Update the build instructions

This commit is contained in:
Olivier Teulière 2012-11-29 18:05:10 +01:00
parent ca41e4c0d0
commit 460e9ecfb9

35
INSTALL
View file

@ -32,22 +32,22 @@ Note that the OS-specific instructions may contain hints on how to install them
--> Used for saving/loading games
You can use any XML back-end supported by Arabica (like expat, or libxml2)
- libconfig (optional): http://www.hyperrealm.com/libconfig/
- libconfig++ (optional): http://www.hyperrealm.com/libconfig/
--> Used for saving/loading preferences
- Qt (optional, but recommended): http://qt.nokia.com/
- Qt (optional, but strongly recommended): http://qt.nokia.com/
--> Used for the graphical interface (see below)
- libncursesw (optional): http://www.gnu.org/software/ncurses/
--> Used for the ncurses interface (see below)
There are in fact several interfaces to Eliot:
- one in text mode: mostly useful to debug Eliot
- one using the ncursesw library: nice and almost complete, but not really
graphical
- a Qt interface: the best interface to use, it supports all the features.
This one is enabled by default if Qt development files are detected, but
you can force it with --enable-qt
- one in text mode: mostly useful to debug Eliot
- one using the ncursesw library: nice and almost complete, but not really
graphical
These interfaces can be enabled or disabled at configuration time. Example:
./configure --disable-text --enable-ncurses --enable-qt
@ -57,17 +57,24 @@ These interfaces can be enabled or disabled at configuration time. Example:
2) Linux/Unix build
===================
* Install the dependencies
On Debian-based systems (like Ubuntu), the following command should install
the needed dependencies (you may need to adjust the version numbers):
sudo apt-get install libboost-dev libqt4-dev libconfig++-dev libncursesw5-dev libexpat-dev
On RPM-based systems, the command should be the following (as root):
yum install boost-devel qt-devel expat-devel libconfig-devel
sudo apt-get install libboost-dev libqt4-core libqt4-gui libconfig++8-dev libncursesw5-dev
* Download and build libarabica (unless it is packaged for your distribution):
a) Download the latest release (see link above) and extract the archive
b) Build with the following line:
./configure --enable-static --disable-shared --with-parser=expat && make
c) Install it, as root:
make install
In addition, you need to download and build libarabica (this is straight-forward).
To build Eliot, you only have to run the following command:
* Build Eliot, with the following command:
./configure && make
Then, as root:
* Install it, as root:
make install
@ -102,12 +109,11 @@ Here are the steps for the cross-compilation:
- configure with the following command:
export INST=`pwd`/extras/contrib/inst && \
PKG_CONFIG_PATH="${INST}/lib/pkgconfig:${PKG_CONFIG_PATH}" \
CPPFLAGS=-I${INST}/include LDFLAGS=-L${INST}/lib \
CC=i586-mingw32msvc-gcc CXX=i586-mingw32msvc-g++ \
CPPFLAGS=-I${INST}/include LDFLAGS=-L${INST}/lib CXX=i586-mingw32msvc-g++ \
./configure --host=i586-mingw32msvc --build=i386-linux \
--with-boost=${INST} --with-expat=${INST}
- to compile, run 'make', possibly followed with 'make install'
- to compile, run 'make'
- run 'make package-win32-zip' to get everything packed up in a nice .zip
@ -128,9 +134,6 @@ Here are the steps for the cross-compilation:
LIBS="-lxml2" \
./configure --enable-qt --disable-text
* You may need to remove the moc files manually:
rm qt/*.moc.cpp
* To compile, run 'make'
* Then, to get a ready to use .dmg file, run 'make package-macosx-dmg'