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Installation: =============
As with any autoconfiguring GNU software, installation is as easy as this:
$ ./configure $ make $ make check $ make install
You need GNU make. On HP-UX, you also need GNU sed.
Known to work with: - Linux/x86, gcc-3.x, gcc-4.0.x, gcc-4.1.[0-1] - Linux/x86_64, gcc-3.[3-4], gcc-4.0.x, gcc-4.1.[0-1] - Linux/ia64, gcc-3.[2-4], gcc-4.0.x, gcc-4.1.[0-1] - Linux/arm, gcc-3.[0-3], gcc-4.0.x, gcc-4.1.[0-1] - Linux/mips, gcc-3.3, gcc-4.0.x, gcc-4.1.[0-1] - Linux/sparc, gcc-3.[1-3], gcc-4.0.x, gcc-4.1.[0-1] - Linux/alpha, gcc-3.[0-3], gcc-4.0.x, gcc-4.1.[0-1] - Linux/powerpc, gcc-3.[0-3], gcc-4.0.x, gcc-4.1.[0-1] - Solaris 2.4 (sparc), gcc-3.[1-3] - OSF/1 V4.0 (alpha), gcc-3.1 - Irix 6.5, gcc-3.0 - BeOS, gcc-2.95.x
The "make" step takes about 30 minutes, on a P-III / 1 GHz / 512 MB.
If you use g++ from gcc-3.x, I recommend adding "-fno-exceptions" to the CXXFLAGS. This will likely generate better code.
If you use g++ from gcc-3.0.4 or older on Sparc, add either "-O", "-O1" or "-O2 -fno-schedule-insns" to the CXXFLAGS. With full "-O2", g++ miscompiles the division routines. Do not use gcc-3.0 on Sparc for compiling CLN, it won't work at all.
If you use g++ on OSF/1 or Tru64 using gcc-3.0.n with n larger than 1, you should not add -fno-exceptions to the CXXFLAGS, since that will generate wrong code (gcc-3.1 is okay again, as is gcc-3.0).
More detailed installation instructions can be found in the documentation, in the doc/ directory.
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