Mercurial > hg > orthanc
view INSTALL @ 325:71d30b9ce801
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author | Sebastien Jodogne <s.jodogne@gmail.com> |
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date | Tue, 08 Jan 2013 09:54:22 +0100 |
parents | 238134081136 |
children | 1da6ec6038f5 |
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Orthanc - A Lightweight, RESTful DICOM Server ============================================= Dependencies ------------ 1) CMake: Orthanc uses CMake (http://www.cmake.org/) to automate its building process. 2) Python: Some code is autogenerated through Python (http://www.python.org/). 3) Mercurial: To use the cutting edge code, a Mercurial client must be installed (http://mercurial.selenic.com/). We recommand TortoiseHg. W) 7-Zip: For the native build under Windows, the 7-Zip tool is used to uncompress the third-party packages (http://www.7-zip.org/). You thus have to download and install CMake, Python, Mercurial and possibly 7-Zip first. The path to their executable must be in the "PATH" environment variable. The other third party dependencies are automatically downloaded by the CMake scripts. The downloaded packages are stored in the "ThirdPartyDownloads" directory. Building Orthanc at a glance ---------------------------- To build Orthanc, you must: 1) Download the source code (either using Mercurial, or through the released versions). For the examples below, we assume the source directory is "~/Orthanc". 2) Create a build directory. For the examples below, we assume the build directory is "~/OrthancBuild". Native Linux Compilation ------------------------ To build binaries with debug information: # cd ~/OrthancBuild # cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ~/Orthanc # make # make doc To build a release version: # cd ~/OrthancBuild # cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ~/Orthanc # make # make doc Under Linux, you have the possibility to dynamically link Orthanc against the shared libraries of your system, provided their version is recent enough. This greatly speeds up the compilation: # cd ~/OrthancBuild # cmake -DSTATIC_BUILD=OFF -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ~/Orthanc # make Cross-Compilation for Windows under Linux ----------------------------------------- To cross-compile Windows binaries under Linux using MinGW, please use the following command: # cd ~/OrthancBuild # cmake -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=~/Orthanc/Resources/MinGWToolchain.cmake -DSTANDALONE_BUILD=ON -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ~/Orthanc # make Native Windows build with MinGW (VERY SLOW) ------------------------------------------- # cd [...]\OrthancBuild # cmake -G "MinGW Makefiles" -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug [...]\Orthanc # mingw32-make Native Windows build with Microsoft Visual Studio 2005 ------------------------------------------------------ # cd [...]\OrthancBuild # cmake -DSTANDALONE_BUILD=ON -G "Visual Studio 8 2005" [...]\Orthanc Then open the "[...]/OrthancBuild/Orthanc.sln" with Visual Studio. NOTES: * More recent versions of Visual Studio should also work. * You will have to install the Platform SDK (version 6 or above) for Visual Studio 2005: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Windows_SDK. Read the CMake FAQ: http://goo.gl/By90B Debian/Ubuntu specific ---------------------- When dynamically linking against the system libraries, you have to manually add the "wrap" and "oflog" libraries at the configuration time (because of a packaging error in "libdcmtk"): # cd ~/OrthancBuild # cmake "-DDCMTK_LIBRARIES=wrap;oflog" -DSTATIC_BUILD=OFF -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ~/Orthanc # make Using ccache ------------ Under Linux, you have the opportunity to use "ccache" to dramatically decrease the compilation time when rebuilding Orthanc. This is especially useful for developers. Under Debian/Ubuntu, you would use: # CC="ccache gcc" CXX="ccache g++" cmake "-DDCMTK_LIBRARIES=wrap;oflog" \ -DSTATIC_BUILD=OFF -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ~/Orthanc