
 __       __   ______      _____  ________      __    __ 
|  \  _  |  \ /      \    |     \|        \    |  \  |  \
| $$ / \ | $$|  $$$$$$\    \$$$$$ \$$$$$$$$    | $$  | $$
| $$/  $\| $$| $$___\$$      | $$   | $$ ______ \$$\/  $$
| $$  $$$\ $$ \$$    \  __   | $$   | $$|      \ >$$  $$ 
| $$ $$\$$\$$ _\$$$$$$\|  \  | $$   | $$ \$$$$$$/  $$$$\ 
| $$$$  \$$$$|  \__| $$| $$__| $$   | $$       |  $$ \$$\
| $$$    \$$$ \$$    $$ \$$    $$   | $$       | $$  | $$
 \$$      \$$  \$$$$$$   \$$$$$$     \$$        \$$   \$$
                                                         
                                                         
Copyright 2001 - 2025 by Joe Taylor, K1JT, and the WSJT Development Team.
                                                         
This  project  doesn't  work  on  MS  Windows.  This  is  because  the
environment  required to  build Hamlib,  a MinGW  environment, is  not
suitable  for  building  the  WSJT-X application.  The  WSJT-X  build,
because of the way Qt applications  must be built, requires a modified
MS DOS command environment. The  two environments are incompatible and
cannot easily be  used in a common  build script like the  one in this
project.

Although this  project will  probably work  on Apple Mac  OS X,  it is
incomplete since on that platform there are several other dependencies
and tools  required that are not  available as standard on  a Mac. See
the WSJT-X project for a suitable recipe for building WSJT-X on a Mac.

Debian and RPM packages generated directly by this project are not yet
suitable for submission to official  distributions. This is mainly due
to limitations in the CPack  package generators invoked by CPack. This
doesn't preclude  the two phase  build method  being used to  make and
build from  a source tarball.  It just means that  package maintainers
will probably have to develop their own package control files.

Currently this  project makes use  of a forked Hamlib  git repository,
use of  forks of  dependent libraries is  not recommended  by official
Linux distributions but we have  little choice at present. All patches
made in  the Hamlib fork are  being submitted upstream so  soon a fork
will  not be  required. At  this point  a snapshot  of the  Hamlib git
master may be substituted. Using a snapshot (or a patch generated from
it) may  also be  problematic as  well.  When the  Hamlib team  make a
release of  Hamlib v3  and that  is accepted  into the  official Linux
repositories;  the need  for  a fork  or snapshot  will  no longer  be
necessary. At that point this project will probably be obsolete as the
WSJT-X build script and source kit will be sufficient.