X-Git-Url: https://git.saurik.com/wxWidgets.git/blobdiff_plain/d21c1b56724aac9900ce74cc3e7846551c524c6c..dbe31039f7ee6169d80386fd75a9f03316f8d261:/docs/motif/install.txt?ds=sidebyside diff --git a/docs/motif/install.txt b/docs/motif/install.txt index 984729779a..b8fc8d22fd 100644 --- a/docs/motif/install.txt +++ b/docs/motif/install.txt @@ -1,5 +1,5 @@ -wxWindows 2.5 for Motif installation ------------------------------------- +wxWidgets for Motif installation +-------------------------------- IMPORTANT NOTE: @@ -9,9 +9,9 @@ IMPORTANT NOTE: mailing wx-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 + When sending bug reports tell us what version of wxWidgets you are using (including the beta) and what compiler on what system. One - example: wxMotif 2.5.1, gcc 2.95.4, Redhat 6.1 + example: wxMotif 2.8.1, gcc 2.95.4, Redhat 6.1 First steps ----------- @@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ First steps - Download wxX11-x.y.z.tgz, where x.y.z is the version number. (wxMotif is included in the wxX11 distribution). Download documentation in a preferred format, such as - wxWindows-HTML.zip or wxWindows-PDF.zip. + wxWidgets-HTML.zip or wxWidgets-PDF.zip. - Make a directory such as ~/wx and unarchive the files into this directory. @@ -30,14 +30,14 @@ First steps - It is recommended that you install bison and flex; using yacc and lex may require tweaking of the makefiles. You also need libXpm (see comments in the Notes section below) if you want to have - XPM support in wxWindows (recommended). + XPM support in wxWidgets (recommended). -- You can now use configure to build wxWindows and the samples. +- You can now use configure to build wxWidgets and the samples. Using configure is the only way to build the library. If it doesn't work for you for whatever reason, please report it (together with detailed information about your platform and the (relevant part of) contents of - config.log file) to wx-dev@lists.wxwindows.org. + config.log file) to wx-dev@lists.wxwidgets.org. COMPILING USING CONFIGURE @@ -46,7 +46,7 @@ COMPILING USING CONFIGURE * The simplest case ------------------- -If you compile wxWindows on Linux for the first time and don't like to read +If you compile wxWidgets on Linux for the first time and don't like to read install instructions just do (in the base dir): > ./configure --with-motif @@ -64,7 +64,7 @@ Afterwards you can continue with > ldconfig > exit -If you want to remove wxWindows on Unix you can do this: +If you want to remove wxWidgets on Unix you can do this: > su > make uninstall @@ -74,15 +74,15 @@ If you want to remove wxWindows on Unix you can do this: * The expert case ----------------- -If you want to do some more serious cross-platform programming with wxWindows, +If you want to do some more serious cross-platform programming with wxWidgets, such as for GTK and Motif, you can now build two complete libraries and use them concurrently. For this end, you have to create a directory for each build -of wxWindows - you may also want to create different versions of wxWindows +of wxWidgets - you may also want to create different versions of wxWidgets and test them concurrently. Most typically, this would be a version configured -with --enable-debug 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: +with --enable-debug and one without. + +For building three versions (one GTK, one Motif and a debug version of the GTK +source) you'd do this: mkdir buildmotif cd buildmotif @@ -102,6 +102,9 @@ cd buildgtkd make cd .. +Note that since wxWidgets-2.6.0 you can install all those libraries +concurrently, you just need to pass the appropriate flags when using them. + * The simplest errors --------------------- @@ -126,12 +129,12 @@ g++ myfoo.cpp `wx-config --libs --cxxflags` -o myfoo * General --------- -The Unix variants of wxWindows use GNU configure. If you have problems with +The Unix variants of wxWidgets use GNU configure. If you have problems with your make use GNU make instead. -If you have general problems with installation, see the wxWindows website at +If you have general problems with installation, see the wxWidgets website at - http://www.wxwindows.org/ + http://www.wxwidgets.org/ 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 @@ -142,7 +145,7 @@ but I tried... * GUI libraries --------------- -wxWindows/Motif requires the Motif library to be installed on your system. As +wxWidgets/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. @@ -153,7 +156,7 @@ You can get the newest version of the Lesstif from the lesstif homepage at: * Additional libraries ---------------------- -wxWindows/Motif requires a thread library and X libraries known to work with +wxWidgets/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, virtually all Linux distributions have @@ -173,16 +176,15 @@ exit Please send comments and question about the OS/2 installation to Stefan Neis and patches to -the wxWindows mailing list. +the wxWidgets mailing list. In the following list, the version numbers indicate the configuration that was actually used by myself, newer version should cause no problems and even older ones are expected to work most of the time. You'll need OS/2 Warp (4.51) or eCS(1.0), X-Free86/2 (3.3.6 or newer), -Lesstif (0.92.7 or newer), emx (0.9d fix 4), flex (2.5.4), yacc (1.8) or -bison (1.25), a Unix like shell (pdksh-5.2.14 or ash), Autoconf (2.57), -GNU file utilities (3.13), GNU text utilities (1.19), +Lesstif (0.92.7 or newer), emx (0.9d fix 4), a Unix like shell (pdksh-5.2.14 +or ash), Autoconf (2.57), GNU file utilities (3.13), GNU text utilities (1.19), GNU shell utilites (1.12), m4 (1.4), sed (2.05), grep (2.0), Awk (3.0.3), GNU Make (3.75). @@ -191,15 +193,15 @@ LIBRARY_PATH set up accordingly, however, wxGTK will even work without it. Presence of Posix/2 will be auto-detected. Open an OS/2 prompt and switch to the directory above. -Set MAKESHELL (and depending on your installation also INSTALL, for me -it tends to try to use the system's tcpip\pcomos\install.exe which causes -problems...) to a Unix like shell, e.g. +Set MAKESHELL or MAKE_SHELL (which one is needed