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Revision as of 05:12, 13 September 2006 by Smekal (Talk | contribs) ((Optional) set environment variables to help CMake find system components that are installed in non-standard locations)

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This is the (un-)official Wiki for PLplot. It should provide additional information to complement the PLplot documentation.

Building PLplot

Our traditional Autotools Build System (ABS) may be used to configure the PLplot build on Unix platforms. Alternatively, our new CMake Build System (CBS) may be used to configure the PLplot build on both Unix and Windows platforms.

Building PLplot with our traditional ABS

Building PLplot with our new CBS

Our CMake Build System (CBS) is a build-system paradigm shift compared to our traditional Autotools Build System (ABS) so it is important to consult the CMake documentation to get the most out of our CBS. That documentation is quite thorough but tends to be a bit scattered so we have collected what we think our the best general CMake documentation links for your convenience.

After consulting that documentation, install the appropriate package of CMake for your system platform. Note, you must use at least version 2.4.3 of CMake for your PLplot configuration.

There are also several CMake options for PLplot which can be set for cmake to personalize your build.

Unix

(Optional) set environment variables to help CMake find system components that are installed in non-standard locations

Here is one particular example (which must be executed before the cmake invocation discussed below).

export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/home/software/libLASi/install/lib/pkgconfig
export CMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH=/home/software/autotools/install/lib:/home/software/cgmlib/cd1.3
export CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH=/home/software/autotools/install/include:/home/software/cgmlib/cd1.3

In these special cases, PKG_CONFIG_PATH helps CMake to use the pkg-config command for a non-standard libLASi install location; CMAKE_LIBRARY_PATH helps CMake to find libltdl and libcd in non-standard install locations; and CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH helps CMake to find the headers for libltdl and libcd in non-standard install locations.

(Optional) set environment variables to specify the compilers and compiler flags

Here is one particular example (which must be executed before the cmake invocation discussed below).

export CC="gcc -O2"
export CXX="g++ -O2"
export FC="g77 -O2"

Note a better option is to set CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE to one of Debug, Release, RelWithDebInfo, or MinSizeRel. If you don't set this variable and don't set the environment variables above, then by default no compiler options (i.e., no optimization and no debugging symbols) are used for gcc-related compilers for our CBS which makes for very fast builds, but slow execution.

cmake invocation
mkdir build_dir
cd build_dir
cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/my/prefix -DCMAKE_VERBOSE_MAKEFILE=ON  ../plplot_cmake >& cmake.out

Check the cmake.out file for any configuration issues.

Everything can be controlled with -D options to the cmake command. In this case we have specified a particular install prefix "/my/prefix" and verbose make results (essential if you want to see the exact commands used for the build). You can also specify options using the convenient ccmake command-line interface to cmake. That interface also presents annotations for the options.

Note an empty build directory called build_dir is used to insure a clean start, and ../plplot_cmake is a freshly checked out source tree (which remains clean because you never actually create any files in that directory tree). To start fresh, simply execute "cd build_dir; rm -rf *". Of course, this is an extremely dangerous command (since it removes everything in the current directory and all subdirectories), but you should be okay so long as you cd to the correct directory before executing the "rm" command.

Post-CMake processing

The PLplot build and install follows the cmake invocation. The installed tree can be tested with the PLplot install-tree test for a large variety of PLplot device drivers. In addition, build-tree tests may be done with the "ctest" command. Note, these tests are limited to just the psc (colour postscript) device and can only be performed if cmake is invoked with the -DBUILD_TEST=ON option (which roughly doubles the build time because all the examples must be built).

Specifics for various Unix platforms

Windows

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