How to install Midori?












5














I tried to install midori using this answer:




Open terminal by pressing Ctrl+Alt+T and run the following
commands,



sudo apt-add-repository ppa:midori/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install midori



but I got following error:



E: Package 'midori' has no installation candidate









share|improve this question


















  • 2




    I think he means launchpad.net/~midori/+archive/ubuntu/ppa If you really want to give it a shot I guess the only option would be instead download the .deb file from here and install it e.g using gdebi <.deb file> or dpkg -i <.deb file>
    – derHugo
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:21








  • 2




    You may try to install midori from 17.04, but it is not good idea. You may want to try other lightweight browsers such as surf, netsurf, arora, rekonq, qupzilla, epiphany-browser. Or chromium.
    – N0rbert
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:24








  • 1




    Again, it is NOT recommended. However, If you really want to, you can edit the ppa file to install. If you are interested, please let me know and I will post an answer but it doesn't always work because of dependencies.
    – mchid
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:30








  • 1




    The midori PPA has not been updated since 2015-08-30, but a new version is released (announced Nov 30 2018) and is available as snap and tarball. See the answer by @ DK Bose.
    – sudodus
    Dec 4 '18 at 11:35
















5














I tried to install midori using this answer:




Open terminal by pressing Ctrl+Alt+T and run the following
commands,



sudo apt-add-repository ppa:midori/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install midori



but I got following error:



E: Package 'midori' has no installation candidate









share|improve this question


















  • 2




    I think he means launchpad.net/~midori/+archive/ubuntu/ppa If you really want to give it a shot I guess the only option would be instead download the .deb file from here and install it e.g using gdebi <.deb file> or dpkg -i <.deb file>
    – derHugo
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:21








  • 2




    You may try to install midori from 17.04, but it is not good idea. You may want to try other lightweight browsers such as surf, netsurf, arora, rekonq, qupzilla, epiphany-browser. Or chromium.
    – N0rbert
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:24








  • 1




    Again, it is NOT recommended. However, If you really want to, you can edit the ppa file to install. If you are interested, please let me know and I will post an answer but it doesn't always work because of dependencies.
    – mchid
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:30








  • 1




    The midori PPA has not been updated since 2015-08-30, but a new version is released (announced Nov 30 2018) and is available as snap and tarball. See the answer by @ DK Bose.
    – sudodus
    Dec 4 '18 at 11:35














5












5








5







I tried to install midori using this answer:




Open terminal by pressing Ctrl+Alt+T and run the following
commands,



sudo apt-add-repository ppa:midori/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install midori



but I got following error:



E: Package 'midori' has no installation candidate









share|improve this question













I tried to install midori using this answer:




Open terminal by pressing Ctrl+Alt+T and run the following
commands,



sudo apt-add-repository ppa:midori/ppa
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install midori



but I got following error:



E: Package 'midori' has no installation candidate






apt software-installation lubuntu 17.10 midori






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Dec 23 '17 at 19:16









Nae

13817




13817








  • 2




    I think he means launchpad.net/~midori/+archive/ubuntu/ppa If you really want to give it a shot I guess the only option would be instead download the .deb file from here and install it e.g using gdebi <.deb file> or dpkg -i <.deb file>
    – derHugo
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:21








  • 2




    You may try to install midori from 17.04, but it is not good idea. You may want to try other lightweight browsers such as surf, netsurf, arora, rekonq, qupzilla, epiphany-browser. Or chromium.
    – N0rbert
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:24








  • 1




    Again, it is NOT recommended. However, If you really want to, you can edit the ppa file to install. If you are interested, please let me know and I will post an answer but it doesn't always work because of dependencies.
    – mchid
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:30








  • 1




    The midori PPA has not been updated since 2015-08-30, but a new version is released (announced Nov 30 2018) and is available as snap and tarball. See the answer by @ DK Bose.
    – sudodus
    Dec 4 '18 at 11:35














