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1 wxWidgets for GTK+ installation
2 -------------------------------
3
4 IMPORTANT NOTE:
5
6 If you experience problems installing, please re-read these
7 instructions and other related files (todo.txt, bugs.txt and
8 osname.txt for your platform if it exists) carefully before
9 mailing wxwin-users or the author. Preferably, try to fix the
10 problem first and then send a patch to the author.
11
12 When sending bug reports tell us what version of wxWidgets you are
13 using (including the beta) and what compiler on what system. One
14 example: wxGTK 2.8.0, gcc 3.4.5, Fedora Core 4
15
16 * The simplest case
17 -------------------
18
19 If you compile wxWidgets on Linux for the first time and don't like to read
20 install instructions just do (in the base dir):
21
22 > mkdir buildgtk
23 > cd buildgtk
24 > ../configure --with-gtk
25 > make
26 > su <type root password>
27 > make install
28 > ldconfig
29 [if you get "ldconfig: command not found", try using "/sbin/ldconfig"]
30
31 If you don't do the 'make install' part, you can still use the libraries from
32 the buildgtk directory, but they may not be available to other users.
33
34 If you want to remove wxWidgets on Unix you can do this:
35
36 > su <type root password>
37 > make uninstall
38 > ldconfig
39
40 Note that by default, GTK+ 2.X is used. GTK+ 1.2 can be specified
41 with --with-gtk=1.
42
43 * The expert case
44 -----------------
45
46 If you want to do some more serious cross-platform programming with wxWidgets,
47 such as for GTK+ and Motif, you can now build two complete libraries and use
48 them concurrently. To do this, create a separate directory for each build
49 of wxWidgets - you may also want to create different versions of wxWidgets
50 and test them concurrently. Most typically, this would be a version configured
51 with --enable-debug and one without.
52
53 For building three versions (one GTK+, one Motif and a debug version of the GTK
54 source) you'd do this:
55
56 mkdir buildmotif
57 cd buildmotif
58 ../configure --with-motif
59 make
60 cd ..
61
62 mkdir buildgtk
63 cd buildgtk
64 ../configure --with-gtk
65 make
66 cd ..
67
68 mkdir buildgtkd
69 cd buildgtkd
70 ../configure --with-gtk --enable-debug
71 make
72 cd ..
73
74 Note that you can install all those libraries concurrently, you just need to
75 pass the appropriate flags when using them.
76
77 * The simplest errors
78 ---------------------
79
80 For any configure errors: please look at config.log file which was generated
81 during configure run, it usually contains some useful information.
82
83 configure reports, that you don't have GTK+ 1.2/2.0 installed although you are
84 very sure you have. Well, you have installed it, but you also have another
85 version of the GTK+ installed, which you may need to remove including other
86 versions of glib (and its headers). Or maybe you installed it in a non-default
87 location and configure can't find it there, so please check that your PATH
88 variable includes the path to the correct gtk-config/pkg-config. Also check
89 that your LD_LIBRARY_PATH or equivalent variable contains the path to GTK+
90 libraries if they were installed in a non-default location.
91
92 You get errors from make: please use GNU make instead of the native make
93 program. Currently wxWidgets can be built only with GNU make, BSD make and
94 Solaris make. Other versions might work or not (any which don't have VPATH
95 support definitely won't).
96
97 You get errors during compilation: The reason is that you probably have a
98 broken compiler. GCC 2.8 and earlier versions and egcs are likely to cause
99 problems due to incomplete support for C++ and optimisation bugs. Best to use
100 GCC 2.95 or later.
101
102 You get immediate segfault when starting any sample or application: This is
103 either due to having compiled the library with different flags or options than
104 your program - typically you might have the __WXDEBUG__ option set for the
105 library but not for your program - or due to using a compiler with optimisation
106 bugs.
