Mercurial > hg > orthanc
view LinuxCompilation.txt @ 5734:9741e5897e9a
fix unit tests
author | Alain Mazy <am@orthanc.team> |
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date | Fri, 26 Jul 2024 20:47:26 +0200 |
parents | 59e3b6f8c5be |
children |
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This file is a complement to "INSTALL", which contains instructions that are specific to GNU/Linux. Static linking for GNU/Linux ============================ The most simple way of building Orthanc under GNU/Linux consists in statically linking against all the third-party dependencies. In this case, the system-wide libraries will not be used. The build tool (CMake) will download the sources of all the required packages and automatically compile them. This process should work on any GNU/Linux distribution, provided that a C/C++ compiler ("build-essential" in Debian-based systems), the Python interpreter, CMake, the "unzip" system tool, and the development package for libuuid ("uuid-dev" in Debian) are installed. We now make the assumption that Orthanc source code is placed in the folder "~/Orthanc" and that the binaries will be compiled to "~/Orthanc/Build". To build binaries with debug information: # cd ./Build # cmake -DSTATIC_BUILD=ON -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ../OrthancServer/ # make # make doc To build a release version: # cd ./Build # cmake -DSTATIC_BUILD=ON -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ../OrthancServer/ # make # make doc Note 1- When the "STATIC_BUILD" option is set to "ON", the build tool will not ask you the permission to download packages from the Internet. Note 2- If the development package of libuuid was not installed when first invoking cmake, you will have to manually remove the build directory ("rm -rf ~/Orthanc/Build") after installing this package, then run cmake again. Note 3- To build the documentation, you will have to install doxygen. Use system-wide libraries under GNU/Linux ========================================= Under GNU/Linux, by default, Orthanc links against the shared libraries of your system (the "STATIC_BUILD" option is set to "OFF"). This greatly speeds up the compilation. This is also required when building packages for GNU/Linux distributions. Because using system libraries is the default behavior, you just have to use: # cd ./Build # cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ../OrthancServer # make Note that to build the documentation, you will have to install doxygen. However, on some GNU/Linux distributions, it is still required to download and static link against some third-party dependencies, e.g. when the system-wide library is not shipped or is outdated. Because of difference in the packaging of the various GNU/Linux distribution, it is also sometimes required to fine-tune some options. You will find below build instructions for specific GNU/Linux distributions. Distributions tagged by "SUPPORTED" are tested by Sébastien Jodogne. Distributions tagged by "CONTRIBUTED" come from Orthanc users. SUPPORTED - Debian Jessie/Sid ----------------------------- # sudo apt-get install build-essential unzip cmake mercurial patch \ uuid-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev liblua5.1-0-dev \ libgtest-dev libpng-dev libjpeg-dev \ libsqlite3-dev libssl-dev zlib1g-dev libdcmtk2-dev \ libboost-all-dev libwrap0-dev libjsoncpp-dev libpugixml-dev # cd ./Build # cmake -DALLOW_DOWNLOADS=ON \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_CIVETWEB=OFF \ -DUSE_GOOGLE_TEST_DEBIAN_PACKAGE=ON \ -DDCMTK_LIBRARIES=dcmjpls \ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \ ../OrthancServer/ # make Note: Have also a look at the official package: http://anonscm.debian.org/viewvc/debian-med/trunk/packages/orthanc/trunk/debian/ SUPPORTED - Ubuntu 14.04 LTS ---------------------------- # sudo apt-get install build-essential unzip cmake mercurial patch \ uuid-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev \ libgtest-dev libpng-dev libsqlite3-dev libssl-dev libjpeg-dev \ zlib1g-dev libdcmtk2-dev libboost-all-dev libwrap0-dev \ libcharls-dev libjsoncpp-dev libpugixml-dev # cd ./Build # cmake -DALLOW_DOWNLOADS=ON \ -DUSE_GOOGLE_TEST_DEBIAN_PACKAGE=ON \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_BOOST=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_CIVETWEB=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_DCMTK=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_JSONCPP=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_LUA=OFF \ -DCIVETWEB_OPENSSL_API=1.0 \ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \ ../OrthancServer/ # make SUPPORTED - Ubuntu 16.04 LTS ---------------------------- # sudo apt-get install build-essential unzip cmake mercurial patch \ uuid-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev liblua5.3-dev \ libgtest-dev libpng-dev libsqlite3-dev libssl-dev libjpeg-dev \ zlib1g-dev libdcmtk-dev libboost-all-dev libwrap0-dev \ libcharls-dev libjsoncpp-dev libpugixml-dev tzdata # cd ./Build # cmake -DALLOW_DOWNLOADS=ON \ -DUSE_GOOGLE_TEST_DEBIAN_PACKAGE=ON \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_CIVETWEB=OFF \ -DCIVETWEB_OPENSSL_API=1.0 \ -DDCMTK_LIBRARIES=dcmjpls \ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \ ../OrthancServer/ # make NB: Instructions to use clang and ninja: # sudo apt-get install ninja-build # cd ./Build # CC=/usr/bin/clang CXX=/usr/bin/clang++ cmake -G Ninja \ -DALLOW_DOWNLOADS=ON \ -DUSE_GOOGLE_TEST_DEBIAN_PACKAGE=ON \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_CIVETWEB=OFF \ -DDCMTK_LIBRARIES=dcmjpls \ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \ ../OrthancServer/ # ninja SUPPORTED - Ubuntu 18.04 LTS ---------------------------- # sudo apt-get install build-essential unzip cmake mercurial patch \ uuid-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev liblua5.3-dev \ libgtest-dev libpng-dev libsqlite3-dev libssl-dev libjpeg-dev \ zlib1g-dev libdcmtk-dev libboost-all-dev libwrap0-dev \ libcharls-dev libjsoncpp-dev libpugixml-dev locales protobuf-compiler # cd ./Build # cmake -DALLOW_DOWNLOADS=ON \ -DUSE_GOOGLE_TEST_DEBIAN_PACKAGE=ON \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_CIVETWEB=OFF \ -DDCMTK_LIBRARIES=dcmjpls \ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \ ../OrthancServer/ # make NB: A suitable environment for locales can be setup as follows: # echo "en_US.UTF-8 UTF-8" > /etc/locale.gen # locale-gen SUPPORTED - Fedora 20-22 ------------------------ # sudo yum install unzip make automake gcc gcc-c++ python cmake \ boost-devel curl-devel dcmtk-devel \ gtest-devel libpng-devel libsqlite3x-devel libuuid-devel jpeg-devel \ mongoose-devel openssl-devel jsoncpp-devel lua-devel pugixml-devel You will also have to install "gflags-devel" on Fedora 21&22: # sudo yum install gflags-devel # cd ./Build # cmake "-DDCMTK_LIBRARIES=CharLS" \ -DCIVETWEB_OPENSSL_API=1.0 \ -DENABLE_CIVETWEB=OFF \ -DSYSTEM_MONGOOSE_USE_CALLBACKS=OFF \ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \ ../OrthancServer/ # make Note: Have also a look at the official package: http://pkgs.fedoraproject.org/cgit/orthanc.git/tree/?h=f18 SUPPORTED - FreeBSD 10.1 ------------------------ # pkg install jsoncpp pugixml lua51 curl googletest dcmtk cmake jpeg \ e2fsprogs-libuuid boost-libs sqlite3 python libiconv # cd ./Build # cmake -DALLOW_DOWNLOADS=ON \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_CIVETWEB=OFF \ -DDCMTK_LIBRARIES="dcmdsig;charls;dcmjpls" \ -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release \ ../OrthancServer/ # make Other GNU/Linux distributions? ------------------------------ Don't hesitate to send us your build instructions (by a mail to s.jodogne@orthanc-labs.com)! The file "./Resources/OldBuildInstructions.txt" contains build instructions that once worked for older versions of Orthanc or older GNU/Linux distributions, but are not tested anymore. Even if they may not work anymore as such, they can serve as a basis. You can find build instructions for Orthanc up to 0.7.0 on the following Wiki page: https://orthanc.uclouvain.be/book/faq/compiling-old.html These instructions will not work as such beyond Orthanc 0.7.0, but they might give indications. Additional information ---------------------- * It has been reported that distributions coming with Boost >= 1.70.0 might need the option "-DBoost_NO_BOOST_CMAKE=ON" to be added to the "cmake" command line. https://groups.google.com/d/msg/orthanc-users/nXq2qOndw9c/0PGnaOqiAgAJ * Starting with Orthanc 1.10.0, if you use a distribution with an old version of gcc (typically gcc 4.8 on CentOS), you might have to add the option "-DCMAKE_CXX_FLAGS=-std=c++11" when invoking the "cmake" command line. This flag was previously automatically added, but this feature was removed according to the following discussion: https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=1000222 Using ccache ============ Under GNU/Linux, you also have the opportunity to use "ccache" to dramatically decrease the compilation time when rebuilding Orthanc. This is especially useful for developers. To this end, you would use: # CC="ccache gcc" CXX="ccache g++" cmake ../OrthancServer/ [Other Options]