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Running Under Linux » History » Revision 20

Revision 19 (Tony Fuller, 07/23/2022 02:21 PM) → Revision 20/26 (Tony Fuller, 07/23/2022 02:35 PM)

h1. Running CHIRP Under Linux 

 {{>toc}} 

 CHIRP's preferred platform is Linux. By far the best way to get CHIRP running is to use one of the binary package repositories provided and maintained by volunteers. If you are running an obscure or old distribution, you may need to install it manually from the source tarball. 

 h2. Installing the flatpak (Ubuntu/Debian example) 

 You will need the flatpak package support from your distribution. Check https://www.flatpak.org/setup/ for other distribution specific instructions. 
 CHIRP will not automatically update when installed using this method. When you are ready to update CHIRP, you should download a new flatpak and run the @flatpak install@ command again. instructions 

   sudo apt install flatpak 
 sudo flatpak remote-add --if-not-exists flathub https://flathub.org/repo/flathub.flatpakrepo 

 Next download the latest flatpak bundle from https://trac.chirp.danplanet.com/chirp_daily/LATEST/ 
 It will probably be saved in your Downloads directory so 

   cd ~/Downloads 
 sudo flatpak install chirp-daily-*.flatpak 

 You may need to log in and log out to see CHIRP in your distribution's applications menu. 
 If you can't wait to start CHIRP run 

   flatpak run com.danplanet.chirp 

 h2. Fedora package via the D-RATS RPM repository 

 This too is quite easy. First, we install the repository RPM and then CHIRP itself. From a terminal: 

   rpm -Uvfh http://d-rats.com/yum/f11/d-rats-repo-0.1.2-1.fc11.noarch.rpm 
 yum install chirp 

 Look for CHIRP under your distribution's applications menu. 

 h2. Installing the snap 

 You will need snap package support for your distribution. Check https://snapcraft.io/chirp-snap for distribution specific instructions. 
 Snaps automatically update when the device is connected to the internet. This is the biggest advantage over the flatpak. 

   sudo snap install chirp-snap --edge 
 sudo snap connect chirp-snap:raw-usb 

 If you do not see CHIRP under your distribution's applications menu then you can manually create using 

   ln -s /var/lib/snapd/desktop/applications/chirp-snap_chirp-snap.desktop ~/.local/share/applications 

 h2. Ubuntu package via PPA (20.04 and earlier) 

 This is super quick and easy if you're running a reasonably new version of Ubuntu. Simply run the following in a terminal: 

   sudo apt-add-repository ppa:dansmith/chirp-snapshots 
 sudo add-apt-repository ppa:nrbrtx/python2-stuff    # Older installations of Ubuntu do not need this (20.04 and earlier) 
 sudo apt-get update 
 sudo apt-get install chirp-daily python-future 

 Look for CHIRP under your distribution's applications menu. 

 h2. Manual installation from source 

 If you are here, you are probably running an old or obscure distribution, or you want to run from source for some other reason (such as testing a daily build). Before you start, make sure that the required python modules are installed on your system. Some suggestions on how to do this are: 

 * Ubuntu/Debian: @apt-get install python-gtk python-serial python-libxml2 python-future@ 
 * Fedora/RedHat: @yum install pyserial pygtk2 libxml2-python python2-futures@ 

 Next, grab the source tarball from the [[Download]] page and save it somewhere like your home directory and then unpack it: 

   tar xzf chirp-0.1.12.tar.gz 
 cd chirp-0.1.12 

 From here, the easiest thing is to just launch CHIRP directly without installing it onto your system. Don't worry, this works just fine and CHIRP will be fully functional. Simply run the following: 

   ./chirpw 

 Once you've tested that it runs on your system, you may want to install it permanently. To do this, run the setup routine by doing: 

   sudo python setup.py install 

 When finished, you should be able to run "chirpw" from anywhere on your system, and (with luck) you'll also have an item in your distribution's applications menu. 

 h2. serial port permissions 

 Note that you may need to adjust permissions on the /dev/tty(something) device, or add your users who want to use CHIRP to the "dialout" group in order to let non-privileged users access the serial device. 

 This issue is often indicated by an "access denied" error when accessing serial port. 

 On most Linux distros this is accomplished with: 
 <pre> 
 sudo addgroup "$USERNAME" dialout 
 </pre> 

 You will then need to log out and back in for it to take effect.