107
108 * The simplest program
109 ----------------------
110
111 Now create your super-application myfoo.cpp and compile anywhere with
112
113 g++ myfoo.cpp `wx-config --libs --cxxflags` -o myfoo
114
115 * GUI libraries
116 ---------------
117
118 wxWidgets/GTK+ requires the GTK+ library to be installed on your system. It has
119 to be a stable version, preferably GTK+ 2.x.y, where x is an even number.
120 GTK+ version 1.2 is highly discouraged, but if you decide to still use it,
121 please use version 1.2.10 (at least 1.2.3 is required, 1.2.7 is strongly recommended).
122
123 You can get the newest version of the GTK+ from the GTK+ homepage at:
124
125 http://www.gtk.org
126
127 We also mirror GTK+ at my ftp site. You'll find information about downloading
128 at my homepage.
129
130 * Additional libraries
131 ----------------------
132
133 wxWidgets/Gtk requires a thread library and X libraries known to work with
134 threads. This is the case on all commercial Unix-Variants and all
135 Linux-Versions that are based on glibc 2 except RedHat 5.0 which is broken in
136 many aspects. As of writing this, virtually all Linux distributions have
137 correct glibc 2 support.
138
139 You can disable thread support by running
140
141 ./configure --disable-threads
142 make
143 su <type root password>
144 make install
145 ldconfig
146 exit
147
148 * Building wxGTK on OS/2
149 ------------------------
150
151 Please send comments and question about the OS/2 installation
152 to Stefan Neis <Stefan.Neis@t-online.de> and patches to
153 the wxWidgets mailing list.
154
155 In the following list, the version numbers indicate the configuration that
156 was actually used by myself, newer version should cause no problems and
157 even older ones are expected to work most of the time.
158
159 You'll need OS/2 Warp (4.51) or eCS(1.0), X-Free86/2 (3.3.6 or newer),
160 GTK+ (1.2.5 or newer), emx (0.9d fix 4), a Unix like shell (pdksh-5.2.14 or
161 ash), Autoconf (2.57), GNU file utilities (3.13), GNU text utilities (1.19),
162 GNU shell utilites (1.12), m4 (1.4), sed (2.05), grep (2.0), Awk (3.0.3),
163 GNU Make (3.75).
164
165 Preferably, you should have Posix/2 installed and C(PLUS)_INCLUDE_PATH and
166 LIBRARY_PATH set up accordingly, however, wxGTK will even work without it.
167 Presence of Posix/2 will be auto-detected.
168
169 Open an OS/2 prompt and switch to the directory above.
170 Set MAKESHELL or MAKE_SHELL (which one is needed depends on the version of
171 make) to a Unix like shell, e.g.
172 SET MAKESHELL=ash
173 If you have a really deficient version of GNU make, it might even be
174 necessary to set SHELL or even COMSPEC to a unix like shell as well.
175 Depending on your installation you might want to also set INSTALL, for me
176 it tends to try to use the system's tcpip\pcomos\install.exe which causes
177 problems, e.g.
178 SET INSTALL=<path_to_src_directory>/install-sh -c
179
180 Notice that the delivered configure scripts are fully OS/2 aware, so you
181 can simply run
182 ash -c "configure --with-gtk=1"
183 and make and possibly make install as described above.
184
185 * Building wxGTK on SGI
186 -----------------------
187
188 Using the SGI native compilers, it is recommended that you
189 also set CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS before running configure. These
190 should be set to :
191
192 CFLAGS="-mips3 -n32"
193 CXXFLAGS="-mips3 -n32"
194
195 This is essential if you want to use the resultant binaries
196 on any other machine than the one it was compiled on. If you
197 have a 64bit machine (Octane) you should also do this to ensure
198 you don't accidently build the libraries as 64bit (which is
199 untested).
