On Linux, install the development packages for FreeType, Cairo, and GLib. For example, on Ubuntu / Debian, you would do: * sudo apt-get install gcc g++ libfreetype6-dev libglib2.0-dev libcairo2-dev whereas on Fedora, RHEL, CentOS, and other Red Hat based systems you would do: * sudo yum install gcc gcc-c++ freetype-devel glib2-devel cairo-devel on the Mac, using MacPorts: * sudo port install freetype glib2 cairo or using Homebrew: * brew install freetype glib cairo If you are using a tarball, you can now proceed to running configure and make as with any other standard package. That should leave you with a shared library in src/, and a few utility programs including hb-view and hb-shape under util/. From the tarball, NMake Makefiles are also provided in win32/, which supports building HarfBuzz using Visual Studio, with a README.txt that gives instructions on building using NMake. If you are bootstraping from git, you need a few more tools before you can run autogen.sh for the first time. Namely, pkg-config and ragel. Again, on Ubuntu / Debian: * sudo apt-get install autoconf automake libtool pkg-config ragel gtk-doc-tools and on Fedora, RHEL, CentOS: * sudo yum install autoconf automake libtool pkgconfig ragel gtk-doc on the Mac, using MacPorts: * sudo port install autoconf automake libtool pkgconfig ragel gtk-doc or using Homebrew: * brew install autoconf automake libtool pkgconfig ragel gtk-doc To build the Python bindings, you also need: * brew install pygobject3