Mercurial > hg > octave-nkf
view etc/README.MinGW @ 20830:b65888ec820e draft default tip gccjit
dmalcom gcc jit import
author | Stefan Mahr <dac922@gmx.de> |
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date | Fri, 27 Feb 2015 16:59:36 +0100 |
parents | 446c46af4b42 |
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1. General Users ================ A MInGW bundle is available from sourceforge. http://octave.sourceforge.net/index.html 2. Developers ============= The process for building Octave from source is as follows. * Install development tools and compiler * Install or compile dependencies of Octave * Download Octave source * Configure and compile source We strongly encourage experienced users to build Octave from the testing and development snapshots to try the latest features of Octave. A good tutorial on building Octave for version 3.2 is available from http://octave.svn.sourceforge.net/viewvc/octave/trunk/octave-forge/admin/Windows/mingw32/HOWTO.txt Additional information beyond the tutorial is summarized below. 2.1 Development tools and compiler ---------------------- Msys + MinGW development Tools The Msys + MinGW development Tools are required to build Octave from source. The latest version of the Msys system is 1.0.16. For MinGW, search and use the most recent version available. Note: The Howto.txt file describing the development tools is rather old. The latest GCC (GNU Complier Collection) for MinGW is gcc-4.5.0. Earlier versions are not recommended for building Octave 3.4.xx. The latest Msys, MinGW, and GCC tools can be downloaded from http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw/files/ (Compiling for 64-bit binaries requires mingw-64 toolkits. This has not been tested.) 2.2 Dependencies ---------------------- External program dependencies * gnuplot (you can build this with the shell script mentioned in Howto.txt) * MikTeX * ghostscript * pstoedit (required for printing using FLTK (OpenGL) graphics) * fig2dev (Optional; better quality for FLTK printing in some file formats) * sed * less The tools below are required for building the development sources from the Mercurial archive, but not for simply building Octave from a snapshot tar.gz file. * Mercurial * git * automake * autoconf Library dependencies Please read Howto.txt carefully on how to build them. The Howto.txt is old so some revisions will be required when using GCC-4.5.0 2.3 Download Octave source ---------------------- The source for testing snapshots can be downloaded from the official Octave web site. http://www.octave.org/download.html The very latest development code is also available via anonymous access to a read-only Mercurial archive. The method of download is described on the web site. You will also need to install gnulib as another dependency. Please visit http://www.gnu.org/software/gnulib/ and download sources using git. 2.4 Configure and compile source ---------------------- Building from source can be carried out using the script described in Howto.txt. When using GCC-4.5.0, remove flags for shared libstdc++ because a shared build is already the default. When running './configure', you must add '--enable-float-truncate' option. Please see the following thread for more information: http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.comp.gnu.octave.bugs/12361/focus=12404 To build development sources from the Mercurial repository you must run bootstrap before running configure and make. This requires that automake and autoconf tools be installed. Tatsuro MATSUOKA tmacchant@yahoo.co.jp Benjamin Lindner bjmldn@gmail.com Last updated: Sat Jan 22 17:29:12 PST 2011