]> git.saurik.com Git - wxWidgets.git/blob - docs/motif/install.txt
Penguin Unicode compilation fix.
[wxWidgets.git] / docs / motif / install.txt
1 wxWindows 2.5 for Motif 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 wx-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 wxWindows you are
13 using (including the beta) and what compiler on what system. One
14 example: wxMotif 2.5.0, gcc 2.95.4, Redhat 6.1
15
16 First steps
17 -----------
18
19 - Prerequisites: Motif 1.2 or above, or Lesstif. Motif 2.0 and
20 above may also be suitable.
21
22 - Download wxX11-x.y.z.tgz, where x.y.z is the version number.
23 (wxMotif is included in the wxX11 distribution).
24 Download documentation in a preferred format, such as
25 wxWindows-HTML.zip or wxWindows-PDF.zip.
26
27 - Make a directory such as ~/wx and unarchive the files into this
28 directory.
29
30 - It is recommended that you install bison and flex; using yacc
31 and lex may require tweaking of the makefiles. You also need
32 libXpm (see comments in the Notes section below) if you want to have
33 XPM support in wxWindows (recommended).
34
35 - You can now use configure to build wxWindows and the samples.
36
37 Using configure is the only way to build the library. If it doesn't
38 work for you for whatever reason, please report it (together with detailed
39 information about your platform and the (relevant part of) contents of
40 config.log file) to wx-dev@lists.wxwindows.org.
41
42
43 COMPILING USING CONFIGURE
44 =========================
45
46 * The simplest case
47 -------------------
48
49 If you compile wxWindows on Linux for the first time and don't like to read
50 install instructions just do (in the base dir):
51
52 > ./configure --with-motif
53 > make
54 > su <type root password>
55 > make install
56 > ldconfig
57 > exit
58
59 Afterwards you can continue with
60
61 > make
62 > su <type root password>
63 > make install
64 > ldconfig
65 > exit
66
67 If you want to remove wxWindows on Unix you can do this:
68
69 > su <type root password>
70 > make uninstall
71 > ldconfig
72 > exit
73
74 * The expert case
75 -----------------
76
77 If you want to do some more serious cross-platform programming with wxWindows,
78 such as for GTK and Motif, you can now build two complete libraries and use
79 them concurrently. For this end, you have to create a directory for each build
80 of wxWindows - you may also want to create different versions of wxWindows
81 and test them concurrently. Most typically, this would be a version configured
82 with --enable-debug and one without. Note, that only one build can
83 currently be installed, so you'd have to use local version of the library for
84 that purpose. For building three versions (one GTK, one Motif and a debug
85 version of the GTK source) you'd do this:
86
87 mkdir buildmotif
88 cd buildmotif
89 ../configure --with-motif
90 make
91 cd ..
92
93 mkdir buildgtk
94 cd buildgtk
95 ../configure --with-gtk
96 make
97 cd ..
98
99 mkdir buildgtkd
100 cd buildgtkd
101 ../configure --with-gtk --enable-debug
102 make
103 cd ..
104
105 * The simplest errors
106 ---------------------
107
108 You get errors during compilation: The reason is that you probably have a
109 broken compiler. GCC 2.8 and earlier versions and egcs are likely to cause
110 problems due to incomplete support for C++ and optimisation bugs. Best to use
111 GCC 2.95 or later.
112
113 You get immediate segfault when starting any sample or application: This is
114 either due to having compiled the library with different flags or options than
115 your program - typically you might have the __WXDEBUG__ option set for the
116 library but not for your program - or due to using a compiler with optimisation
117 bugs.
118
119 * The simplest program
120 ----------------------
121
122 Now create your super-application myfoo.app and compile anywhere with
123
124 g++ myfoo.cpp `wx-config --libs --cxxflags` -o myfoo
125
126 * General
127 ---------
128
129 The Unix variants of wxWindows use GNU configure. If you have problems with
130 your make use GNU make instead.
131
132 If you have general problems with installation, see the wxWindows website at
133
134 http://www.wxwindows.org/
135
136 for newest information. If you still don't have any success, please send a bug
137 report to one of our mailing lists (see my homepage) INCLUDING A DESCRIPTION OF
138 YOUR SYSTEM AND YOUR PROBLEM, SUCH AS YOUR VERSION OF MOTIF, WXMOTIF, WHAT
139 DISTRIBUTION YOU USE AND WHAT ERROR WAS REPORTED. I know this has no effect,
140 but I tried...
