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Installation » History » Revision 17

Revision 16 (Tony Ciavarella, 06/04/2012 02:12 AM) → Revision 17/175 (Tony Ciavarella, 06/04/2012 02:14 AM)

h1. Installation 

 h2. Obtaining the Source Code 

 h3. Release Tarballs 

 Release source tarballs are available on the "Files":http://oss.squalllinesoftware.com/projects/disorder/files page.    This is what you want if you are looking for stability and something ready for production use.    You'll probably want to use the most recent version found on that page. 

 h3. SCM 

 The Disorder source code is hosted in a "Bazaar":http://bazaar.canonical.com repository.    This is what you want if you are looking for the very latest bleeding edge of the code for contributing to Disorder or whatever other reason you may have. 

 To get a lightweight checkout of the latest version without all the history (not suitable for Disorder development): 
 <pre>bzr co --lightweight http://???.squalllinesoftware.com/???/disorder</pre> 

 To clone the repository including the full history: 
 <pre>bzr branch http://???.squalllinesoftware.com/???/disorder</pre> 

 h2. Prerequisites 

 The following third party things are required to use Disorder: 
 * "Boost":http://www.boost.org >= 1.49.0 
 * "Eigen":http://eigen.tuxfamily.org >= 3.0.5 
 * C++ version of the "SEDRIS SRM":http://www.sedris.org/srm_4.4/srm_c_cpp.htm >= 4.4.0 (optional but you will need some kind of sophisticated geospatial library) 
 * A "Python":http://www.python.org interpreter (needed to use the "waf":https://code.google.com/p/waf/ build system) 

 Build and install these things in accordance with the instructions for your operating system provided by each vendor.    Some hints for certain platforms follow. 

 h3. Debian Linux and Derivatives 

 Pat yourself on the back for using a good operating system.    All the dependencies are available via the package system.    To install the Boost and Eigen build dependencies on Debian and maybe other derivatives: 
 <pre>sudo apt-get install libboost-dev libboost-system-dev libboost-thread-dev libboost-date-time-dev libeigen3-dev</pre> 

 If you don't already have python, this will get the required bits of that: 
 <pre>sudo apt-get install python</pre> 

 

 h2. Configuration 

 If everything is setup properly, this step will be a breeze, but it is important to resolve any errors produced by the configuration step prior to attempting to compile Disorder. 

 

 h3. Linux 

 From inside the root of the Disorder tree do this in your favorite terminal emulator: 
 <pre>./waf configure --sedris-srm-root=<put the path to the SEDRIS SRM root here></pre> 
 For example, if your SEDRIS SRM is in /opt/sedris/srm: 
 <pre>./waf configure --sedris-srm-root=/opt/sedris/srm</pre> 

 That command will take several seconds and print a bunch of hopefully green stuff.    The output should end up looking something like this: 
 <pre> 
 Setting top to                             : /opt/disorder  
 Setting out to                             : /opt/disorder/bin  
 Checking for 'g++' (c++ compiler)          : /usr/bin/g++  
 Checking for program doxygen               : /usr/bin/doxygen  
 Checking for program tar                   : /bin/tar  
 Checking boost ABI tag                     :   
 Checking boost includes                    : 1_49  
 Checking boost libs                        : ok  
 Checking for boost linkage                 : ok  
 Checking for header boost/asio.hpp         : yes  
 Checking for header boost/bind.hpp         : yes  
 Checking for header boost/date_time.hpp    : yes  
 Checking for header boost/detail/endian.hpp : yes  
 Checking for header boost/format.hpp          : yes  
 Checking for header boost/function.hpp        : yes  
 Checking for header boost/functional/factory.hpp : yes  
 Checking for header boost/ptr_container/ptr_vector.hpp : yes  
 Checking for header boost/scoped_ptr.hpp                 : yes  
 Checking for header boost/static_assert.hpp              : yes  
 Checking for header boost/thread.hpp                     : yes  
 Checking for program pkg-config                          : /usr/bin/pkg-config  
 Checking for 'eigen3'                                    : yes  
 Checking for header Eigen/Dense                          : yes  
 Checking for SEDRIS SRM                                  : /opt/sedris/srm  
 Checking for SEDRIS SRM include directory                : /opt/sedris/srm/src/include  
 Checking for SEDRIS SRM library directory                : /opt/sedris/srm/lib/linux-3.1.0-1-amd64-i386-gnu-/OPT  
 SEDRIS SRM library                                       : /opt/sedris/srm/lib/linux-3.1.0-1-amd64-i386-gnu-/OPT/libsrm.so  
 Checking for header srf_all.h                            : yes  
 'configure' finished successfully (25.518s) 
 </pre> 

 If you don't see that last line saying that 'configure' finished successfully, you must fix whatever it complains about and try again. 

 h4. h3. Clang 

 To use the Clang C++ compiler instead of GCC's, assuming you already have clang++ installed, do this: 
 <pre>CXX=<put the path to clang++ here> ./waf configure --sedris-srm-root=<put the path to the SEDRIS SRM root here></pre> 

 So, this might work for example: 
 <pre>CXX=/usr/bin/clang++ ./waf configure --sedris-srm-root=/opt/sedris/srm</pre> 


 


 h3. Windows 

 On windows, your $PATH environment variable needs to include the path to the Python interpreter. 

 Next, you'll want to modify the provided batch file to tell Disorder where your prerequisites live.    From inside the root of the disorder tree: 
 <pre>copy tools/configure.bat configure.bat</pre> 

 This file contains some stuff at the top you'll want to edit to match your system configuration. 

 

 h2. Compiling 

 h3. With GCC on Linux 

 h3. With Clang++ on Linux 

 h3. With Visual Studio 2010 (Express or Full) 

 h2. Building Against the Disorder Library