To install Carla, simply run as usual:
$ make
$ [sudo] make install
You can run it without installing, by using instead:
$ make
$ ./source/frontend/carla
Packagers can make use of the PREFIX
and DESTDIR
variable during install, like this:
$ make install PREFIX=/usr DESTDIR=./test-dir
There are no required build dependencies.
But if you want the frontend (which is likely), you will need PyQt4/5 (python3 version)
Optional for extra Linux-only engine features:
Optional for extended LV2 UIs support: (Linux only)
Optional for extra samplers support:
Optional for extra LADSPA plugin information:
You can use:
$ make features
To find out which dependencies are missing.
Under debian based systems, you can use this command to install all dependencies:
sudo apt install python3-pyqt5.qtsvg python3-rdflib pyqt5-dev-tools \
libmagic-dev liblo-dev libasound2-dev libpulse-dev libx11-dev \
libgtk2.0-dev libgtk-3-dev libqt4-dev qtbase5-dev libfluidsynth-dev
Carla can make use of plugin bridges to load additional plugin types.
Simply run make posix32
after a regular Carla build, and install or run Carla locally.
This feature requires a compiler capable of building 32bit binaries.
This is built by default on Linux systems.
Requires LD_PRELOAD support by the OS and the GCC compiler.
Does not work with clang. (if you discover why, please let me know!)
Requires a mingw compiler, and winegcc.
First, we build the Windows bridges using mingw, like this: (adjust as needed)
make win32 CC=i686-w64-mingw32-gcc CXX=i686-w64-mingw32-g++
make win64 CC=x86_64-w64-mingw32-gcc CXX=x86_64-w64-mingw32-g++
To finalize, we build the wine<->native bridges using winegcc:
make wine32
make wine64