200
201 The SGI native compiler support has only been tested on Irix 6.5.
202
203 * Building wxGTK on Cygwin
204 --------------------------
205
206 The normal build instructions should work fine on Cygwin. The one difference
207 with Cygwin is that when using the "--enable-shared" configure option (which
208 is the default) the API is exported explicitly using __declspec(dllexport)
209 rather than all global symbols being available.
210
211 This shouldn't make a difference using the library and should be a little
212 more efficient. However if an export attribute has been missed somewhere you
213 will see linking errors. If this happens then you can work around the
214 problem by setting LDFLAGS=-Wl,--export-all-symbols. Please also let us know
215 about it on the wx-dev mailing list.
216
217 * Create your configuration
218 ---------------------------
219
220 Usage:
221 ./configure options
222
223 If you want to use system's C and C++ compiler,
224 set environment variables CC and CXX as
225
226 % setenv CC cc
227 % setenv CXX CC
228 % ./configure [options]
229
230 to see all the options please use:
231
232 ./configure --help
233
234 It is recommended to build wxWidgets in another directory (maybe a
235 subdirectory of your wxWidgets installation) as this allows you to
236 have multiple configurations (for example, debug and release or GTK
237 and Motif) simultaneously.
238
239
240 * General options
241 -----------------
242
243 Given below are the commands to change the default behaviour,
244 i.e. if it says "--disable-threads" it means that threads
245 are enabled by default.
246
247 Normally, you won't have to choose a toolkit, because when
248 you download wxGTK, it will default to --with-gtk etc. But
249 if you use all of our CVS repository you have to choose a
250 toolkit. You must do this by running configure with either of:
251
252 --with-gtk=2 Use the GTK+ 2.0. Default.
253 --with-gtk=1 Use the GTK+ 1.2.
254 --with-motif Use either Motif or Lesstif
255 Configure will look for both.
256
257 The following options handle the kind of library you want to build.
258
259 --disable-threads Compile without thread support.
260
261 --disable-shared Do not create shared libraries, but
262 build static libraries instead.
263
264 --enable-monolithic Build wxWidgets as single library instead
265 of as several smaller libraries (which is
266 the default since wxWidgets 2.5.0).
267
268 --disable-optimise Do not optimise the code. Can
269 sometimes be useful for debugging
270 and is required on some architectures
271 such as Sun with gcc 2.8.X which
272 would otherwise produce segvs.
273
274 --enable-unicode Enable Unicode support.
275
276 --enable-profile Add profiling info to the object
277 files. Currently broken, I think.
278
279 --enable-no_rtti Enable compilation without creation of
280 C++ RTTI information in object files.
281 This will speed-up compilation and reduce
282 binary size.
283
284 --enable-no_exceptions Enable compilation without creation of
285 C++ exception information in object files.
286 This will speed-up compilation and reduce
287 binary size. Also fewer crashes during the
288 actual compilation...
289
290 --enable-no_deps Enable compilation without creation of
291 dependency information.
292
293 --enable-permissive Enable compilation without checking for strict
294 ANSI conformance. Useful to prevent the build
295 dying with errors as soon as you compile with
296 Solaris' ANSI-defying headers.
297
298 --enable-mem_tracing Add built-in memory tracing.
299
300 --enable-dmalloc Use the dmalloc memory debugger.
301 Read more at www.letters.com/dmalloc/
302
303 --enable-debug_info Add debug info to object files and
304 executables for use with debuggers
305 such as gdb (or its many frontends).
306
307 --enable-debug_flag Define __DEBUG__ and __WXDEBUG__ when
308 compiling. This enable wxWidgets' very
309 useful internal debugging tricks (such
310 as automatically reporting illegal calls)
311 to work. Note that program and library
312 must be compiled with the same debug
313 options.
314
315 --enable-debug Same as --enable-debug_info and
316 --enable-debug_flag together. Unless you have
317 some very specific needs, you should use this
318 option instead of --enable-debug_info/flag ones
319 separately.
