README
author ali <ali@juiblex.co.uk>
Fri Jan 27 23:59:51 2012 +0000 (2012-01-27)
changeset 8 cf332d440466
parent 5 f600b0d1fc5d
child 10 f28ad4577863
permissions -rw-r--r--
Add a testcase for embedded LFs
     1                                    bookloupe
     2                                    =========
     3 
     4 General installation instructions can be found in INSTALL. The following
     5 aim to give a quick overview and some help for specific systems. Documentation
     6 for bookloupe itself can be found in doc/bookloupe.txt and for the test
     7 framework in doc/loupe-test.txt.
     8 
     9 Linux
    10 -----
    11 
    12 You should be able to use the standard:
    13 
    14 % ./configure
    15 % make
    16 % sudo make install
    17 
    18 If you get an error about no package 'glib-2.0' found, then you need to
    19 install the development package for glib2. Under Fedora, RHEL and friends
    20 that would be:
    21 
    22 % sudo yum install gcc pkgconfig glib2-devel
    23 
    24 Under Debian, Ubuntu and friends that would be:
    25 
    26 % sudo apt-get install gcc pkgconfig glib2-devel
    27 
    28 Microsoft Windows
    29 -----------------
    30 
    31 It should be possible to use MSYS (http://www.mingw.org/wiki/MSYS) to build
    32 on a Windows machine. You'll need a copy of the development package for
    33 glib and its dependencies from http://www.gtk.org/download/win32.php.
    34 
    35 It's much easier to build using a cross-compiler from Linux, if you have
    36 access to such a system. Under Fedora, RHEL and friends you can do this
    37 with:
    38 
    39 % sudo yum install mingw32-gcc pkgconfig mingw32-glib2-static \
    40   mingw32-gettext-static mingw32-iconv-static
    41 % ./configure --host=i686-w64-mingw32 --disable-shared \
    42   --bindir=/bookloupe --datadir=/
    43 % make
    44 % mkdir build
    45 % make install DESTDIR=`pwd`/build
    46 
    47 The contents of the build/bookloupe directory can then be copied to a
    48 Microsoft Windows machine.
    49 
    50 Depending on the version of mingw32-gcc you use, you may need to specify a
    51 different host type. If you're not sure look and see what the cross-compiler
    52 is called (eg., i686-pc-mingw32-gcc) and use the prefix as the host type.
    53 
    54 Mac
    55 ---
    56 
    57 I think this should be quite similar to Linux, doing something like this:
    58 
    59 % sudo port install gcc pkgconfig glib2-devel
    60 % ./configure
    61 % make
    62 % sudo make install
    63 
    64 It may also be possible to use fink instead of macports.