141
142 * GUI libraries
143 ---------------
144
145 wxWindows/Motif requires the Motif library to be installed on your system. As
146 an alternative, you may also use the free library "lesstif" which implements
147 most of the Motif API without the licence restrictions of Motif.
148
149 You can get the newest version of the Lesstif from the lesstif homepage at:
150
151 http://www.lesstif.org/
152
153 * Additional libraries
154 ----------------------
155
156 wxWindows/Motif requires a thread library and X libraries known to work with
157 threads. This is the case on all commercial Unix-Variants and all
158 Linux-Versions that are based on glibc 2 except RedHat 5.0 which is broken in
159 many aspects. As of writing this, these Linux distributions have correct glibc
160 2 support:
161
162 - RedHat 5.1
163 - Debian 2.0 and 3.0
164 - Stampede
165 - DLD 6.0
166 - SuSE 6.0
167
168 You can disable thread support by running
169
170 ./configure --disable-threads
171 make
172 su <type root password>
173 make install
174 ldconfig
175 exit
176
177 * Building wxMotif on OS/2
178 --------------------------
179
180 Please send comments and question about the OS/2 installation
181 to Andrea Venturoli <a.ventu@flashnet.it> and patches to
182 the wxWindows mailing list.
183
184 You'll need OS/2 Warp (4.00FP#6), X-Free86/2 (3.3.3 or newer),
185 Lesstif (0.89.1 or newer), emx (0.9d fix 1), flex (2.5.4),
186 yacc (1.8), unix like shell, e.g. korn shell (5.2.13),
187 Autoconf (2.13), GNU file utilities (3.6),
188 GNU text utilities (1.3), GNU shell utilites (1.12), m4 (1.4),
189 sed (2.05), grep (2.0), Awk (3.0.3), GNU Make (3.76.1).
190
191 Open an OS/2 prompt and switch to the directory above.
192 First set some global environment variables we need:
193
194 SET CXXFLAGS=-Zmtd -D__ST_MT_ERRNO__
195 SET CFLAGS=-Zmtd -D__ST_MT_ERRNO__
196 SET OSTYPE=OS2X
197 SET COMSPEC=sh
198
199 Notice you can choose whatever you want, if you don't like OS2X.
200
201 Now, run autoconf in the main directory and in the samples, demos
202 and utils subdirectory. This will generate the OS/2 specific
203 versions of the configure scripts. Now run
204 configure --with-motif
205 as described above.
206
207 To verify Lesstif installation, configure will try to compile a
208 sample program that requires X headers/libraries to be either
209 available via C_INCLUDE_PATH and LIBRARY_PATH or you need to
210 explicitly set CFLAGS prior to running configure.
211
212 If you have pthreads library installed, it will be autodetected
213 and the library will be compiled with thread-support.
214
215 Note that configure assumes your flex will generate files named
216 "lexyy.c", not "lex.yy.c". If you have a version which does
217 generate "lex.yy.c", you need to manually change the generated
218 makefile.
219
220 * Building wxMotif on SGI
221 -------------------------
222
223 Using the SGI native compilers, it is recommended that you
224 also set CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS before running configure. These
225 should be set to :
226
227 CFLAGS="-mips3 -n32"
228 CXXFLAGS="-mips3 -n32"
229
230 This is essential if you want to use the resultant binaries
231 on any other machine than the one it was compiled on. If you
232 have a 64bit machine (Octane) you should also do this to ensure
233 you don't accidently build the libraries as 64bit (which is
234 untested).
235
236 The SGI native compiler support has only been tested on Irix 6.5.
237
238 * Create your configuration
239 ---------------------------
240
241 Usage:
242 ./configure [options]
243
244 If you want to use system's C and C++ compiler,
245 set environment variables CXX and CC as
246
247 % setenv CC cc
248 % setenv CXX CC
249 % ./configure options
250
251 to see all the options please use:
252
253 ./configure --help
254
255 The basic philosophy is that if you want to use different
256 configurations, like a debug and a release version,
257 or use the same source tree on different systems,
258 you have only to change the environment variable OSTYPE.
