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[project @ 1997-02-01 16:53:52 by jwe]
author | jwe |
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date | Sat, 01 Feb 1997 16:57:10 +0000 |
parents | 20704e7e5e79 |
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@c Copyright (C) 1996 John W. Eaton @c This is part of the Octave manual. @c For copying conditions, see the file gpl.texi. @c The text of this file will eventually appear in the file INSTALL @c in the Octave distribution, as well as in the Octave manual. @ifclear INSTALLONLY @node Installation, Trouble, Emacs, Top @appendix Installing Octave @end ifclear @ifset INSTALLONLY @include conf.texi This file documents the installation of Octave. Octave is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation. @node Installation, , Installation @chapter Installing Octave @end ifset @cindex installing Octave Here is the procedure for installing Octave from scratch on a Unix system. For instructions on how to install the binary distributions of Octave, see @ref{Binary Distributions}. @itemize @bullet @item Run the shell script @file{configure}. This will determine the features your system has (or doesn't have) and create a file named @file{Makefile} from each of the files named @file{Makefile.in}. Here is a summary of the configure options that are most frequently used when building Octave: @table @code @item --prefix=@var{prefix} Install Octave in subdirectories below @var{prefix}. The default value of @var{prefix} is @file{/usr/local}. @item --srcdir=@var{dir} Look for Octave sources in the directory @var{dir}. @item --with-f2c Use f2c even if Fortran compiler is available. @item --enable-dld Use DLD to make Octave capable of dynamically linking externally compiled functions. This only works on systems that have a working port of DLD. @item --enable-lite-kernel Compile smaller kernel. This currently requires DLD so that Octave can load functions at run time that are not loaded at compile time. @item --help Print a summary of the options recognized by the configure script. @end table See the file @file{INSTALL} for more information about the command line options used by configure. That file also contains instructions for compiling in a directory other than where the source is located. @item Run make. You will need a recent version of GNU make. Modifying Octave's makefiles to work with other make programs is probably not worth your time. We recommend you get and compile GNU make instead. For plotting, you will need to have gnuplot installed on your system. Gnuplot is a command-driven interactive function plotting program. Gnuplot is copyrighted, but freely distributable. The `gnu' in gnuplot is a coincidence---it is not related to the GNU project or the FSF in any but the most peripheral sense. For version @value{VERSION}, you must have the GNU C++ compiler (gcc) version 2.7.2 or later to compile Octave. You will also need version 2.7.1 or 2.7.2 of the GNU C++ class library (libg++). If you plan to modify the parser you will also need GNU bison and fles. If you modify the documentation, you will need GNU Texinfo, along with the patch for the makeinfo program that is distributed with Octave. GNU make, gcc, and libg++, gnuplot, bison, flex, and Texinfo are all available from many anonymous ftp archives. The primary site is prep.ai.mit.edu, but it is often very busy. A list of sites that mirror the software on prep is available by anonymous ftp from prep.ai.mit.edu in the file @file{/pub/gnu/GNUinfo/FTP}, or by fingering fsf@@prep.ai.mit.edu. If you don't have a Fortran compiler, or if your Fortran compiler doesn't work like the traditional Unix f77, you will need to have the Fortran to C translator f2c. You can get f2c from any number of anonymous ftp archives. The most recent version of f2c is always available from netlib.att.com. On an otherwise idle SPARCstation II, it will take somewhere between 60 and 90 minutes to compile everything, depending on whether you are compiling the Fortran libraries with f2c or using the Fortran compiler directly. You will need about 50 megabytes of disk storage to work with (considerably less if you don't compile with debugging symbols). To do that, use the command @example make CFLAGS=-O CXXFLAGS=-O LDFLAGS= @end example @noindent instead of just @samp{make}. @item If you encounter errors while compiling Octave, first check the list of known problems below to see if there is a workaround or solution for your problem. If not, @ifclear INSTALLONLY see @ref{Trouble}, @end ifclear @ifset INSTALLONLY see the file BUGS @end ifset for information about how to report bugs. @item Once you have successfully compiled Octave, run @samp{make install}. This will install a copy of octave, its libraries, and its documentation in the destination directory. As distributed, Octave is installed in the following directories. In the table below, @var{prefix} defaults to @file{/usr/local}, @var{version} stands for the current version number of the interpreter, and @var{host_type} is the type of computer on which Octave is installed (for example, @samp{i586-unknown-gnu}). @table @file @item @var{prefix}/bin Octave and other binaries that people will want to run directly. @item @var{prefix}/lib Libraries like libcruft.a and liboctave.a. @item @var{prefix}/share Architecture-independent data files. @item @var{prefix}/include/octave Include files distributed with Octave. @item @var{prefix}/man/man1 Unix-style man pages describing Octave. @item @var{prefix}/info Info files