
Installing
**********

If khal is packaged for your OS/distribution, using your system's
standard package manager is probably the easiest way to install khal:

* pkgsrc

* Fedora: - Fedora 22 and later:

     sudo dnf install -y khal

* Personal repos for openSUSE:

  * openSUSE 13.1:

       sudo zypper ar -f http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/seilerphilipp/openSUSE_13.1/home_seilerphilipp

  * openSUSE 13.2:

       sudo zypper ar -f http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/home:/seilerphilipp/openSUSE_13.2/home_seilerphilipp

* AUR packages for ArchLinux: stable and development version.

If a package isn't available (or it is outdated) you need to fall back
to one of the methods mentioned below.


Install via Python's Package Managers
=====================================

Since *khal* is written in python, you can use one of the package
managers available to install python packages, e.g. *pip*.

You can install the latest released version of *khal* by executing:

   pip install khal

or the latest development version by executing:

   pip install git+git://github.com/pimutils/khal.git

This should also take care of installing all required dependencies.


Requirements
============

*khal* is written in python and can run on Python 3.3+. It requires a
Python with "sqlite3" support enabled (which is usually the case).

If you are installing python via *pip* or from source, be aware that
since *khal* indirectly depends on lxml you need to either install it
via your system's package manager or have python's libxml2's and
libxslt1's headers (included in a separate "development package" on
some distributions) installed.