320
321 * Feature Options
322 -----------------
323
324 When producing an executable that is linked statically with wxGTK
325 you'll be surprised at its immense size. This can sometimes be
326 drastically reduced by removing features from wxWidgets that
327 are not used in your program. The most relevant such features
328 are
329
330 --with-odbc Enables ODBC code. This is disabled
331 by default because iODBC is under the
332 L-GPL license which is less liberal than
333 wxWidgets license.
334
335 --without-libpng Disables PNG image format code.
336
337 --without-libjpeg Disables JPEG image format code.
338
339 --without-libtiff Disables TIFF image format code.
340
341 --without-expat Disable XML classes based on Expat parser.
342
343 --disable-pnm Disables PNM image format code.
344
345 --disable-gif Disables GIF image format code.
346
347 --disable-pcx Disables PCX image format code.
348
349 --disable-iff Disables IFF image format code.
350
351 --disable-resources Disables the use of *.wxr type resources.
352
353 --disable-threads Disables threads. Will also disable sockets.
354
355 --disable-sockets Disables sockets.
356
357 --disable-dnd Disables Drag'n'Drop.
358
359 --disable-clipboard Disables Clipboard.
360
361 --disable-serial Disables object instance serialisation.
362
363 --disable-streams Disables the wxStream classes.
364
365 --disable-file Disables the wxFile class.
366
367 --disable-textfile Disables the wxTextFile class.
368
369 --disable-intl Disables the internationalisation.
370
371 --disable-validators Disables validators.
372
373 --disable-accel Disables accelerators support.
374
375 Apart from disabling certain features you can very often "strip"
376 the program of its debugging information resulting in a significant
377 reduction in size.
378
379 Please see the output of "./configure --help" for comprehensive list
380 of all configurable options.
381
382
383 * Compiling
384 -----------
385
386 The following must be done in the base directory (e.g. ~/wxGTK
387 or ~/wxWin or whatever)
388
389 Now the makefiles are created (by configure) and you can compile
390 the library by typing:
391
392 make
393
394 make yourself some coffee, as it will take some time. On an old
395 386SX possibly two weeks. During compilation, you'll get a few
396 warning messages depending in your compiler.
397
398 If you want to be more selective, you can change into a specific
399 directory and type "make" there.
400
401 Then you may install the library and its header files under
402 /usr/local/include/wx and /usr/local/lib respectively. You
403 have to log in as root (i.e. run "su" and enter the root
404 password) and type
405
406 make install
407
408 You can remove any traces of wxWidgets by typing
409
410 make uninstall
411
412 If you want to save disk space by removing unnecessary
413 object-files:
414
415 make clean
416
417 in the various directories will do the work for you.
418
419 * Creating a new Project
420 --------------------------
421
422 1) The first way uses the installed libraries and header files
423 automatically using wx-config
424
425 g++ myfoo.cpp `wx-config --cxxflags --libs` -o myfoo
426
427 Using this way, a make file for the minimal sample would look
428 like this
429
430 CC = gcc
431
432 minimal: minimal.o
433 $(CC) -o minimal minimal.o `wx-config --libs`
434
435 minimal.o: minimal.cpp mondrian.xpm
436 $(CC) `wx-config --cxxflags` -c minimal.cpp -o minimal.o
437
438 clean:
439 rm -f *.o minimal
440
441 If your application uses only some of wxWidgets libraries, you can
442 specify required libraries when running wx-config. For example,
443 `wx-config --libs=html,core` will only output link command to link
444 with libraries required by core GUI classes and wxHTML classes. See
445 the manual for more information on the libraries.
446
447 2) The other way creates a project within the source code
448 directories of wxWidgets. For this endeavour, you'll need
449 GNU autoconf version 2.14 and add an entry to your Makefile.in
450 to the bottom of the configure.in script and run autoconf
451 and configure before you can type make.
452
453 ----------------------
454
455 In the hope that it will be useful,
456
457 Robert Roebling
458