  • 2




    I think he means launchpad.net/~midori/+archive/ubuntu/ppa If you really want to give it a shot I guess the only option would be instead download the .deb file from here and install it e.g using gdebi <.deb file> or dpkg -i <.deb file>
    – derHugo
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:21








  • 2




    You may try to install midori from 17.04, but it is not good idea. You may want to try other lightweight browsers such as surf, netsurf, arora, rekonq, qupzilla, epiphany-browser. Or chromium.
    – N0rbert
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:24








  • 1




    Again, it is NOT recommended. However, If you really want to, you can edit the ppa file to install. If you are interested, please let me know and I will post an answer but it doesn't always work because of dependencies.
    – mchid
    Dec 23 '17 at 19:30








  • 1




    The midori PPA has not been updated since 2015-08-30, but a new version is released (announced Nov 30 2018) and is available as snap and tarball. See the answer by @ DK Bose.
    – sudodus
    Dec 4 '18 at 11:35








2




2




I think he means launchpad.net/~midori/+archive/ubuntu/ppa If you really want to give it a shot I guess the only option would be instead download the .deb file from here and install it e.g using gdebi <.deb file> or dpkg -i <.deb file>
– derHugo
Dec 23 '17 at 19:21






I think he means launchpad.net/~midori/+archive/ubuntu/ppa If you really want to give it a shot I guess the only option would be instead download the .deb file from here and install it e.g using gdebi <.deb file> or dpkg -i <.deb file>
– derHugo
Dec 23 '17 at 19:21






2




2




You may try to install midori from 17.04, but it is not good idea. You may want to try other lightweight browsers such as surf, netsurf, arora, rekonq, qupzilla, epiphany-browser. Or chromium.
– N0rbert
Dec 23 '17 at 19:24






You may try to install midori from 17.04, but it is not good idea. You may want to try other lightweight browsers such as surf, netsurf, arora, rekonq, qupzilla, epiphany-browser. Or chromium.
– N0rbert
Dec 23 '17 at 19:24






1




1




Again, it is NOT recommended. However, If you really want to, you can edit the ppa file to install. If you are interested, please let me know and I will post an answer but it doesn't always work because of dependencies.
– mchid
Dec 23 '17 at 19:30






Again, it is NOT recommended. However, If you really want to, you can edit the ppa file to install. If you are interested, please let me know and I will post an answer but it doesn't always work because of dependencies.
– mchid
Dec 23 '17 at 19:30






1




1




The midori PPA has not been updated since 2015-08-30, but a new version is released (announced Nov 30 2018) and is available as snap and tarball. See the answer by @ DK Bose.
– sudodus
Dec 4 '18 at 11:35




The midori PPA has not been updated since 2015-08-30, but a new version is released (announced Nov 30 2018) and is available as snap and tarball. See the answer by @ DK Bose.
– sudodus
Dec 4 '18 at 11:35










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















4














It is possible to install midori by compiling its source code under Ubuntu 17.10. Be aware though that there has been no development of this browser for some time so various security concerns will not have been addressed.



Just 4 simple steps are required:



1. Download build tools and dev files:



You will need a set of compiling tools and some 'development' files to build midori. Simply copy the following single command into a Terminal window:



sudo apt-get install build-essential cmake valac libvala-0.36-dev 
libwebkitgtk-3.0-dev libsqlite3-dev libsoup-gnome2.4-dev libwebkit2gtk-4.0-dev
libzeitgeist-2.0-dev libgcr-3-dev librsvg2-bin intltool


2.Create a build directory & download the source:



Next create a build directory and download and extract the midori source here. Again the following is a single command:



mkdir $HOME/midori_build && cd $HOME/midori_build && 
wget http://midori-browser.org/downloads/midori_0.5.11_all_.tar.bz2 &&
tar xvf midori_0.5.11_all_.tar.bz2


