X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/8b9c0e20baee0d3669affa0b799c1351980c5900..a92b0cfd2bd0bef75b43c071df0b0e028f360d8e:/docs/motif/install.txt diff --git a/docs/motif/install.txt b/docs/motif/install.txt index d8368dfbf5..2eada2b3f4 100644 --- a/docs/motif/install.txt +++ b/docs/motif/install.txt @@ -1,26 +1,30 @@ -wxWindows 2.0 for Motif installation +wxWindows 2.3 for Motif installation ------------------------------------ -IMPORTANT NOTE: If you experience problems installing, please re-read this - instructions and other related files (todo.txt, bugs.txt and - osname.txt for your platform if it exists) carefully before - mailing wxwin-users or the author. Preferably, try to fix the - problem first and then send a patch to the author. +IMPORTANT NOTE: + + If you experience problems installing, please re-read these + instructions and other related files (todo.txt, bugs.txt and + osname.txt for your platform if it exists) carefully before + mailing wxwin-users or the author. Preferably, try to fix the + problem first and then send a patch to the author. + + When sending bug reports tell us what version of wxWindows you are + using (including the beta) and what compiler on what system. One + example: wxMotif 2.3.0, egcs 1.1.1, Redhat 5.0 + +First steps +----------- - Prerequisites: Motif 1.2 or above, or Lesstif (not yet tested). Motif 2.0 and above may also be suitable. -- Download the files wx200gen.zip and wx200mot.zip, and - documentation in a preferred format, such as wx200htm.zip - or wx200pdf.zip. +- Download wxMotif-x.y.z.tgz, where x.y.z is the version number. + Download documentation in a preferred format, such as + wxWindows-HTML.zip or wxWindows-PDF.zip. -- Make a directory such as ~/wx and unzip the files into this - directory. Use the -a option if available to convert the ASCII - files to Unix format. Don't worry about files being - overwritten: they should be identical anyway. - - (See http://www.cdrom.com/pub/infozip/ if you don't have zip/unzip - already installed. Zip isn't the same as gzip!) +- Make a directory such as ~/wx and unarchive the files into this + directory. - It is recommended that you install bison and flex; using yacc and lex may require tweaking of the makefiles. You also need @@ -38,12 +42,422 @@ IMPORTANT NOTE: If you experience problems installing, please re-read this COMPILING USING CONFIGURE ========================= -- You can use the wxGTK configure system to make wxMotif, or - you can follow the following steps to use the simpler (but - less automatic) makefile system. If using configure, the - following script should make the library and samples, when - run from the top-level wxWindows directory (see also 'makewxmotif' - in this directory). Make this script executable with the command +* The most simple case +----------------------- + +If you compile wxWindows on Linux for the first time and don't like to read +install instructions just do (in the base dir): + +> ./configure --with-motif +> make +> su +> make install +> ldconfig +> exit + +Afterwards you can continue with + +> make +> su +> make install +> ldconfig +> exit + +If you want to remove wxWindows on Unix you can do this: + +> su +> make uninstall +> ldconfig +> exit + +* The expert case +----------------- + +If you want to do some more serious cross-platform programming with wxWindows, +such as for GTK and Motif, you can now build two complete libraries and use +them concurretly. For this end, you have to create a directory for each build +of wxWindows - you may also want to create different versions of wxWindows +and test them concurrently. Most typically, this would be a version configured +with --enable-debug_flag and one without. Note, that only one build can currently +be installed, so you'd have to use local version of the library for that purpose. +For building three versions (one GTK, one Motif and a debug version of the GTK +source) you'd do this: + +md buildmotif +cd buildmotif +../configure --with-motif +make +cd .. + +md buildgtk +cd buildgtk +../configure --with-gtk +make +cd .. + +md buildgtkd +cd buildgtkd +../configure --with-gtk --enable-debug_flag +make +cd .. + +* The most simple errors +------------------------ + +You get errors during compilation: The reason is that you probably have a broken +compiler, which includes almost everything that is called gcc. If you use gcc 2.8 +you have to disable optimsation as the compiler will give up with an internal +compiler error. + +If