![configure openjdk 7 on netbsd configure openjdk 7 on netbsd](https://www.unixmen.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/NetBSD.png)
If neither is the case then you need to install some development package on your system: look at what configure is complaining about specifically and use apt-cache search or yum search to find relevant packages, usually with -dev or -devel in the name. It is usually the case that branches that are newer than what your distro has packaged (especially master) have additional requirements, which the autogen.sh step will helpfully point out to you usually these requirements are either optional and have a corresponding -disable-foo or -without-foo argument, or the requirement can be satisfied with an option to use a bundled copy via -without-system-foo argument (which should be the default already). Note: Windows Subsystem for Linux is not supported! In general, the easiest way to build LibreOffice is on Linux. The steps that need elevation use sudo explicitly in the following explanation. Since this turns out to be the common problem with newbies, please note: do not build as root! This will break your build, and as the result, you'll need to cleanup everything (including ccache) and start over. 6.9.1 Building translated user interface.6.9 Building translated user interface with.6.8 Dealing with line endings and Git's autocrlf.6.6 rpm not found/ant not found/no package gnome-vfs-2.0.