describing Octave. @item @var{prefix}/share/octave/@var{version}/m Function files distributed with Octave. This includes the Octave version, so that multiple versions of Octave may be installed at the same time. @item @var{prefix}/lib/octave/@var{version}/exec/@var{host_type} Executables to be run by Octave rather than the user. @item @var{prefix}/lib/octave/@var{version}/oct/@var{host_type} Object files that will be dynamically loaded. @item @var{prefix}/share/octave/@var{version}/imagelib Image files that are distributed with Octave. @end table @end itemize @menu * Installation Problems:: * Binary Distributions:: @end menu @node Installation Problems, Binary Distributions, Installation, Installation @appendixsec Installation Problems This section contains a list of problems (and some apparent problems that don't really mean anything is wrong) that may show up during installation of Octave. @itemize @bullet @item On some SCO systems, @code{info} fails to compile if @code{HAVE_TERMIOS_H} is defined int @file{config.h}. Simply removing the definition from @file{info/config.h} should allow it to compile. @item If @code{configure} finds @code{dlopen}, @code{dlsym}, @code{dlclose}, and @code{dlerror}, but not the header file @file{dlfcn.h}, you need to find the source for the header file and install it in the directory @file{usr/include}. This is reportedly a problem with Slackware 3.1. For Linux/GNU systems, the source for @file{dlfcn.h} is in the @samp{ldso} package. @item If you encounter errors like @smallexample @group passing `void (*)()' as argument 2 of `octave_set_signal_handler(int, void (*)(int))' @end group @end smallexample @noindent or @smallexample warning: ANSI C++ prohibits conversion from `(int)' to `(...)' @end smallexample @noindent while compiling @file{sighandlers.cc}, you may need to edit some files in the gcc include subdirectory to add proper prototypes for functions there. For example, Ultrix 4.2 needs proper declarations for the @code{signal()} and the @code{SIG_IGN} macro in the file @file{signal.h}. On some systems the @code{SIG_IGN} macro is defined to be something like this: @example #define SIG_IGN (void (*)())1 @end example @noindent when it should really be something like: @example #define SIG_IGN (void (*)(int))1 @end example @noindent to match the prototype declaration for @code{signal()}. This change should also be made for the @code{SIG_DFL} and @code{SIG_ERR} symbols. It may be necessary to change the definitions in @file{sys/signal.h} as well. The gcc fixincludes/fixproto script should probably fix these problems when gcc installs its modified set of header files, but I don't think that's been done yet. @strong{You should not change the files in @file{/usr/include}}. You can find the gcc include directory tree by running the command @example gcc -print-libgcc-file-name @end example @noindent The directory of gcc include files normally begins in the same directory that contains the file @file{libgcc.a}. @item There is a bug with the makeinfo program that is distributed with Texinfo (through version 3.9) that causes the indices in Octave's on-line manual to be generated incorrectly. If you need to recreate the on-line documentation, you should get the makeinfo program that is distributed with texinfo-3.9 and apply the patch for makeinfo that is distributed with Octave. See the file @file{MAKEINFO.PATCH} for more details. @item Some of the Fortran subroutines may fail to compile with older versions of the Sun Fortran compiler. If you get errors like @smallexample zgemm.f: zgemm: warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree zgemm.f, line 245: warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree zgemm.f, line 304: warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree zgemm.f, line 327: warning: unexpected parent of complex expression subtree pcc_binval: missing IR_CONV in complex op make[2]: *** [zgemm.o] Error 1 @end smallexample @noindent when compiling the Fortran subroutines in the @file{libcruft} subdirectory, you should either upgrade your compiler or try compiling with optimization turned off. @item On NeXT systems, if you get errors like this: @example /usr/tmp/cc007458.s:unknown:Undefined local symbol LBB7656 /usr/tmp/cc007458.s:unknown:Undefined local symbol LBE7656 @end example @noindent when compiling @file{Array.cc} and @file{Matrix.cc}, try recompiling these files without @code{-g}. @item Some people have reported that calls to shell_cmd and the pager do not work on SunOS systems. This is apparently due to having @code{G_HAVE_SYS_WAIT} defined to be 0 instead of 1 when compiling libg++. @item On NeXT systems, linking to @file{libsys_s.a} may fail to resolve the following functions @example _tcgetattr _tcsetattr _tcflow @end example @noindent which are part of @file{libposix.a}. Unfortunately, linking Octave with @code{-posix} results in the following undefined symbols. @example .destructors_used .constructors_used _objc_msgSend _NXGetDefaultValue _NXRegisterDefaults .objc_class_name_NXStringTable .objc_class_name_NXBundle @end example One kluge around this problem is to extract @file{termios.o} from @file{libposix.a}, put it in Octave's @file{src} directory, and add it to the list of files to link together in the makefile. Suggestions for better ways to solve this problem are welcome! @item If Octave crashes immediately with a floating point exception, it is likely that it is failing to initialize the IEEE floating point values for infinity and NaN. If your system actually