there is just any way for you to use egcs, use egcs. We cannot fix gcc. + +You get immediate segfault when starting any sample or application: This is either +due to having compiled the library with different flags or options than your program - +typically you might have the __WXDEBUG__ option set for the library but not for your +program - or due to using a broken compiler (and its optimisation) such as GCC 2.8. + +* The most simple program +------------------------- + +Now create your super-application myfoo.app and compile anywhere with + +g++ myfoo.cpp `wx-config --libs --cflags` -o myfoo + +* General +----------------------- + +The Unix variants of wxWindows use GNU configure. If you have problems with your +make use GNU make instead. + +If you have general problems with installation, read my homepage at + + http://wesley.informatik.uni-freiburg.de/~wxxt + +for newest information. If you still don't have any success, please send a bug +report to one of our mailing lists (see my homepage) INCLUDING A DESCRIPTION OF +YOUR SYSTEM AND YOUR PROBLEM, SUCH AS YOUR VERSION OF GTK, WXGTK, WHAT DISTRIBUTION +YOU USE AND WHAT ERROR WAS REPORTED. I know this has no effect, but I tried... + +* GUI libraries +----------------------- + +wxWindows/Motif requires the Motif library to be installed on your system. As +an alternative, you may also use the free library "lesstif" which implements +most of the Motif API without the licence restrictions of Motif. + +You can get the newest version of the Lesstif from the lesstif homepage at: + + http://www.lesstif.org + +* Additional libraries +----------------------- + +wxWindows/Motif requires a thread library and X libraries known to work with threads. +This is the case on all commercial Unix-Variants and all Linux-Versions that are +based on glibc 2 except RedHat 5.0 which is broken in many aspects. As of writing +this, these Linux distributions have correct glibc 2 support: + + - RedHat 5.1 + - Debian 2.0 + - Stampede + - DLD 6.0 + - SuSE 6.0 + +You can disable thread support by running + +./configure "--disable-threads" +make +su +make install +ldconfig +exit + +NB: DO NOT COMPILE WXGTK WITH GCC AND THREADS, SINCE ALL PROGRAMS WILL +CRASH UPON START-UP! Just always use egcs and be happy. + +* Building wxGTK on OS/2 +-------------------------- + +Please send comments and question about the OS/2 installation +to Andrea Venturoli and patches to +the wxWindows mailing list. + +You'll need OS/2 Warp (4.00FP#6), X-Free86/2 (3.3.3 or newer), +Lesstif (0.89.1 or newer), emx (0.9d fix 1), flex (2.5.4), +yacc (1.8), unix like shell, e.g. korn shell (5.2.13), +Autoconf (2.13), GNU file utilities (3.6), +GNU text utilities (1.3), GNU shell utilites (1.12), m4 (1.4), +sed (2.05), grep (2.0), Awk (3.0.3), GNU Make (3.76.1). + +Open an OS/2 prompt and switch to the directory above. +First set some global environment variables we need: + +SET CXXFLAGS=-Zmtd -D__ST_MT_ERRNO__ +SET CFLAGS=-Zmtd -D__ST_MT_ERRNO__ +SET OSTYPE=OS2X +SET COMSPEC=sh + +Notice you can choose whatever you want, if you don't like OS2X. + +Now, run autoconf in the main directory and in the samples, demos +and utils subdirectory. This will generate the OS/2 specific +versions of the configure scripts. Now run + configure --with-motif +as described above. + +To verify Lesstif installation, configure will try to compile a +sample program that requires X headers/libraries to be either +available via C_INCLUDE_PATH and LIBRARY_PATH or you need to +explicitly set CFLAGS prior to running configure. + +If you have pthreads library installed, it will be autodetected +and the library will be compiled with thread-support. + +Note that configure assumes your flex will generate files named +"lexyy.c", not "lex.yy.c". If you have a version which does +generate "lex.yy.c", you need to manually change the generated +makefile. + +* Building wxMotif on SGI +-------------------------- + +Using the SGI native compilers, it is recommended that you +also set CFLAGS and CXXFLAGS before running configure. These +should be set to : + +CFLAGS="-mips3 -n32" +CXXFLAGS="-mips3 -n32" + +This is essential if you want to use the resultant binaries +on any other machine than the one it was compiled on. If you +have a 64bit machine (Octane) you should also do this to ensure +you don't accidently build the libraries as 64bit (which is +untested). + +The SGI native compiler support has only been tested on Irix 6.5. + +* Create your configuration +----------------------------- + +Usage: + ./configure options + +If you want to use system's C and C++ compiler, +set environment variables CXX and CC as + + % setenv CC cc + % setenv CXX CC + % ./configure options + +to see all the options please use: + + ./configure --help + +The basic philosophy is that if you want to use different +configurations, like a debug and a release version, +or use the same source tree on different systems, +you have only to change the environment variable OSTYPE. +(Sadly this variable is not set by default on some systems +in some shells - on SGI's for example). So you will have to +set it there. This variable HAS to be set before starting +configure, so that it knows which system it tries to +configure for. + +Configure will complain if the system variable OSTYPE has +not been defined. And Make in some circumstances as well... + + +* General options +------------------- + +Given below are the commands to change the default behaviour, +i.e. if it says "--disable-threads" it means that threads +are enabled by default. + +Many of the confiugre options have been thoroughly tested +in wxWindows snapshot 6, but not yet all (ODBC not). + +You have to add --with-motif on platforms, where Motif is +not the default (on Linux, configure will deafult to GTK). + + --without-gtk Don't use the GIMP ToolKit (GTK) + + --with-motif Use either Motif or Lesstif + Configure will look for both. + +The following options handle the kind of library you want to build. + + --disable-threads Compile without thread support. Threads + support is also required for the + socket code to work. + + --disable-shared Do not create shared libraries. + + --disable-optimise Do not optimise the code. Can + sometimes be useful for debugging + and is required on some architectures + such as Sun with gcc 2.8.X which + would otherwise produce segvs. + + --enable-profile Add profiling info to the object + files. Currently broken, I think. + + --enable-no_rtti Enable compilation without creation of + C++ RTTI information in object files. + This will speed-up compilation and reduce + binary size. + + --enable-no_exceptions Enable compilation without creation of + C++ exception information in object files. + This will speed-up compilation and reduce + binary size. Also fewer crashes during the + actual compilation... + + --enable-no_deps Enable compilation without creation of + dependency information. + + --enable-permissive Enable compilation without creation of + giving erros as soon as you compile with + Solaris ANSI-defying headers... + + --enable-mem_tracing Add built-in memory tracing. + + --enable-dmalloc Use the dmalloc memory debugger. + Read more at www.letters.com/dmalloc/ + + --enable-debug_info Add debug info to object files and + executables for use with debuggers + such as gdb (or its many frontends). + + --enable-debug_flag Define __DEBUG__ and __WXDEBUG__ when + compiling. This enable wxWindows' very + useful internal debugging tricks (such + as automatically reporting illegal calls) + to work. Note that program and library + must be compiled with the same debug + options. + +* Feature Options +------------------- + +Many of the confiugre options have been thoroughly tested +in wxWindows snapshot 6, but not yet all (ODBC not). + +When producing an executable that is linked statically with wxGTK +you'll be surprised at its immense size. This can sometimes be +drastically reduced by removing features from wxWindows that +are not used in your program. The most relevant such features +are + + --without-libpng Disables PNG image format code. + + --without-libjpeg Disables JPEG image format code. + +{ --without-odbc Disables ODBC code. Not yet. } + + --disable-resources Disables the use of *.wxr type + resources. + + --disable-threads Disables threads. Will also + disable sockets. + + --disable-sockets Disables sockets. + + --disable-dnd Disables Drag'n'Drop. + + --disable-clipboard Disables Clipboard. + + --disable-serial Disables object instance serialiasation. + + --disable-streams Disables the wxStream classes. + + --disable-file Disables the wxFile class. + + --disable-textfile Disables the wxTextFile class. + + --disable-intl Disables the internationalisation. + + --disable-validators Disables validators. + + --disable-accel Disables accel. + +Apart from disabling certain features you can very often "strip" +the program of its debugging information resulting in a significant +reduction in size. + +* Compiling +------------- + +The following