This guide explains how to get started building and running MapLibre Native on Linux. The guide focusses on a Ubuntu 22.04. The build process should give you a set of .a
files that you can use to include MapLibre Native in other C++ projects, as well as a set of executables that you can run to render map tile images and test the project.
The following system libraries need to be installed.
apt install libcurl4-openssl-dev libglfw3-dev libuv1-dev libpng-dev libicu-dev libjpeg-turbo8-dev libwebp-dev xvfb
Optional: libsqlite3-dev
(also available as vendored dependency).
The following tools need to be available.
apt install clang git cmake ccache ninja-build pkg-config
You can use a Docker container to build MapLibre Native. A Dockerfile
that installes the required dependencies when the image is built is provided in this directory.
Build image with:
# in platform/linux
docker build -t maplibre-native-image .
Run image with:
# in repo root directory
docker run --rm -it -v "$(pwd)":/root/ maplibre-native-image
First, clone the repository. This repository uses git submodules, that are required to build the project.
git clone --recurse-submodules -j8 https://github.com/maplibre/maplibre-native.git
cd maplibre-native
To create the build, run the following commands from the root of the project:
cmake -B build -GNinja -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=clang -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=clang++ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo -DMLN_WITH_CLANG_TIDY=OFF -DMLN_WITH_COVERAGE=OFF -DMLN_DRAWABLE_RENDERER=ON -DCMAKE_BUILD_WITH_INSTALL_RPATH=ON
cmake --build build --target mbgl-render -j $(nproc 2>/dev/null || sysctl -n hw.ncpu 2>/dev/null)
If all went well, there should now be a ./build/bin/mbgl-render
binary that you can run to generate map tile images. To test that it is working properly, run the following command.
./build/bin/mbgl-render --style https://raw.githubusercontent.com/maplibre/demotiles/gh-pages/style.json --output out.png
I get an error
Error: Failed to open X display.
when I run this command.
If you're setting up MapLibre Native on a headless server (i.e. one without a display), you'll need to simulate an X server to do any rendering. Install xvfb
and xauth
and run the following command:
xvfb-run -a ./build/bin/mbgl-render --style https://raw.githubusercontent.com/maplibre/demotiles/gh-pages/style.json --output out.png
This should produce an out.png
map tile image with the default MapLibre styling from the MapLibre demo.
You can also use the mbgl-render
command to render images from your own style or tile set. To do so, you will need a data source and a style JSON file.
For the purposes of this exercise, you can use the zurich_switzerland.mbtiles
from here, and this following style.json
file. Download both by running the commands below.
wget https://github.com/acalcutt/tileserver-gl/releases/download/test_data/zurich_switzerland.mbtiles
wget https://gist.githubusercontent.com/louwers/d7607270cbd6e3faa05222a09bcb8f7d/raw/4e9532e1760717865df8aeff08f9bcf100f9e8c4/style.json
Note that this style is totally inadequate for any real use beyond testing your custom setup. Replace the source URL mbtiles:///path/to/zurich_switzerland.mbtiles
with the actual path to your .mbtiles
file. You can use this command if you downloaded both files to the working directory:
sed -i "s#/path/to#$PWD#" style.json
Next, run the following command.
./build/bin/mbgl-render --style style.json --output out.png
This should produce an out.png
image in your current directory with a barebones image of the world.