InstallationDependenciesMPlayer&kplayer; uses &mplayer;
as the multimedia backend for playing audio and video files and streams.
This ensures maximum variety of supported types of files and encodings.You need to have &mplayer; version 1.0-pre8 or later. If there are good
binary packages for your distribution, use those. For example on Debian you
would doecho
'deb http://debian-multimedia.org unstable main' >>
/etc/apt/sources.listapt-get updateapt-get install mplayerSubstitute unstable for stable or
testing as required. The same repository also has a &kplayer;
package, so you can install it as well:apt-get install kplayerAs always compiling
from source is an option.X11 and XVideoX11 is required. The X Server and libraries released by X.org are
recommended. XFree86 may also work.XVideo extension is recommended. You can check your
/etc/X11/xorg.conf or
/etc/X11/XF86Config-4 file for a line that readsLoad "extmod"This is the line that loads XVideo extension, so make sure it is not
disabled. Also check /var/log/Xorg.0.log or
/var/log/XFree86.0.log to make sure that XVideo is loaded
without error.See the Configuration
micro-HOWTO if you want to use a different video output.TQt and TDE&kplayer; 0.6 supports &kde; 3.1 and later, so you need to either run a
relatively recent &kde; (recommended) or at least have &kde; libraries and the
corresponding TQt libraries on your system.InstallationBinary installThe recommended way to install &kplayer; is by using the binary package
built specifically for your distribution. The
Downloads section
of the &kplayer; home page lists the available packages and repositories.Compiling from sourceIf you cannot install a precompiled binary for any reason, you can compile
&kplayer; yourself. See the Compilation
Micro-HOWTO for instructions.Compiling from CVSIf you want to try the latest and greatest &kplayer; features at the risk
of getting some parts of it broken, you can compile the latest
CVS code. See the
Compilation Micro-HOWTO for
details.