This section describes how to install the CLN package on your system.
To build CLN, you need a C++ compiler.
Actually, you need GNU g++ 2.7.0 or newer.
On HPPA, you need GNU g++ 2.8.0 or newer.
I recommend GNU egcs 1.1 or newer.
The following C++ features are used: classes, member functions, overloading of functions and operators, constructors and destructors, inline, const, multiple inheritance, templates.
The following C++ features are not used:
new, delete, virtual inheritance,
exceptions.
CLN relies on semi-automatic ordering of initializations of static and global variables, a feature which I could implement for GNU g++ only.
To build CLN, you also need to have GNU make installed.
To build CLN on HP-UX, you also need to have GNU sed installed.
This is because the libtool script, which creates the CLN library, relies
on sed, and the vendor's sed utility on these systems is too
limited.
As with any autoconfiguring GNU software, installation is as easy as this:
$ ./configure $ make $ make check
If on your system, `make' is not GNU make, you have to use
`gmake' instead of `make' above.
The configure command checks out some features of your system and
C++ compiler and builds the Makefiles. The make command
builds the library. This step may take 4 hours on an average workstation.
The make check runs some test to check that no important subroutine
has been miscompiled.
The configure command accepts options. To get a summary of them, try
$ ./configure --help
Some of the options are explained in detail in the `INSTALL.generic' file.
You can specify the C compiler, the C++ compiler and their options through
the following environment variables when running configure:
CC
CFLAGS
CXX
CXXFLAGS
Examples:
$ CC="gcc" CFLAGS="-O" CXX="g++" CXXFLAGS="-O" ./configure $ CC="gcc -V 2.7.2" CFLAGS="-O -g" \ CXX="g++ -V 2.7.2" CXXFLAGS="-O -g" ./configure $ CC="gcc -V 2.8.1" CFLAGS="-O -fno-exceptions" \ CXX="g++ -V 2.8.1" CXXFLAGS="-O -fno-exceptions" ./configure $ CC="gcc -V egcs-2.91.60" CFLAGS="-O2 -fno-exceptions" \ CXX="g++ -V egcs-2.91.60" CFLAGS="-O2 -fno-exceptions" ./configure
Note that for these environment variables to take effect, you have to set
them (assuming a Bourne-compatible shell) on the same line as the
configure command. If you made the settings in earlier shell
commands, you have to export the environment variables before
calling configure. In a csh shell, you have to use the
`setenv' command for setting each of the environment variables.
On Linux, g++ needs 15 MB to compile the tests. So you should better
have 17 MB swap space and 1 MB room in $TMPDIR.
If you use g++ version 2.7.x, don't add `-O2' to the CXXFLAGS,
because `g++ -O' generates better code for CLN than `g++ -O2'.
If you use g++ version 2.8.x or egcs-2.91.x (a.k.a. egcs-1.1) or
gcc-2.95.x, I recommend adding `-fno-exceptions' to the CXXFLAGS.
This will likely generate better code.
If you use g++ version egcs-2.91.x (egcs-1.1) or gcc-2.95.x on Sparc,
add either `-O' or `-O2 -fno-schedule-insns' to the CXXFLAGS.
With full `-O2', g++ miscompiles the division routines. Also, for
--enable-shared to work, you need egcs-1.1.2 or newer.
On MIPS (SGI Irix 6), pass option --without-gmp to configure. gmp does
not work when compiled in `n32' binary format on Irix.
By default, only a static library is built. You can build CLN as a shared
library too, by calling configure with the option `--enable-shared'.
To get it built as a shared library only, call configure with the options
`--enable-shared --disable-static'.
If you use g++ version egcs-2.91.x (egcs-1.1) on Sparc, you cannot
use `--enable-shared' because g++ would miscompile parts of the
library.
As with any autoconfiguring GNU software, installation is as easy as this:
$ make install
The `make install' command installs the library and the include files
into public places (`/usr/local/lib/' and `/usr/local/include/',
if you haven't specified a --prefix option to configure).
This step may require superuser privileges.
If you have already built the library and wish to install it, but didn't
specify --prefix=... at configure time, just re-run
configure, giving it the same options as the first time, plus
the --prefix=... option.
You can remove system-dependent files generated by make through
$ make clean
You can remove all files generated by make, thus reverting to a
virgin distribution of CLN, through
$ make distclean
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