259 (Sadly this variable is not set by default on some systems
260 in some shells - on SGI's for example). So you will have to
261 set it there. This variable HAS to be set before starting
262 configure, so that it knows which system it tries to
263 configure for.
264
265 Configure will complain if the system variable OSTYPE has
266 not been defined. And Make in some circumstances as well...
267
268
269 * General options
270 -------------------
271
272 Given below are the commands to change the default behaviour,
273 i.e. if it says "--disable-threads" it means that threads
274 are enabled by default.
275
276 Many of the configure options have been thoroughly tested
277 in wxWindows snapshot 6, but not yet all (ODBC not).
278
279 You have to add --with-motif on platforms, where Motif is
280 not the default (on Linux, configure will default to GTK).
281
282 --with-motif Use either Motif or Lesstif
283 Configure will look for both.
284
285 The following options handle the kind of library you want to build.
286
287 --disable-threads Compile without thread support. Threads
288 support is also required for the
289 socket code to work.
290
291 --disable-shared Do not create shared libraries.
292
293 --disable-optimise Do not optimise the code. Can
294 sometimes be useful for debugging
295 and is required on some architectures
296 such as Sun with gcc 2.8.X which
297 would otherwise produce segvs.
298
299 --enable-profile Add profiling info to the object
300 files. Currently broken, I think.
301
302 --enable-no_rtti Enable compilation without creation of
303 C++ RTTI information in object files.
304 This will speed-up compilation and reduce
305 binary size.
306
307 --enable-no_exceptions Enable compilation without creation of
308 C++ exception information in object files.
309 This will speed-up compilation and reduce
310 binary size. Also fewer crashes during the
311 actual compilation...
312
313 --enable-no_deps Enable compilation without creation of
314 dependency information.
315
316 --enable-permissive Enable compilation without checking for strict
317 ANSI conformance. Useful to prevent the build
318 dying with errors as soon as you compile with
319 Solaris' ANSI-defying headers.
320
321 --enable-mem_tracing Add built-in memory tracing.
322
323 --enable-dmalloc Use the dmalloc memory debugger.
324 Read more at www.letters.com/dmalloc/
325
326 --enable-debug Equivalent to --enable-debug_info plus
327 --enable-debug-flag.
328
329 --enable-debug_info Add debug info to object files and
330 executables for use with debuggers
331 such as gdb (or its many frontends).
332
333 --enable-debug_flag Define __DEBUG__ and __WXDEBUG__ when
334 compiling. This enable wxWindows' very
335 useful internal debugging tricks (such
336 as automatically reporting illegal calls)
337 to work. Note that program and library
338 must be compiled with the same debug
339 options.
340
341 * Feature Options
342 -----------------
343
344 Many of the configure options have been thoroughly tested
345 in wxWindows snapshot 6, but not yet all (ODBC not).
346
347 When producing an executable that is linked statically with wxGTK
348 you'll be surprised at its immense size. This can sometimes be
349 drastically reduced by removing features from wxWindows that
350 are not used in your program. The most relevant such features
351 are
352
353 --without-libpng Disables PNG image format code.
354
355 --without-libjpeg Disables JPEG image format code.
356
357 --without-odbc Disables ODBC code.
358
359 --disable-threads Disables threads. Will also
360 disable sockets.
361
362 --disable-sockets Disables sockets.
363
364 --disable-dnd Disables Drag'n'Drop.
365
366 --disable-clipboard Disables Clipboard.
367
368 --disable-streams Disables the wxStream classes.
369
370 --disable-file Disables the wxFile class.
371
372 --disable-textfile Disables the wxTextFile class.
373
374 --disable-intl Disables the internationalisation.
375
376 --disable-validators Disables validators.
377
378 --disable-accel Disables accel.
379
380 Apart from disabling certain features you can very often "strip"
381 the program of its debugging information resulting in a significant
382 reduction in size.
383
384 * Compiling
385 -----------
386
387 The following must be done in the base directory (e.g. ~/wxMotif
388 or ~/wxWin or whatever)
389
390 Now the makefiles are created (by configure) and you can compile
391 the library by typing:
392
393 make
394
395 make yourself some coffee, as it will take some time. On an old
396 Pentium 200 around 40 minutes. During compilation, you may get a few
397 warning messages depending in your compiler.