depends on the version of +make) to a Unix like shell, e.g. SET MAKESHELL=ash - -Be warned that depending on the precise version of your make, the -variable that needs to be set might be MAKE_SHELL instead of MAKESHELL. If you have a really deficient version of GNU make, it might even be necessary to set SHELL or even COMSPEC to a unix like shell as well. +Depending on your installation you might want to also set INSTALL, for me +it tends to try to use the system's tcpip\pcomos\install.exe which causes +problems, e.g. +SET INSTALL=/install-sh -c Notice that the delivered configure scripts are fully OS/2 aware, so you can simply run @@ -229,6 +231,20 @@ untested). The SGI native compiler support has only been tested on Irix 6.5. +* Building wxMotif on Cygwin +---------------------------- + +The normal build instructions should work fine on Cygwin. The one difference +with Cygwin is that when using the "--enable-shared" configure option (which +is the default) the API is exported explicitly using __declspec(dllexport) +rather than all global symbols being available. + +This shouldn't make a difference using the library and should be a little +more efficient. However if an export attribute has been missed somewhere you +will see linking errors. If this happens then you can work around the +problem by setting LDFLAGS=-Wl,--export-all-symbols. Please also let us know +about it on the wx-dev mailing list. + * Create your configuration --------------------------- @@ -268,7 +284,7 @@ i.e. if it says "--disable-threads" it means that threads are enabled by default. Many of the configure options have been thoroughly tested -in wxWindows snapshot 6, but not yet all (ODBC not). +in wxWidgets 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 default to GTK). @@ -280,19 +296,19 @@ 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. + socket code to work. --disable-shared Do not create shared libraries. - --enable-monolithic Build wxWindows as single library instead - of as several smaller libraries (which is - the default since wxWindows 2.5.0). + --enable-monolithic Build wxWidgets as single library instead + of as several smaller libraries (which is + the default since wxWidgets 2.5.0). --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. + 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. @@ -311,16 +327,16 @@ The following options handle the kind of library you want to build. --enable-no_deps Enable compilation without creation of dependency information. - --enable-permissive Enable compilation without checking for strict - ANSI conformance. Useful to prevent the build - dying with errors as soon as you compile with - Solaris' ANSI-defying headers. - + --enable-permissive Enable compilation without checking for strict + ANSI conformance. Useful to prevent the build + dying with errors 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 Equivalent to --enable-debug_info plus --enable-debug-flag. @@ -329,7 +345,7 @@ The following options handle the kind of library you want to build. such as gdb (or its many frontends). --enable-debug_flag Define __DEBUG__ and __WXDEBUG__ when - compiling. This enable wxWindows' very + compiling. This enable wxWidgets' very useful internal debugging tricks (such as automatically reporting illegal calls) to work. Note that program and library @@ -340,43 +356,43 @@ The following options handle the kind of library you want to build. ----------------- Many of the configure options have been thoroughly tested -in wxWindows snapshot 6, but not yet all (ODBC not). +in wxWidgets 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 +drastically reduced by removing features from wxWidgets 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. - - --without-libtiff Disables TIFF image format code. - - --without-expat Disable XML classes based on Expat parser. - + + --without-libtiff Disables TIFF image format code. + + --without-expat Disable XML classes based on Expat parser. + --disable-threads Disables threads. Will also disable sockets. --disable-sockets Disables sockets. --disable-dnd Disables Drag'n'Drop. - + --disable-clipboard Disables Clipboard. - + --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" @@ -412,7 +428,7 @@ password) and type make install -You can remove any traces of wxWindows by typing +You can remove any traces of wxWidgets by typing make uninstall @@ -448,14 +464,14 @@ clean: This is certain to become the standard way unless we decide to stick to tmake. -If your application uses only some of wxWindows libraries, you can +If your application uses only some of wxWidgets libraries, you can specify required libraries when running wx-config. For example, `wx-config --libs=html,core` will only output link command to link with libraries required by core GUI classes and wxHTML classes. See the manual for more information on the libraries. 2) The other way creates a project within the source code -directories of wxWindows. For this endeavour, you'll need +directories of wxWidgets. 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. @@ -472,7 +488,7 @@ and configure before you can type make. # makewxmotif # Sets permissions (in case we extracted wxMotif from zip files) # and makes wxMotif. - # Call from top-level wxWindows directory. + # Call from top-level wxWidgets directory. # Note that this uses standard (but commonly-used) configure options; # if you're feeling brave, you may wish to compile with threads: # if they're not supported by the target platform, they will be disabled @@ -484,7 +500,7 @@ and configure before you can type make. -------:x-----Cut here-----:x----- This script will build wxMotif using shared libraries. If you want to build - a static wxWindows library, use --disable-shared. + a static wxWidgets library, use --disable-shared. Troubleshooting --------------- @@ -524,7 +540,7 @@ Bug reports Please send bug reports with a description of your environment, compiler and the error message(s) to the wxwin-developers mailing list at: - wx-dev@lists.wxwindows.org + wx-dev@lists.wxwidgets.org Julian Smart, Robert Roebling and Vadim Zeitlin, November 1999.