Skip to content

An ebook reader application supports PDF, DJVU, EPUB, FB2 and much more, running on Kindle, Kobo, PocketBook, Ubuntu Touch and Android devices

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

iceflowdev/koreader

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Build Status Coverage Status AGPL Licence KOReader

Join the chat

KOReader is a document viewer application, originally created for Kindle e-ink readers. It currently runs on Kindle, Kobo, PocketBook, Ubuntu Touch and Android (2.3+) devices. Developers can also run Koreader emulator for development purpose on desktop PC with Linux and Windows operating system.

Main features for users

  • supports multi-format documents including:
    • paged fixed-layout formats: PDF, DjVu and CBZ
    • reflowable e-book formats: ePub, fb2, mobi, doc, chm and plain text
    • scanned PDF/DjVu documents can also be reflowed with built-in K2pdfopt
  • use StarDict dictionaries / Wikipedia to lookup words
  • highlights can be exported to Evernote cloud account
  • highly customizable reader view and typeset
    • setting arbitrary page margins / line space
    • choosing external fonts and styles
    • built-in multi-lingual hyphenation dictionaries
  • supports adding custom online OPDS catalogs
  • calibre integration
    • search calibre metadata on your koreader device
    • send ebooks from calibre library to your koreader device wirelessly
    • browser calibre library and download ebooks via calibre OPDS server
  • can share ebooks with other koreader devices wirelessly
  • various optimizations for e-ink devices
    • paginated menus without animation
    • adjustable text contrast
  • multi-lingual user interface
  • online Over-The-Air software update

Highlights for developers

  • frontend written in Lua scripting language
    • running on multi-platform with only one code-base maintained
    • developing koreader in any editor without compilation
    • high runtime efficiency by LuaJIT acceleration
    • light-weight widget toolkit for small memory footprint
    • extensible with plugin system
  • interfaced backends for documents parsing and rendering
    • high quality document backend libraries like MuPDF, DjvuLibre and CREngine
    • interacting with frontend via LuaJIT FFI for best performence
  • in active development
    • contributed by developers around the world
    • continuous integration with Travis CI
    • with unit tests and code coverage test
    • automatic release of nightly builds
  • free as in free speech
    • licensed under Affero GPL v3
    • all dependencies are free software

Check out the KOReader wiki to learn more about this project.

Building Prerequisites

These instructions for how to get and compile the source are intended for a Linux OS. Windows users are suggested to develop in a Linux VM or use Wubi.

To get and compile the source you must have patch, wget, unzip, git, cmake and luarocks installed, as well as a version of autoconf greater than 2.64. You also need nasm and of course a compiler like gcc or clang. If you want to cross-compile for other architectures, you need a proper cross-compile toolchain. Your GCC should be at least of version 4.7 for both native and cross compiling.

Users of Debian and Ubuntu can install the required packages using:

sudo apt-get install build-essential git patch wget unzip \
autoconf cmake libtool nasm luarocks \
libssl-dev libffi-dev libsdl2-dev linux-libc-dev:i386

Note that the linux-libc-dev:i386 package is only necessary for x86_64 machines.

Cross compile toolchains are available for Ubuntu users through these commands:

# for Kindle
sudo apt-get install gcc-arm-linux-gnueabi g++-arm-linux-gnueabi
# for Kobo and Ubuntu touch
sudo apt-get install gcc-arm-linux-gnueabihf g++-arm-linux-gnueabihf
# for Win32
sudo apt-get install gcc-mingw-w64-i686 g++-mingw-w64-i686

A recent version of Android SDK/NDK and ant are needed in order to build Koreader for Android devices.

sudo apt-get install ant

In order to build Koreader package for Ubuntu Touch, the click package management tool is needed, Ubuntu users can install it with:

sudo apt-get install click

You might also need SDL library packages if you want to compile and run Koreader on Linux PC. Fedora users can install SDL and SDL-devel package. Ubuntu users probably need to install libsdl2-dev package:

Getting the source

git clone https://github.com/koreader/koreader.git
cd koreader
make fetchthirdparty

Building & Running & Testing

For real reader devices

To build installable package for Kindle:

make TARGET=kindle clean update

To build installable package for Kobo:

make TARGET=kobo clean update

To build installable package for PocketBook you need first to obtain the SDK from PocketBook:

make pocketbook-toolchain

then similarly with Kindle and Kobo building run this command:

make TARGET=pocketbook clean update

To build installable package for Ubuntu Touch

make TARGET=ubuntu-touch clean update

To run, you must call the script reader.lua. Run it without arguments to see usage notes. Note that the script and the luajit binary must be in the same directory.

You may checkout our nightlybuild script to see how to build a package from scratch.

For Android devices

Make sure the "android" and "ndk-build" tools are in your PATH variable and the NDK variable points to the root directory of the Android NDK.

First, run this command to make a standalone android cross compiling toolchain from NDK:

make android-toolchain

Then, build installable package for Android:

make TARGET=android clean androidupdate

For emulating KOReader on Linux and Windows

To build an emulator on current Linux machine just run:

make clean && make

If you want to compile the emulator for Windows you need to run:

make TARGET=win32 clean && make TARGET=win32

To run Koreader on your developing machine (you may need to change $(MACHINE) to the arch of your machine such as 'x86_64'):

cd koreader-emulator-$(MACHINE)/koreader && ./reader.lua -d ../../test

To run unit tests in KOReader:

make test

To run Lua static-analysis for KOReader:

make statick-check

You may need to checkout the travis config file to setup up a proper testing environment. Briefly, you need to install luarocks and then install busted with luarocks. The "eng" language data file for tesseract-ocr is also need to test OCR functionality. Finally, make sure that luajit in your system is at least of version 2.0.2.

You can also specify size of emulator's screen via environment variables. For more information, please refer to koreader-base's README.

To use your own koreader-base repo instead of the default one change KOR_BASE environment variable:

make KOR_BASE=../koreader-base

This will be handy if you are developing koreader-base and want to test your modifications with kroeader frontend. NOTE: only support relative path for now.

Translation

Please refer to l10n's README to grab the latest translations from the Koreader project on Transifex with this command:

make po

If your language is not listed on the Transifex project, please don't hesitate to send a language request here.

Variables in translation

Some strings contain variables that should remain unaltered in translation. For example:

The title of the book is %1 and its author is %2.

This might be displayed as:

The title of the book is The Republic and its author is Plato.

To aid localization the variables may be freely positioned:

De auteur van het boek is %2 en de titel is %1.

That would result in:

De auteur van het boek is Plato en de titel is The Republic.

Use ccache

Ccache can speed up recompilation by caching previous compilations and detecting when the same compilation is being done again. In other words, it will decrease build time when the source have been built. Ccache support has been added to KOReader's build system. Before using it, you need to install a ccache in your system.

  • in Ubuntu use:sudo apt-get install ccache
  • in Fedora use:sudo yum install ccache
  • install from source:
  • to disable ccache, use export USE_NO_CCACHE=1 before make.
  • for more detail about ccache. visit:

http://ccache.samba.org

About

An ebook reader application supports PDF, DJVU, EPUB, FB2 and much more, running on Kindle, Kobo, PocketBook, Ubuntu Touch and Android devices

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Lua 96.3%
  • Shell 2.4%
  • Makefile 1.1%
  • Smarty 0.2%