3. Alter the source:



midori requires some tweaking to compile with newer libraries and the following snippet borrows from Linux From Scratch to achieve this. Again a single command:



cd $HOME/midori_build/midori-0.5.11 && 
sed -e 's/protected Tally/public Tally/g' -i midori/midori-notebook.vala &&
sed -e 's/%d other files/%u other files/g' -i extensions/transfers.vala &&
for f in transfers adblock/widgets apps history-list notes; do
sed -e 's/.remove (iter/.remove (ref iter/g' -i "extensions/$f.vala"
done


4. Compile and install midori:



Use the following single command to now compile and install midori (packaged with checkinstall for easy removal):



cd $HOME/midori_build/midori-0.5.11 && 
mkdir build && cd build &&
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local
-DUSE_GTK3=ON
-DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
-DHALF_BRO_INCOM_WEBKIT2=ON .. && make &&
sudo checkinstall -D --install=yes --fstrans=no --pakdir "$HOME/midori_build"
--pkgname midori --backup=no --deldoc=yes --deldesc=yes --delspec=yes --default
--pkgversion "0.5.11" &&
sudo ldconfig


Screenshot:



Below is a screenshot of the completed installation on my 17.10 system. Note that there is still a little remedial work needed for the sidebar (dock) icon but I will investigate after Xmas :).



enter image description here



References:





  • Linux From Scratch: midori Patching information from here so that midori will compile against recent vala






share|improve this answer































    3














    Midori seems to be actively developed again.

    • https://www.midori-browser.org/2018/11/30/lorem-ipsum/

    • https://github.com/midori-browser/core/releases/.



    Some features of Midori 7:

    • Fixed YouTube rendering issue due to custom user agent

    • Fixed invisible cursor in text fields

    • Restored behavior of " " and "." in urlbar completion

    • Download/ web notifications for background window/ tab

    • Highlight in toolbar for finished downloads

    • Re-introduced proxy server UX

    • Multiple processes for indivdual tabs

    • Adaptive toolbar layout for smaller screens



    It's available as a snap or as a tar.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 1




      +1; great news ;-)
      – sudodus
      Dec 4 '18 at 11:30











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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
    2






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    oldest

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    4














    It is possible to install midori by compiling its source code under Ubuntu 17.10. Be aware though that there has been no development of this browser for some time so various security concerns will not have been addressed.



    Just 4 simple steps are required:



    1. Download build tools and dev files:



    You will need a set of compiling tools and some 'development' files to build midori. Simply copy the following single command into a Terminal window:



    sudo apt-get install build-essential cmake valac libvala-0.36-dev 
    libwebkitgtk-3.0-dev libsqlite3-dev libsoup-gnome2.4-dev libwebkit2gtk-4.0-dev
    libzeitgeist-2.0-dev libgcr-3-dev librsvg2-bin intltool


    2.Create a build directory & download the source:



    Next create a build directory and download and extract the midori source here. Again the following is a single command:



    mkdir $HOME/midori_build && cd $HOME/midori_build && 
    wget http://midori-browser.org/downloads/midori_0.5.11_all_.tar.bz2 &&
    tar xvf midori_0.5.11_all_.tar.bz2


    3. Alter the source:



    midori requires some tweaking to compile with newer libraries and the following snippet borrows from Linux From Scratch to achieve this. Again a single command:



    cd $HOME/midori_build/midori-0.5.11 && 
    sed -e 's/protected Tally/public Tally/g' -i midori/midori-notebook.vala &&
    sed -e 's/%d other files/%u other files/g' -i extensions/transfers.vala &&
    for f in transfers adblock/widgets apps history-list notes; do
    sed -e 's/.remove (iter/.remove (ref iter/g' -i "extensions/$f.vala"
    done


