Recoll downloads
General information
The current version is 1.19.14p2. Release notes.
The download page for Recoll 1.18 is still available.
Recoll Installation / building manual.
The indexing filters used for some document types may need external packages not installed on your system by default, and not installed automatically with Recoll: take a look at the list and decide what you need to install.
The Recoll term explorer tool in phonetic mode (marginally useful and optional) uses the aspell package, version 0.60 (utf-8 support) or newer.
If you find problems with this page, the package or its installation, please report them.
What do the release numbers mean?
The Recoll releases are numbered X.Y.Z. The X would only change for really major modifications like a big change in the index format, and possibly won't ever reach 2.
Y is for functional modifications. These may bring bugs, so if you don't need the new features, you may want to wait a little, and especially skip the first release (X.Y.0), at least for a few weeks.
Z changes for bug fixes only, and moving from X.Y.Z to X.Y.Z+u should in general involve little risk of regression. But, any change can bring problems, if you are not affected by the corrected bugs (check the release file), there is probably no necessity to upgrade anyway.
Known bugs
There is a history of known bugs, sorted by fix release. Also see the issue tracker on Bitbucket.
Source
Current release distribution: 1.19.14p2:
1.20 preview
Recoll 1.20 will contain no revolutionary changes, but a set of hopefully useful adjustments, which will be released in a series of incremental snapshots. The current snapshot is recoll-1.20.0p2.tar.gz. See the release notes for what's in there.
Ubuntu Unity Lens and Scope
This are not included in the main tar file any more.
For 1.19 and 1.20 installations: recoll-lens-1.19.10.3543.tar.gz (up to Ubuntu 13.04 Raring)unity-scope-recoll-1.19.12.tar.gz (Ubuntu 13.10 and later).
For 1.18: recoll-lens-1.18.1.2997.tar.gz
For 1.17: recoll-lens-1.17.2.2697.tar.gz
Prerequisites for building from source:
- C++ compiler. Its absence sometimes manifests itself by strange messages about iconv_open (fixed after 1.13.04).
Xapian core development libraries. Most Linux distributions carry them in their package repository. Or you will find source and binary packages on the Xapian download page.
Recoll should still work with Xapian 1.0, but it is highly recommended to use a Xapian 1.2 version.Note on building Xapian for older CPUs: The build configurations for Xapian releases 1.0.21 and 1.2.1 or newer enable the use of SSE2 floating point instructions. These instructions are not available in CPUs older than Intel Pentium 4 or AMD Athlon 64. When building for such a CPU, you need to add the --disable-sse flag to the Xapian library configure command. If this is not done, the problem signals itself by "Illegal instruction" crashes (SIGILL) in recollindex and recoll.
- X11 development files.
- zlib development files.
Qt development files: Qt 4.4 or newer. The Recoll GUI will not build with Qt releases older than 4.4.
Qt webkit development: Qt WebKit is quite often distributed apart from the main Qt lib. It is possible to configure Recoll not to use Qt WebKit (see configure --help).
- Python development package: you can avoid needing this by configuring with --disable-python-module.
Source repository:
The Recoll source repository is hosted on bitbucket.org. The trunk is usually a bit on the bleeding edge, but there is always a maintenance branch for the current production version.
Instructions for building
Normally, it's just configure; make; make install. If a bit more detail is needed, there is some in the manual.
Older recoll releases:
A whole bunch is there, but I can see no reason whatsoever to use one of these versions.
Packages
Packages or ports for Recoll are available in the standard repositories for many distributions.
However they are often a bit older or built with older Xapian releases. Here follow some pointers to find newer packages for some distributions. In most cases, you will just need to use an alternate repository.
I sometimes build binary packages when no appropriate repository exists. Any binary package directly linked from this page need a Qt 4 (4.4 at least) runtime environment. To make things easier, on systems where Xapian is not available from the standard package repositories, the Recoll package will have a static link to Xapian so that you do not need to build/install it separately.
Debian
The Debian Recoll packages are usually fairly up to date (at least in testing), just use the appropriate Debian repository.
Except they're not at the moment (2014-05).... So here are
1.19.14p2 packages for Debian stable (Wheezy):
python3-recoll_1.19.14p2-1_amd64.deb
python3-recoll_1.19.14p2-1_i386.deb
python-recoll_1.19.14p2-1_amd64.deb
python-recoll_1.19.14p2-1_i386.deb
recoll_1.19.14p2-1_amd64.deb
recoll_1.19.14p2-1_i386.deb
You can list the directory for the source package and other files).
Ubuntu
There are Personal Package Archives on launchpad.net for Recoll, kio-recoll and recoll-lens. These were built from the latest versions, for a set of Ubuntu series. starting at Lucid. The installation is very simple:
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:recoll-backports/recoll-1.15-on sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install recoll
The 1.19 packages in the PPA now have a separate package for the Python extension, like the standard ones, so there should be no more conflict issues while switching from the PPA to the normal repositories and back.
Notes for Ubuntu Lucid
- If you still use Ubuntu 10.04 (Lucid), you will need to add the Xapian backports PPA to provide the libxapian22 package
- The
rclepub
filter apparently needs Python 2.7. You will need to install it and modify the first line of the filter script to execute python2.7 instead of python.
Linux Mint
The Ubuntu PPA works perfectly for Mint 13 (and probably other releases too). Just follow the instructions for Ubuntu.
RPMS
You'll need to install the Xapian, Qt, Qt-Webkit and zlib development packages if you want use the source rpms.
Fedora
Recoll is present in the standard Fedora package repositories starting from F-12. The new versions are usually tracked quite closely, but 1.19.14p2 is not there yet, so here are some packages for Fedora 20 and Fedora 21. There are only x86_64 binaries for now, use the source rpm for other archs.
OpenSUSE
Recoll is in the KDE:Extra repository. You just need to add the
repository to your software
sources (Yast2->software->Software repositories).
Repository list (supported Suse versions).
After adding the appropriate repository to your software sources,
you will be able to install recoll and kio_recoll from the software
management interface. The Xapian dependancy will also be satisfied
from the build service repository. Some of the older repositories do
not build antiword, just tell the software manager to "break" recoll
by installing anyway, and get antiword somewhere else.
Ports
Mac port
It seems that Recoll will sometimes find data that Spotlight misses (especially inside pdfs apparently, which is probably more to the credit of poppler than recoll itself).
Recoll is in MacPorts and really easy to install:
- Install MacPorts.
- Type "sudo port install recoll"
Recoll is then available from the command line and as an icon in the usual MacPorts applications place.
Updated filters
new or updated filters sometimes become available after a release. As a rule, all filters are compatible with all Recoll versions. Any compatibility problem will be explicitely mentionned.
Translations
Most of the translations for 1.19 are incomplete The source translation files are included in the source release. If your language has some english messages left and you want to take a shot at fixing the problem, you can send the results to me and earn my gratefulness (and your less multilingual compatriot's)...
You can use the .ts file to alter the translations if you wish (use
Qt's linguist tool to edit the source file, then lrelease to
produce the .qm file.). The
recoll_xx.ts is a blank Recoll 1.19 message file, handy to work on a new translation.
Updated 1.19 translations that became available after the release:
A Polish translation by Tymoteusz: recoll_pl.ts recoll_pl.qm
All the following translations are up to date in release 1.19.12. For older ones:
Greek translation, thanks to Dimitrios recoll_el.ts recoll_el.qm
German translation, thanks to Jonatan recoll_de.ts recoll_de.qm
Note that, if you are running an older release, you may find updated messages by looking inside the appropriate maintenance branch on bitbucket.