvf znc-1.9.1.tar.gz
  3. cd znc-1.9.1
  4. mkdir build
  5. cd build
  6. cmake ..
    (use cmake .. -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX="$HOME/.local" if you don't want a system wide installation or simply don't have root access; use cmake -DOPENSSL_ROOT_DIR=/path/to/openssl if you have a non-standard SSL path)
    (use ccmake or cmake-gui to see other configure options)
  7. make
    (if you are on a dedicated server and your CPU has more than one core, you can use make -jX where X is the number of CPU cores to speed up compilation)
  8. make install

Please note that compiling can take 5-10 minutes or more.

Once you have installed znc, you can use znc --makeconf to make a configuration file for ZNC. This config is stored in ~/.znc under the user you run it as. You should create a dedicated non root user to run znc under.

ZNC is run by just executing znc under the dedicated znc user, at which stage it goes to background. It does not automatically make an init.d service for itself (which can be done by following the instructions to running ZNC as a system daemon) nor does it need to be run in screen or something similar.

See the FAQ page if you encounter problems.

Linux

Docker

ZNC is available as an image in Docker Hub, and can be downloaded with:

docker pull znc

Follow the link above for additional instructions.

If you want to test great new features (and bugs!), unstable ZNC image is here.

Debian

Debian provides ZNC packages which may be installed using (stretch/stable, buster/testing, sid)

apt install znc

Debian Jessie LTS backports

apt -t jessie-backports install znc

If you want to build znc from source to get a newer version than Debian provides, you may need the following packages:

build-essential
libssl-dev
libperl-dev
pkg-config
libicu-dev

You can use the command

aptitude build-dep znc

to install build dependencies automatically. Note that sometimes these build-depedencies are outdated and won't work with the current version of ZNC.

Fedora/CentOS/Red Hat Enterprise Linux

Fedora has znc packaged in it's main repository and their Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux (EPEL) repository provides them for CentOS/RHEL.

If using RHEL install the EPEL repository by downloading the appropriate package linked on EPEL's website.

Once you have EPEL installed (or are on Fedora), execute:

sudo yum install znc

or dnf

sudo dnf install znc

Once installed you can configure znc by running:

sudo -u znc znc --makeconf # this creates /var/lib/znc/.znc

Then finally to start it you can run:

sudo systemctl start znc # or enable if you want it to autostart

Build from Source: CentOS 7+ only

If you really wish to build from source, then please follow the instructions here, written by Thomas Ward. Note that these instructions do utilize the EPEL repository in order to get all the necessary build dependencies (and there's a lot of them). These instructions work properly to create a basic ZNC installation. CentOS 7 or newer is needed because of the C++ standards being used, and older CentOS not having the required compilers for those standards.

Ubuntu

This page lists all of the ZNC packages in the Ubuntu repositories.

You can either build ZNC from source, or use a PPA that was made by a community member to contain pre-built ZNC packages for all supported Ubuntu releases. Note that the PPA does not contain packages for every Ubuntu release, and the support dates for various Ubuntu versions is detailed here. If the release of Ubuntu you are on is not supported on the PPA, you will have to compile it from source yourself.

Build From Source

If you want to build znc from source to get a newer version than Ubuntu provides, you may need to determine capability of your system to build ZNC 1.6.0 (and newer) based on the version of Ubuntu.

Building from Git Master

If you are trying to use the Git master version of the source code, then you will also need to ensure the following packages are also installed. You will not need to install these if you are using a stable release tarball, only if you are using Git master:

aclocal
pkg-config
automake
autoconf

After you have installed these packages, then continue onward for the additional dependencies you will need.

After installing dependencies, you will have to run autogen.sh to generate the configure script.

Add Build Dependency Sources
Ubuntu 14.04

If you are on Ubuntu 14.04, you will need to add one PPA to your system, with the following command:

sudo add-apt-repository -y ppa:teward/swig3.0
Newer than Ubuntu 14.04

You will not need any additional PPAs or sources for build dependencies.

