4 GiNaC requires the CLN library by Bruno Haible installed on your system.
5 It is available from <ftp://ftpthep.physik.uni-mainz.de/pub/gnu/>.
7 You will also need a decent ANSI-compliant C++-compiler. We recommend the
8 C++ compiler from the GNU compiler collection, GCC >= 3.4. If you have a
9 different or older compiler you are on your own. Note that you may have to
10 use the same compiler you compiled CLN with because of differing
11 name-mangling schemes.
13 The pkg-config utility is required for configuration, it can be downloaded
14 from <http://pkg-config.freedesktop.org/>.
16 To build the GiNaC tutorial and reference manual the doxygen utility
17 (it can be downloaded from http://www.stack.nl/~dimitri/doxygen) and
21 - Linux on x86 and x86_64 using GCC 3.4, 4.0, 4.1, and 4.2.
22 - Linux on Alpha using GCC 3.4.
23 - Solaris on Sparc using GCC 3.4.
24 - Windows on x86 using GCC 3.4 (MinGW)
26 Known not to work with:
27 - GCC 4.3.0 due to the compiler bug,
28 see <http://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=35548>.
29 - GCC 2.96 or earlier because proper exception and standard library support
32 If you install from git, you also need GNU autoconf (>=2.59), automake (>=1.7),
33 libtool (>= 1.5), bison (>= 2.3), flex (>= 2.5.33), autogen (>= 5.6.0) to be
40 To install from a source .tar.bz2 distribution:
44 [become root if necessary]
47 To build the GiNaC tutorial and reference manual in HTML, DVI, PostScript,
48 or PDF formats, use one of
55 To compile and run GiNaC's test and benchmark suite and check whether the
56 library works correctly you can use
60 The "configure" script can be given a number of options to enable and
61 disable various features. For a complete list, type:
65 A few of the more important ones:
67 --prefix=PREFIX install architecture-independent files in PREFIX
68 [defaults to /usr/local]
69 --exec-prefix=EPREFIX install architecture-dependent files in EPREFIX
70 [defaults to the value given to --prefix]
71 --disable-shared suppress the creation of a shared version of libginac
72 --disable-static suppress the creation of a static version of libginac
74 More detailed installation instructions can be found in the documentation,
75 in the doc/ directory.
77 The time the "make" step takes depends heavily on optimization levels. Large
78 amounts of memory (>128MB) will be required by the compiler, also depending
79 on optimization. To give you a rough idea of what you have to expect the
80 following table may be helpful. It was measured on an Athlon/800MHz with
83 step | GCC optimization | comment
85 --------------+---------+---------+----------------------------------------
86 make | ~6m | ~8m | shared and static library
87 make check | ~8m | ~12m | largely due to compilation
93 First, download the code:
94 $ git clone git://www.ginac.de/ginac.git ginac
97 Secondly, make sure all required software is installed. This is *really*
98 important step. If some package is missing, the `configure' script might
99 be misgenerated, see e.g. this discussion:
100 <http://www.ginac.de/pipermail/ginac-list/2007-November/001263.html>
106 to generate the `configure' script, and proceed in a standard way, i.e.
110 [become root if necessary]
119 You should use at least CLN-1.1, since during the development of GiNaC
120 various bugs have been discovered and fixed in earlier versions. Please
121 install CLN properly on your system before continuing with GiNaC.
123 Problems building ginsh
124 -----------------------
126 The GiNaC interactive shell, ginsh, makes use of GNU readline to provide
127 command line editing and history. If readline library and/or headers are
128 missing on your system, the configure script will issue a warning. In this
129 case you have two options:
131 1) (the easiest) If you don't intend to use ginsh (i.e. if you need GiNaC
132 library to compile some piece of software), ignore it. ginsh builds just
133 fine without readline (obviously, it won't support the command line history
136 2) Install GNU readline and run the configure script once again. Depending on
137 what your system/distribution is, you will have to install a package called
138 libreadline and libreadline-dev (or readline-devel). If your system's vendor
139 doesn't supply such packages, go to <ftp://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/readline/> and
140 compile it yourself. Note that non-GNU versions of libreadline (in particular
141 one shipped with Mac OS X) are not supported at the moment.
143 Problems with missing standard header files
144 -------------------------------------------
146 Building GiNaC requires many standard header files. If you get a configure
147 error complaining about such missing files your compiler and library are
148 probably not up to date enough and it's no worth continuing.