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doc_COMPILE_md(3elektra) Elektra doc_COMPILE_md(3elektra)

NAME

doc_COMPILE_md - COMPILE

DEPENDENCIES

For the base system you only need cmake and build-essential (make, gcc, some unix tools).

To build documentation you need doxygen and graphviz.

To build pdf documentation you need pdflatex with


texlive-fonts-recommended
texlive-latex-recommended

For the debian package, please refer to debian/control (in the debian branch).

For the plugins, please refer to the README.md of the respective plugin.

PREPARATION

Elektra is using cmake. Tested are cmake version 2.8.9 and version 3.0.2.

To configure Elektra graphically (with curses) run (.. belongs to command):


mkdir build && cd build && ccmake ..

and press 'c':

All options described here, can also be used with cmake rather then ccmake (.. belongs to the command!):


mkdir build && cd build && cmake -D<OPTION1>=<VAR1> -D<OPTION2>=<VAR2> ..

For information what you can use as OPTION1 and OPTION2 see above. Note to pass '' to VAR if it contains ;. E.g.:


cmake -DPLUGINS="dump;resolver;yajl" ..

Some scripts in the folder of the same name may help you running cmake.

COMPILERS

For supported compilers see the automatic build farm on http://build.libelektra.org:8080/

Additional gcc 4.6 armhf is tested regularly.

Compiler Version Target gcc gcc (Debian 4.7.2-5) 4.7.2 i386 gcc gcc (Debian 4.7.2-5) 4.7.2 amd64 gcc gcc 4.8 amd64 gcc gcc 4.9 amd64 gcc (Debian 4.4.5-8) 4.4.5 amd64 gcc (Debian 4.4.5-8) 4.3 amd64 gcc 4.6 armhf mingw 4.6 i386 clang version 3.5.0-1~exp1 x86_64-pc-linux-gnu icc 14.0.2 20140120 x86_64-pc-linux-gnu

To change the compiler, use


CMAKE_C_COMPILER and CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER.

for example to use gcc-4.3


cmake -DCMAKE_C_COMPILER=gcc-4.3 -DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER=g++-4.3 ..

OPTIONS

Some options, i.e. PLUGINS, BINDINGS and TOOLS are either:

  • a list of elements separated with ; (note that shells typically need ; to be escaped)
  • a special uppercase element that gets replaced by a list of elements, that are:
ALL to include all elements (except elements with unfulfilled dependencies)
NODEP to include all elements without dependencies
DEFAULT to go back to the situation that was there when nothing was changed
elements prefixed with a minus symbol (-) to exclude an element

Examples for this are especially in the subsection PLUGINS below, but they work in the same fashion for BINDINGS and TOOLS.

PLUGINS

Read about available plugins here.

Because the core of elektra is minimal, plugins are needed to actually read and write to configuration files (storage plugins), commit the changes (resolver plugin, also takes care about how the configuration files are named) and also do many other tasks related to configuration.

The default is also the minimal set of plugins you should add:

  • dump is the default storage. If you remove it, make sure you add another one and set KDB_DEFAULT_STORAGE to it.
  • resolver is the default resolver. If you remove it, make sure you add another one and set KDB_DEFAULT_RESOLVER to it.
  • sync is very useful to not lose any data. If you do not want to include it, make sure to set /sw/kdb/current/plugins to a value not containing sync. See kdb-mount(1).

To add all plugins, you can use:


-DPLUGINS=ALL

Note that plugins get dropped when dependencies are not satisfied. To add all plugins except some plugins you can use:


-DPLUGINS="ALL;-plugin1;-plugin2"

E.g. if you want all plugins except the jni plugin you would use:


-DPLUGINS="ALL;-jni"

To add all plugins not having additional dependencies (they need only POSIX), you can use


-DPLUGINS=NODEP

To manually set the default (same as not setting PLUGINS), you can use


-DPLUGINS=DEFAULT

This only states the list of the plugins are the default list and does not mean that a different default is used after Elektra was installed. For this endeavour you need to change:


-DKDB_DEFAULT_RESOLVER=resolver

and


-DKDB_DEFAULT_STORAGE=dump

Alternatively, you can pass the list of plugins you want, e.g.:


-DPLUGINS="resolver;sync;dump"

Some plugins are compile-time configureable. Then you can choose which features are compiled in or out. This is especially important in the bootstrapping phase, because then only the compiled in configuration applies. To compile-time-configure a plugin, you just pass a underscore (_) and flags after the name of the plugin.