    4. Compile and install midori:



    Use the following single command to now compile and install midori (packaged with checkinstall for easy removal):



    cd $HOME/midori_build/midori-0.5.11 && 
    mkdir build && cd build &&
    cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local
    -DUSE_GTK3=ON
    -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
    -DHALF_BRO_INCOM_WEBKIT2=ON .. && make &&
    sudo checkinstall -D --install=yes --fstrans=no --pakdir "$HOME/midori_build"
    --pkgname midori --backup=no --deldoc=yes --deldesc=yes --delspec=yes --default
    --pkgversion "0.5.11" &&
    sudo ldconfig


    Screenshot:



    Below is a screenshot of the completed installation on my 17.10 system. Note that there is still a little remedial work needed for the sidebar (dock) icon but I will investigate after Xmas :).



    enter image description here



    References:





    • Linux From Scratch: midori Patching information from here so that midori will compile against recent vala






    share|improve this answer




























      4














      It is possible to install midori by compiling its source code under Ubuntu 17.10. Be aware though that there has been no development of this browser for some time so various security concerns will not have been addressed.



      Just 4 simple steps are required:



      1. Download build tools and dev files:



      You will need a set of compiling tools and some 'development' files to build midori. Simply copy the following single command into a Terminal window:



      sudo apt-get install build-essential cmake valac libvala-0.36-dev 
      libwebkitgtk-3.0-dev libsqlite3-dev libsoup-gnome2.4-dev libwebkit2gtk-4.0-dev
      libzeitgeist-2.0-dev libgcr-3-dev librsvg2-bin intltool


      2.Create a build directory & download the source:



      Next create a build directory and download and extract the midori source here. Again the following is a single command:



      mkdir $HOME/midori_build && cd $HOME/midori_build && 
      wget http://midori-browser.org/downloads/midori_0.5.11_all_.tar.bz2 &&
      tar xvf midori_0.5.11_all_.tar.bz2


      3. Alter the source:



      midori requires some tweaking to compile with newer libraries and the following snippet borrows from Linux From Scratch to achieve this. Again a single command:



      cd $HOME/midori_build/midori-0.5.11 && 
      sed -e 's/protected Tally/public Tally/g' -i midori/midori-notebook.vala &&
      sed -e 's/%d other files/%u other files/g' -i extensions/transfers.vala &&
      for f in transfers adblock/widgets apps history-list notes; do
      sed -e 's/.remove (iter/.remove (ref iter/g' -i "extensions/$f.vala"
      done


      4. Compile and install midori:



      Use the following single command to now compile and install midori (packaged with checkinstall for easy removal):



      cd $HOME/midori_build/midori-0.5.11 && 
      mkdir build && cd build &&
      cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local
      -DUSE_GTK3=ON
      -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
      -DHALF_BRO_INCOM_WEBKIT2=ON .. && make &&
      sudo checkinstall -D --install=yes --fstrans=no --pakdir "$HOME/midori_build"
      --pkgname midori --backup=no --deldoc=yes --deldesc=yes --delspec=yes --default
      --pkgversion "0.5.11" &&
      sudo ldconfig


      Screenshot:



      Below is a screenshot of the completed installation on my 17.10 system. Note that there is still a little remedial work needed for the sidebar (dock) icon but I will investigate after Xmas :).



      enter image description here



      References:





      • Linux From Scratch: midori Patching information from here so that midori will compile against recent vala






      share|improve this answer


























        4












        4








        4






        It is possible to install midori by compiling its source code under Ubuntu 17.10. Be aware though that there has been no development of this browser for some time so various security concerns will not have been addressed.



