Difference between revisions of "Linux"
(→Compiling the PLplot examples) |
m (Step (11) was missing ">&") |
||
Line 17: | Line 17: | ||
# make VERBOSE=1 >& make.out | # make VERBOSE=1 >& make.out | ||
# less make.out | # less make.out | ||
− | # make VERBOSE=1 install make_install.out | + | # make VERBOSE=1 install >& make_install.out |
# less make_install.out | # less make_install.out | ||
Revision as of 14:11, 16 May 2010
Contents
Compiling plplot on GNU-Linux
Prerequisites
List of Debian/Ubuntu packages provides a list of packages needed to configure and compile PLplot successfully. The Debian/Ubuntu package names should be a rough guide for the names of required packages for other Linux distributions.
Quick recipe for building and installing PLplot from a tarball
This quick method should be relevant for most Linux users. Assume the path /home/yourname/plplot exists and is empty, and assume you have put the latest released PLplot version string into the "PL_VERSION" environment variable (as of this writing do that using "export PL_VERSION=5.9.5"). Then do the following steps:
- cd /home/yourname/plplot
- rm -rf plplot-$PL_VERSION build_dir install_directory
- tar -zxf plplot-$PL_VERSION.tar.gz
- mkdir build_directory
- cd build_directory
- cmake \ -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:PATH=/home/yourname/plplot/install_directory \ ../plplot-$PL_VERSION >& cmake.out
- less cmake.out
- make VERBOSE=1 >& make.out
- less make.out
- make VERBOSE=1 install >& make_install.out
- less make_install.out
Step (1) changes your directory to the correct starting directory; step(2) removes the stale source, build, and install trees (note be careful with rm -rf since that is a powerful and potentially dangerous command); step (3) unpacks the tarball into the plplot-$PL_VERSION subdirectory of your starting directory; step (4) creates a new subdirectory where the configuration and build steps will be done; step (5) changes to that subdirectory; step (6) configures PLplot using the cmake application and captures the resulting output in the cmake.out file. (n.b. the "../plplot-$PL_VERSION" refers to the top of the source directory tree); step (7) lets you look at that captured output for any error or warning messages; step (8) builds PLplot and captures the resulting output in the make.out file; step (9) lets you look at that captured output for any error or warning messages; step (10) installs PLplot in the /home/yourname/plplot/install_directory specified in step (6) as the install prefix and captures the resulting output in the make_install.out file; and step (11) lets you look at that captured output for any error or warning messages.
To summarize, the various directories are:
- the source-tree with top-level directory /home/yourname/plplot/plplot-PL_VERSION
- the build-tree directory, /home/yourname/plplot/build_directory
- the install-tree directory, /home/yourname/plplot/install_directory
For more details consult the generic Unix instructions for our build system.
Other options
The Python and Java interfaces to PLplot are generated with SWIG so if you want those interfaces you must install SWIG. If SWIG is installed and cmake cannot find it, then you must help cmake out by specifying the directory where swig.swg (an important SWIG file) is located using the CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH environment variable. For example, one of our users reported success with finding SWIG and generating our Python and Java interfaces for Arch Linux by specifying
CMAKE_INCLUDE_PATH=/usr/share/swig/1.3.27
Normally, though, such extraordinary measures are not required on Linux.
Compiling the PLplot examples
Following the previous quick recipe for building and installing PLplot, here is how to compile the examples and test them:
- cd \ /home/yourname/plplot/install_directory/share/plplot$PL_VERSION/examples
- make test_noninteractive >& make_test.out
- less make_test.out
The test takes a significant amount of time and a large number of plot files (pdf, png, xfig,...) that consume a couple of gigabytes of disk space are generated. For more details consult Testing PLplot.