398
399 If you want to be more selective, you can change into a specific
400 directory and type "make" there.
401
402 Then you may install the library and its header files under
403 /usr/local/include/wx and /usr/local/lib respectively. You
404 have to log in as root (i.e. run "su" and enter the root
405 password) and type
406
407 make install
408
409 You can remove any traces of wxWindows by typing
410
411 make uninstall
412
413 If you want to save disk space by removing unnecessary
414 object-files:
415
416 make clean
417
418 in the various directories will do the work for you.
419
420 * Creating a new Project
421 ------------------------
422
423 1) The first way uses the installed libraries and header files
424 automatically using wx-config
425
426 g++ myfoo.cpp `wx-config --libs` `wx-config --cxxflags` -o myfoo
427
428 Using this way, a make file for the minimal sample would look
429 like this
430
431 CXX = g++
432
433 minimal: minimal.o
434 $(CXX) -o minimal minimal.o `wx-config --libs`
435
436 minimal.o: minimal.cpp mondrian.xpm
437 $(CXX) `wx-config --cxxflags` -c minimal.cpp -o minimal.o
438
439 clean:
440 rm -f *.o minimal
441
442 This is certain to become the standard way unless we decide
443 to stick to tmake.
444
445 2) The other way creates a project within the source code
446 directories of wxWindows. For this endeavour, you'll need
447 GNU autoconf version 2.14 and add an entry to your Makefile.in
448 to the bottom of the configure.in script and run autoconf
449 and configure before you can type make.
450
451 * Further notes by Julian Smart
452 ---------------------------------
453
454 - You may find the following script useful for compiling wxMotif,
455 especially if installing from zips (which don't preserve file
456 permissions). Make this script executable with the command
457 chmod a+x makewxmotif.
458
459 -------:x-----Cut here-----:x-----
460 # makewxmotif
461 # Sets permissions (in case we extracted wxMotif from zip files)
462 # and makes wxMotif.
463 # Call from top-level wxWindows directory.
464 # Note that this uses standard (but commonly-used) configure options;
465 # if you're feeling brave, you may wish to compile with threads:
466 # if they're not supported by the target platform, they will be disabled
467 # anyhow
468 # -- Julian Smart
469 chmod a+x configure config.sub config.guess
470 ./configure --with-shared --with-motif --with-debug_flag --with-debug_info --enable-debug --without-threads --without-sockets --without-odbc
471 make
472 -------:x-----Cut here-----:x-----
473
474 This script will build wxMotif using shared libraries. If you want to build
475 a static wxWindows library, use --disable-shared.
476
477 Troubleshooting
478 ---------------
479
480 - Solaris compilation with gcc: if the compiler has problems with the variable
481 argument functions, try putting the gcc fixinclude file paths early in the
482 include path.
483
484 - If you operator-related compile errors or strange memory problems
485 (for example in deletion of string arrays), set wxUSE_GLOBAL_MEMORY_OPERATORS
486 and wxUSE_MEMORY_TRACING to 0 in setup.h, and recompile.
487
488 - If you get an internal compiler error in gcc, turn off optimisations.
489
490 - Problems with XtDestroyWidget crashing in ~wxWindow have been
491 reported on SGI IRIX 6.4. This has not yet been resolved, so
492 any advice here would be very welcome. See bugs.txt for a
493 possible temporary workaround (comment out the final
494 XtDestroyWidget from ~wxWindow in window.cpp).
495
496 - Some compilers, such as Sun C++, may give a lot of warnings about
497 virtual functions being hidden. Please ignore these, it's correct C++ syntax.
498 If you find any incorrect instances, though, such as a
499 missing 'const' in an overridden function, please let us know.
500
501 Other Notes
502 -----------
503
504 - Using configure will create a release build of the library by
505 default: it's recommended to use --enable-debug configure switch
506 while developing your application. To compile in non-debug mode, use
507 --disable-debug configure switch.
508
509 Bug reports
510 -----------
511
512 Please send bug reports with a description of your environment,
513 compiler and the error message(s) to the wxwin-developers mailing list at:
514
515 wx-dev@lists.wxwindows.org
516
517 Julian Smart, Robert Roebling and Vadim Zeitlin, November 1999.
518