        Just 4 simple steps are required:



        1. Download build tools and dev files:



        You will need a set of compiling tools and some 'development' files to build midori. Simply copy the following single command into a Terminal window:



        sudo apt-get install build-essential cmake valac libvala-0.36-dev 
        libwebkitgtk-3.0-dev libsqlite3-dev libsoup-gnome2.4-dev libwebkit2gtk-4.0-dev
        libzeitgeist-2.0-dev libgcr-3-dev librsvg2-bin intltool


        2.Create a build directory & download the source:



        Next create a build directory and download and extract the midori source here. Again the following is a single command:



        mkdir $HOME/midori_build && cd $HOME/midori_build && 
        wget http://midori-browser.org/downloads/midori_0.5.11_all_.tar.bz2 &&
        tar xvf midori_0.5.11_all_.tar.bz2


        3. Alter the source:



        midori requires some tweaking to compile with newer libraries and the following snippet borrows from Linux From Scratch to achieve this. Again a single command:



        cd $HOME/midori_build/midori-0.5.11 && 
        sed -e 's/protected Tally/public Tally/g' -i midori/midori-notebook.vala &&
        sed -e 's/%d other files/%u other files/g' -i extensions/transfers.vala &&
        for f in transfers adblock/widgets apps history-list notes; do
        sed -e 's/.remove (iter/.remove (ref iter/g' -i "extensions/$f.vala"
        done


        4. Compile and install midori:



        Use the following single command to now compile and install midori (packaged with checkinstall for easy removal):



        cd $HOME/midori_build/midori-0.5.11 && 
        mkdir build && cd build &&
        cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local
        -DUSE_GTK3=ON
        -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
        -DHALF_BRO_INCOM_WEBKIT2=ON .. && make &&
        sudo checkinstall -D --install=yes --fstrans=no --pakdir "$HOME/midori_build"
        --pkgname midori --backup=no --deldoc=yes --deldesc=yes --delspec=yes --default
        --pkgversion "0.5.11" &&
        sudo ldconfig


        Screenshot:



        Below is a screenshot of the completed installation on my 17.10 system. Note that there is still a little remedial work needed for the sidebar (dock) icon but I will investigate after Xmas :).



        enter image description here



        References:





        • Linux From Scratch: midori Patching information from here so that midori will compile against recent vala






        share|improve this answer














        It is possible to install midori by compiling its source code under Ubuntu 17.10. Be aware though that there has been no development of this browser for some time so various security concerns will not have been addressed.



        Just 4 simple steps are required:



        1. Download build tools and dev files:



        You will need a set of compiling tools and some 'development' files to build midori. Simply copy the following single command into a Terminal window:



        sudo apt-get install build-essential cmake valac libvala-0.36-dev 
        libwebkitgtk-3.0-dev libsqlite3-dev libsoup-gnome2.4-dev libwebkit2gtk-4.0-dev
        libzeitgeist-2.0-dev libgcr-3-dev librsvg2-bin intltool


        2.Create a build directory & download the source:



        Next create a build directory and download and extract the midori source here. Again the following is a single command:



        mkdir $HOME/midori_build && cd $HOME/midori_build && 
        wget http://midori-browser.org/downloads/midori_0.5.11_all_.tar.bz2 &&
        tar xvf midori_0.5.11_all_.tar.bz2


        3. Alter the source:



        midori requires some tweaking to compile with newer libraries and the following snippet borrows from Linux From Scratch to achieve this. Again a single command:



        cd $HOME/midori_build/midori-0.5.11 && 
        sed -e 's/protected Tally/public Tally/g' -i midori/midori-notebook.vala &&
        sed -e 's/%d other files/%u other files/g' -i extensions/transfers.vala &&
        for f in transfers adblock/widgets apps history-list notes; do
        sed -e 's/.remove (iter/.remove (ref iter/g' -i "extensions/$f.vala"
        done


        4. Compile and install midori:



        Use the following single command to now compile and install midori (packaged with checkinstall for easy removal):



        cd $HOME/midori_build/midori-0.5.11 && 
        mkdir build && cd build &&
        cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/usr/local
        -DUSE_GTK3=ON
        -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
        -DHALF_BRO_INCOM_WEBKIT2=ON .. && make &&
        sudo checkinstall -D --install=yes --fstrans=no --pakdir "$HOME/midori_build"
        --pkgname midori --backup=no --deldoc=yes --deldesc=yes --delspec=yes --default
        --pkgversion "0.5.11" &&
        sudo ldconfig


