X-Git-Url: https://www.ginac.de/ginac.git//ginac.git?p=ginac.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=INSTALL;h=2c60d2d365ba3388da73539f7eac2a6e197adf31;hp=aee07da74f0abe5517a6b1d5808b8e89d47a8d7b;hb=aac581703f2d6383ccf0136c2d36bbf922968116;hpb=dc99ad9cf2df9460d5d7e1cf96ccdd5f4055b798
diff --git a/INSTALL b/INSTALL
index aee07da7..2c60d2d3 100644
--- a/INSTALL
+++ b/INSTALL
@@ -1,42 +1,68 @@
PREREQUISITES
=============
-GiNaC requires the CLN library by Bruno Haible, available at either
-one of the following FTP-sites:
- * ,
- * or
- * .
-You will also need a decent ANSI-compliant C++-compiler. We use
-`post-EGCS' GCC, i.e GCC >= 2.95 for development so if you have a
-different compiler you are on your own. Note that you may have to use
-the same compiler you compiled CLN with because of differing
+GiNaC requires the CLN library by Bruno Haible installed on your system.
+It is available from .
+
+You will also need a decent ANSI-compliant C++-compiler. We recommend the
+C++ compiler from the GNU compiler collection, GCC >= 3.0. If you have a
+different or older compiler you are on your own. Note that you may have to
+use the same compiler you compiled CLN with because of differing
name-mangling schemes.
-Optionally, GiNaC may work together with Masaharu Goto's C++
-interpreter cint (which requires that you register for commercial
-use). You may obtain it from
- * .
-Install it by following the instructions included in Cint's
-distribution before trying to compile GiNaC-cint. (See section
-`Working with the Cint C++ interpreter' below.)
+To build the GiNaC tutorial and reference manual the doxygen utility
+(it can be downloaded from http://www.stack.nl/~dimitri/doxygen) and
+TeX are necessary.
+
+Known to work with:
+ - Linux on x86, Alpha and Sparc using GCC 3.x and 4.0.
+
+Known not to work with:
+ - GCC 2.96 or earlier because proper exception and standard library support
+ is missing there.
+
+If you install from CVS, you also need GNU autoconf (>=2.59) and
+automake (>=1.7) to be installed.
INSTALLATION
============
-As with any autoconfiguring GNU software, installation is as easy as this:
+To install from a source .tar.bz2 distribution:
$ ./configure
$ make
- $ make check
-[become root if necessary]
- $ make install
+ [become root if necessary]
+ # make install
-Known to work with:
- - Linux/x86, EGCS-1.1.2 or GCC 2-95.1/2-95.2
+To install from CVS:
+
+ $ cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@cvs.ginac.de:/home/cvs/GiNaC login
+ [enter "anoncvs" as the password]
+ $ cvs -d :pserver:anoncvs@cvs.ginac.de:/home/cvs/GiNaC co GiNaC
+ $ cd GiNaC
+ $ autoreconf -i
+ $ ./configure
+ $ make
+ [become root if necessary]
+ # make install
-The "configure" script can be given a number of options to enable and
-disable various features. For a complete list, type:
+To build the GiNaC tutorial and reference manual in HTML, DVI, PostScript,
+or PDF formats, use one of
+
+ $ make html
+ $ make dvi
+ $ make ps
+ $ make pdf
+
+To compile and run GiNaC's test and benchmark suite and check whether the
+library works correctly you can use
+
+ $ make check
+
+The "configure" script (and "autogen.sh", which invokes "configure") can be
+given a number of options to enable and disable various features. For a
+complete list, type:
$ ./configure --help
@@ -47,21 +73,22 @@ A few of the more important ones:
--exec-prefix=EPREFIX install architecture-dependent files in EPREFIX
[defaults to the value given to --prefix]
--disable-shared suppress the creation of a shared version of libginac
+ --disable-static suppress the creation of a static version of libginac
More detailed installation instructions can be found in the documentation,
in the doc/ directory.
-The time the "make" step takes depends heavily on optimization levels.
-Large amounts of memory (>128MB) will be required by the compiler,
-also depending on optimization. To give you a rough idea of what you
-have to expect the following table may be helpful. It was measured on
-a P-III/500MHz with "enough" memory:
+The time the "make" step takes depends heavily on optimization levels. Large
+amounts of memory (>128MB) will be required by the compiler, also depending
+on optimization. To give you a rough idea of what you have to expect the
+following table may be helpful. It was measured on an Athlon/800MHz with
+"enough" memory:
-step: | GCC optimization level: | comment:
- | -O0 | -O1 | -O2 |
---------------+--------+--------+--------+-------------------------------
-make | ~4m | ~6m | ~10m | building shared and static lib
-make check | ~2m | ~2m | ~7m | mostly due to compilation
+step | GCC optimization | comment
+ | -O1 | -O2 |
+--------------+---------+---------+----------------------------------------
+make | ~6m | ~8m | shared and static library
+make check | ~8m | ~12m | largely due to compilation
COMMON PROBLEMS
@@ -70,43 +97,24 @@ COMMON PROBLEMS
Problems with CLN
-----------------
-You should use at least CLN V1.0.3, since during the development of
-GiNaC various bugs have been discovered and fixed in earlier versions.
-To protect you, the "configure" script checks for a feature that was
-added in V1.0.3 so it won't continue with earlier versions anyhow.
-Please install CLN properly on your system before continuing with
-GiNaC.
-
-Problems with building ginsh
-----------------------------
-
-The most common reason why this doesn't succeed is the absence of
-libreadline and/or the corresponding header files. Depending on what
-your system/distribution is, you will have to install a package called
-libreadline and maybe libreadline-dev. If your system's vendor
-doesn't supply such packages, go to
-and compile it yourself. After that it should work fine.
-
-If you want to build a completely static ginsh and your compiler still
-complains about unresolved objects try linking with libncurses, too.
-
-
-Working with the Cint C++ interpreter
-=====================================
-
-The interface to the Cint C++ interpreter is currently in an alpha
-state. Please see to learn about
-Cint and install it before installing ginaccint. For the tool
-makecint to work properly it must know where Cint has its system
-directory. This is usually done by exporting $CINTSYSDIR to point to
-the proper place. With GiNaC you may either try to export that
-variable and type
- $ ./configure --with-cint
-or specify it on the command line saying
- $ ./configure --with-cint=/my/path/to/cintsysdir
-Good luck!
-
- Known to work with: | Known not to work with:
------------------------+----------------------------
- Cint 5.14.25 | Cint 5.14.24
- Cint 5.14.26 | Cint 5.14.29
+You should use at least CLN-1.1, since during the development of GiNaC
+various bugs have been discovered and fixed in earlier versions. Please
+install CLN properly on your system before continuing with GiNaC.
+
+Problems building ginsh
+-----------------------
+
+The most common reason why this doesn't succeed is the absence of GNU
+libreadline and/or the corresponding header files. Depending on what your
+system/distribution is, you will have to install a package called
+libreadline and maybe libreadline-dev. If your system's vendor doesn't
+supply such packages, go to and compile
+it yourself. Note that non-GNU versions of libreadline (in particular
+one shipped with Mac OS X) are not supported at the moment.
+
+Problems with missing standard header files
+-------------------------------------------
+
+Building GiNaC requires many standard header files. If you get a configure
+error complaining about such missing files your compiler and library are
+probably not up to date enough and it's no worth continuing.