Note that the base-plugin itself need to be part of PLUGINS, so that the variants will work.

The resolver even distinguish between 3 different kind of flags:


-DPLUGINS="resolver_baseflags_userflags_systemflags"

Following baseflags are available:

The user flags are (the order matters!):

The system flags are (the order matters!):

  • if a path that begins with / is chosen the system flags are irrelevant and the path is taken as-is.

E.g. one may use:


-DPLUGINS="resolver;resolver_lm_uhpb_b"

TOOLS

Tools are used to add extra functionality to Elektra. The flag used to specify which tools are compiled is -DTOOLS, thus flag works similarly to the -DPLUGINS flag.

To add all tools, you can use::


-DTOOLS=ALL

To add all plugins not having additional dependencies (they need only POSIX), you can use:


-DTOOLS=NODEP

To build only the default tools, you can use:


-DTOOLS=DEFAULT

To specify specific tools you can use, e.g.:


-DTOOLS=qt-gui;kdb

BINDINGS

Bindings are used in the same way as PLUGINS and TOOLS. For example you can use:


-DBINDINGS=ALL

Note that the same languages are sometimes available over GI and SWIG. In this case, the SWIG bindings are preferred. To add all swig bindings (and also cpp), you can use:


-DBINDINGS=SWIG;cpp

The SWIG executable my be specified with:


-DSWIG_EXECUTABLE=...

If this option is not used, cmake will find the first occurrence of swig in your environment's path.

CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE

Debug, Release or RelWithDebInfo See help bar at bottom of ccmake for that option or: http://www.cmake.org/Wiki/CMake_Useful_Variables

ELEKTRA_DEBUG_BUILD and ELEKTRA_VERBOSE_BUILD

Only needed by Elektra developers. Make the library to output logging information. It is not recommended to use these options.

BUILD_DOCUMENTATION

build documentation with doxygen the kdb tool does only have the integrated docu at the moment

CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX

By default all files will installed below /usr/local. Edit that cache entry to change that behaviour. Also called system prefix within the documentation.

If you want to create a package afterwards it is ok to use pathes that you can write to (e.g. CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX /home/markus/bin)

LIB_SUFFIX

Lets you install libraries into architecture specific folder. E.g. for 32/64 bit systems you might install libraries under lib64. Set LIB_SUFFIX to 64 to achieve exactly that. So the system library folder will be CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX/lib64 then.

TARGET_INCLUDE_FOLDER

By default include folders will be installed below CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX/include/elektra This entry let you change the elektra. If the entry is empty, the include files will be installed directly to CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX/include.

TARGET_PLUGIN_FOLDER

Similar to above, but with the plugins. Default is: CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX/lib${LIB_SUFFIX}/elektra It can be also left empty to install plugins next to other libraries.

GTEST_ROOT

Specifies the root of the GoogleTest sources, to be used for some of the tests. A CMakeLists.txt inside GTEST_ROOT will be searched as way to detect a valid GoogleTest source directory. If it is '', an internal version of gtest will be used.

It is recommended that you browse through all of the options. Afterwards press c again (maybe multiple times until all variables are resolved) and then g to generate. Finally press e to exit.

BUILDING

NO IDE

To build the source use:

make

You can pass: -j for parallel builds VERBOSE=1 to see the invocations of the compiler

CodeBlocks

You can build Elektra using Code::Blocks under Gentoo:

Precondition: Make sure you have a compiler, xml2 (for kdb tool) and xsl (see later) installed. cmake configure will help you with that, it will make sure you don't forget something essential.

For Most Linux system all you have to do is open up a console and


mkdir build
cd build
cmake .. -G 'CodeBlocks - Unix Makefiles'
make package

Note 1: You can use other editor if you like just type cmake at the console to get a list of option you can pass to cmake as long as well as a list of what code editor project cmake can create.

Note 2: For Unix if you have nCurses install you can run ccmake to set important option after running cmake like to enable debug symbol.

Note 3: for Gentoo is recommend to emerge sys-apps/lsb-release to name the package right even thou not required.

Sun May 29 2016 Version 0.8.14