        Screenshot:



        Below is a screenshot of the completed installation on my 17.10 system. Note that there is still a little remedial work needed for the sidebar (dock) icon but I will investigate after Xmas :).



        enter image description here



        References:





        • Linux From Scratch: midori Patching information from here so that midori will compile against recent vala







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Feb 20 '18 at 7:16

























        answered Dec 24 '17 at 0:29









        andrew.46

        21.3k1468147




        21.3k1468147

























            3














            Midori seems to be actively developed again.

            • https://www.midori-browser.org/2018/11/30/lorem-ipsum/

            • https://github.com/midori-browser/core/releases/.



            Some features of Midori 7:

            • Fixed YouTube rendering issue due to custom user agent

            • Fixed invisible cursor in text fields

            • Restored behavior of " " and "." in urlbar completion

            • Download/ web notifications for background window/ tab

            • Highlight in toolbar for finished downloads

            • Re-introduced proxy server UX

            • Multiple processes for indivdual tabs

            • Adaptive toolbar layout for smaller screens



            It's available as a snap or as a tar.






            share|improve this answer

















            • 1




              +1; great news ;-)
              – sudodus
              Dec 4 '18 at 11:30
















            3














            Midori seems to be actively developed again.

            • https://www.midori-browser.org/2018/11/30/lorem-ipsum/

            • https://github.com/midori-browser/core/releases/.



            Some features of Midori 7:

            • Fixed YouTube rendering issue due to custom user agent

            • Fixed invisible cursor in text fields

            • Restored behavior of " " and "." in urlbar completion

            • Download/ web notifications for background window/ tab

            • Highlight in toolbar for finished downloads

            • Re-introduced proxy server UX

            • Multiple processes for indivdual tabs

            • Adaptive toolbar layout for smaller screens



            It's available as a snap or as a tar.






            share|improve this answer

















            • 1




              +1; great news ;-)
              – sudodus
              Dec 4 '18 at 11:30














            3












            3








            3






            Midori seems to be actively developed again.

            • https://www.midori-browser.org/2018/11/30/lorem-ipsum/

            • https://github.com/midori-browser/core/releases/.



            Some features of Midori 7:

            • Fixed YouTube rendering issue due to custom user agent

            • Fixed invisible cursor in text fields

            • Restored behavior of " " and "." in urlbar completion

            • Download/ web notifications for background window/ tab

            • Highlight in toolbar for finished downloads

            • Re-introduced proxy server UX

            • Multiple processes for indivdual tabs

            • Adaptive toolbar layout for smaller screens



            It's available as a snap or as a tar.






            share|improve this answer












            Midori seems to be actively developed again.

            • https://www.midori-browser.org/2018/11/30/lorem-ipsum/

            • https://github.com/midori-browser/core/releases/.



            Some features of Midori 7:

            • Fixed YouTube rendering issue due to custom user agent

            • Fixed invisible cursor in text fields

            • Restored behavior of " " and "." in urlbar completion

            • Download/ web notifications for background window/ tab

            • Highlight in toolbar for finished downloads

            • Re-introduced proxy server UX

            • Multiple processes for indivdual tabs

            • Adaptive toolbar layout for smaller screens



            It's available as a snap or as a tar.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Dec 4 '18 at 11:24









            DK Bose

            13.1k123983




            13.1k123983








            • 1




              +1; great news ;-)
              – sudodus
              Dec 4 '18 at 11:30














            • 1




              +1; great news ;-)
              – sudodus
              Dec 4 '18 at 11:30








            1




            1




            +1; great news ;-)
            – sudodus
            Dec 4 '18 at 11:30




            +1; great news ;-)
            – sudodus
            Dec 4 '18 at 11:30


















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