Other Build Dependencies

After verifying you have the required build dependency sources, you will need to install the following packages:

build-essential
libssl-dev
libperl-dev
pkg-config
swig3.0
libicu-dev

After you have done this, you can follow the instructions on this page for compiling from the source tarball.

(open)SUSE

ZNC is part of the official repositories. To install, use the YaST GUI or install via commandline by typing

zypper install znc

Gentoo

Gentoo provides ZNC packages which may be installed using:

emerge -av net-irc/znc

Several USE Flags can be used for znc:

  • argon2: store password hashes using Argon2id instead of SHA-256
  • icu: character encodings support
  • perl: adds support for writing perl modules
  • python: adds support for writing python 3 modules
    • python_single_target_python3_NN: use the specific python version
  • ssl: enable secure socket layer connections
  • sasl: build cyrusauth module
  • tcl: adds support for writing tcl modules
  • zlib: compression for HTML in web UI
equery uses znc -a

Will print you a list of USE flags that will be used for znc

Slackware

Latest Slackware SBo Slackbuild

Alpine Linux

To install znc from the package manager, enter the following command:

sudo apk add znc znc-extra znc-modperl znc-modpython znc-modtcl ca-certificates

If you want to build znc from source to get a newer version than Alpine provides, you need to install packages with the following command:

sudo apk add autoconf automake gettext-dev g++ make openssl-dev pkgconfig zlib-dev 

If you want to run git, Debugging, perl, (requires swig), python, (requires swig), tcl, or cyrus then install the packages that correspond:

sudo apk add git gdb perl-dev python3-dev swig tcl-dev cyrus-sasl-dev

Archlinux

ZNC is part of the archlinux package repository, and can be installed with the following:

pacman -S znc

Additionally you can install the following optional dependencies to add support for additional modules.

  • cyrus-sasl - saslauth module
  • perl - modperl module
  • python - modpython module
  • tcl - modtcl module

Unstable/Testing

You can install the latest git snapshot from the Arch User Repository.

FreeBSD

ZNC is in FreeBSD ports, just do:

cd /usr/ports/irc/znc
make config
make install clean

or pkg_add

pkg_add -r znc

or pkgng

pkg install znc

Mac OS X

There are two ways to install ZNC on OS X, either using a package manager such as Homebrew or installing it yourself from source. See this blog post for a tutorial on how to compile ZNC from source.

  • NOTE: If you are running on PPC architecture and cannot make the ./configure && make && sudo make install dance work, you'll want to do the following:
  1. Make sure that you're using the --disable-perl switch for configure. Hence: ./configure --prefix=/usr/local --disable-perl

Homebrew

Installing Homebrew

For more information about Homebrew see here. The following command will install Homebrew to /usr/local

 /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/master/install)"

Homebrew requires Xcode and Mac OS X >= 10.5

Installing znc with Homebrew

 brew install znc

Installing znc with MacPorts

 port install znc


Microsoft Windows

Warning: If you're going to install ZNC on your local Windows machine, it will probably be useless. You should run it on some machine (Windows or not), which is connected to internet 24/7.

Cygwin

ZNC is available in list of cygwin packages.

Download Cygwin, install it. When choosing list of packages to install, search for "znc".

If you don't want to use the provided packages, you can compile ZNC from source; for that you'll need the dependencies installed, which you can see in BUILD_REQUIRES in znc.cygport which is used to build the cygwin ZNC package. After installing these packages proceed to source tarball section (or git)

ZNC is run by just executing znc, at which stage it goes to background. It does not automatically make a service by itself (which can be done by following the instructions in running ZNC as a system daemon#Windows) nor does it need to be run in screen or something similar.

WSL

After ensuring that WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux) itself works, follow the Linux instructions above.

However note that it is not suitable for services unless you enable a currently experimental option/setting which you can then follow the Running ZNC as a system daemon#Linux instructions