does support IEEE arithmetic, you should be able to fix this problem by modifying the function @code{octave_ieee_init} in the file @file{lo-ieee.cc} to correctly initialize Octave's internal infinity and NaN variables. If your system does not support IEEE arithmetic but Octave's configure script incorrectly determined that it does, you can work around the problem by editing the file @file{config.h} to not define @code{HAVE_ISINF}, @code{HAVE_FINITE}, and @code{HAVE_ISNAN}. In any case, please report this as a bug since it might be possible to modify Octave's configuration script to automatically determine the proper thing to do. @item If you don't have NPSOL but you still want to be able to solve NLPs, or if you don't have QPSOL but you still want to solve QPs, you'll need to find replacements or order them from Stanford. If you know of a freely redistributable replacement, please let us know---we might be interested in distributing it with Octave. You can get more information about NPSOL and QPSOL from @quotation Stanford Business Sofrtware, Inc.@* 2680 Bayshore Parkway, Suite 304@* Mountain View, CA 94043@* Tel: (415) 962-8719@* Fax: (415) 962-1869 @end quotation Octave may soon support FSQP, an NLP solver from Andre Tits (andre@@src.umd.edu) of the University of Maryland. FSQP is available free of charge to academic sites, but can not be redistributed to third parties. @end itemize @node Binary Distributions, , Installation Problems, Installation @appendixsec Binary Distributions This section contains instructions for creating and installing a binary distribution. @menu * Installing Octave from a Binary Distribution:: * Creating a Binary Distribution:: @end menu @node Installing Octave from a Binary Distribution, Creating a Binary Distribution, Binary Distributions, Binary Distributions @appendixsubsec Installing Octave from a Binary Distribution @itemize @bullet @item To install Octave from a binary distribution, execute the command @example sh ./install-octave @end example @noindent in the top level directory of the distribution. Binary distributions are normally compiled assuming that Octave will be installed in the following subdirectories of @file{/usr/local}. @table @file @item bin Octave and other binaries that people will want to run directly. @item lib Shared libraries that Octave needs in order to run. These files are not included if you are installing a statically linked version of Octave. @item man/man1 Unix-style man pages describing Octave. @item info Info files describing Octave. @item share/octave/@var{version}/m Function files distributed with Octave. This includes the Octave version, so that multiple versions of Octave may be installed at the same time. @item libexec/octave/@var{version}/exec/@var{host_type} Executables to be run by Octave rather than the user. @item libexec/octave/@var{version}/oct/@var{host_type} Object files that will be dynamically loaded. @item share/octave/@var{version}/imagelib Image files that are distributed with Octave. @end table @noindent where @var{version} stands for the current version number of the interpreter, and @var{host_type} is the type of computer on which Octave is installed (for example, @samp{i486-unknown-gnu}). If these directories don't exist, the script @file{install-octave} will create them for you. The installation script also creates the following subdirectories of @file{/usr/local} that are intended for locally installed functions: @table @file @item share/octave/site/m Locally installed M-files. @item libexec/octave/site/exec/@var{host_type} Locally installed binaries intendec to be run by Octave rather than by the user. @item libexec/octave/site/octave/@var{host_type} Local object files that will be dynamically linked. @end table If it is not possible for you to install Octave in @file{/usr/local}, or if you would prefer to install it in a different directory, you can specify the name of the top level directory as an argument to the @file{install-octave} script. For example: @example sh ./install-octave /some/other/directory @end example @noindent will install Octave in subdirectories of the directory @file{/some/other/directory}. @end itemize @node Creating a Binary Distribution, , Installing Octave from a Binary Distribution, Binary Distributions @appendixsubsec Creating a Binary Distribution Here is how to build a binary distribution for others. @itemize @bullet @item Unpack the source distribution. @item Configure Octave using the command @example ./configure --disable-dl --disable-shl --disable-shared @end example If your system supports shared libraries and dynamic linking, you should also build a binary that supports those features, but it is important to create a statically linked executable that will run no matter what versions of the libraries are installed on the target system. @item Build the binaries using the command @example make LDFLAGS=-static @end example @item Type @samp{make static-binary-dist}. This will create a compressed tar file ready for distribution. The file will have a name like @file{octave-@var{version}-@var{host_type}-static.tar.gz}. @item If your system supports dynamic linking and shared libraries, build another version of Octave that supports these features. Use the commands @example @group configure --enable-shared make make dynamic-binary-dist @end group @end example @noindent This will create a compressed tar file ready for distribution. The file will have a name like @file{octave-@var{version}-@var{host_type}-dynamic.tar.gz}. @end itemize