must be done in the base directory (e.g. ~/wxGTK +or ~/wxWin or whatever) + +Now the makefiles are created (by configure) and you can compile +the library by typing: + + make + +make yourself some coffee, as it will take some time. On an old +386SX possibly two weeks. During compilation, you'll get a few +warning messages depending in your compiler. + +If you want to be more selective, you can change into a specific +directiry and type "make" there. + +Then you may install the library and it's header files under +/usr/local/include/wx and /usr/local/lib respectively. You +have to log in as root (i.e. run "su" and enter the root +password) and type + + make install + +You can remove any traces of wxWindows by typing + + make uninstall + +If you want to save disk space by removing unnecessary +object-files: + + make clean + +in the various directories will do the work for you. + +* Creating a new Project +-------------------------- + +1) The first way uses the installed libraries and header files +automatically using wx-config + +g++ myfoo.cpp `wx-config --libs` `wx-config --cflags` -o myfoo + +Using this way, a make file for the minimal sample would look +like this + +CXX = g++ + +minimal: minimal.o + $(CXX) -o minimal minimal.o `wx-config --libs` + +minimal.o: minimal.cpp mondrian.xpm + $(CXX) `wx-config --cflags` -c minimal.cpp -o minimal.o + +clean: + rm -f *.o minimal + +This is certain to become the standard way unless we decide +to sitch to tmake. + +2) The other way creates a project within the source code +directories of wxWindows. For this endeavour, you'll need +GNU autoconf version 2.14 and add an entry to your Makefile.in +to the bottom of the configure.in script and run autoconf +and configure before you can type make. + +* Further notes by Julian Smart +--------------------------------- + +- You may find the following script useful for compiling wxMotif, + especially if installing from zips (which don't preserve file + permissions). Make this script executable with the command chmod a+x makewxmotif. -------:x-----Cut here-----:x----- @@ -56,30 +470,13 @@ COMPILING USING CONFIGURE # if they're not supported by the target platform, they will be disabled # anyhow # -- Julian Smart - chmod a+x configure config.sub config.guess setup/general/* setup/shared/* - ./configure --with-shared --with-motif --without-gtk --with-debug_flag --with-debug_info --without-threads + chmod a+x configure config.sub config.guess + ./configure --with-shared --with-motif --without-gtk --with-debug_flag --with-debug_info --enable-debug --without-threads --without-sockets --without-odbc make -------:x-----Cut here-----:x----- - This script will build wxMotif using shared libraries. - -- Change directory to a sample e.g. samples/minimal, and type make. - The binary will end up under the Linux (or other appropriate) subdirectory. - -- To build an application outside the wxWindows hierarchy, you can - use `wx-config --cflags` when compiling source files and `wx-config --libs` - when linking, where wx-config is in the wxWindows root directory. - These invocations return the appropriate flags for the compiler. - -- When compiling certain utilities such as Dialog Editor, you may find - that the makefile refers to wx-config as above. Unless you have used - "make install" to install wxWindows, wx-config won't be found, so - either edit the makefile to hard-wire the flags, or place wx-config - where it will be found by the makefile, or add the directory where you have - installed wxWindows to your PATH. - -- If switching between wxMotif and wxGTK, you should remove the - config.cache file manually before running configure again. + This script will build wxMotif using shared libraries. If you want to build + a static wxWindows library, use --disable-shared. COMPILING USING MAKEFILES ========================= @@ -159,9 +556,6 @@ Troubleshooting Other Notes ----------- -- Better installation and makefile systems are - required. A revised configure system is in preparation. - - Debugging mode is switched on by default in the makefiles, but using configure will create a release build of the library by default: it's recommended to use --with-debug_info and --with-debug_flag configure @@ -207,5 +601,5 @@ compiler and the error message(s) to the wxwin-developers mailing list at: wxwin-developers@wx.dent.med.uni-muenchen.de -Julian Smart, February 1999. -julian.smart@ukonline.co.uk +Julian Smart, Robert Roebling and Vadim Zeitlin, November 1999. +