Mercurial > hg > orthanc
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author | Sebastien Jodogne <s.jodogne@gmail.com> |
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date | Tue, 12 Apr 2016 19:36:24 +0200 |
parents | 0b8e62bd9c48 |
children | e39a2657f1c6 |
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This file is a complement to "INSTALL", which contains instructions that are specific to Linux. Static linking for Linux ======================== The most simple way of building Orthanc under 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 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 "~/OrthancBuild". To build binaries with debug information: # cd ~/OrthancBuild # cmake -DSTATIC_BUILD=ON -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ~/Orthanc # make # make doc To build a release version: # cd ~/OrthancBuild # cmake -DSTATIC_BUILD=ON -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release ~/Orthanc # 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 ~/OrthancBuild") after installing this package, then run cmake again. Note 3- To build the documentation, you will have to install doxyen. Use system-wide libraries under Linux ===================================== Under 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 Linux distributions. Because using system libraries is the default behavior, you just have to use: # cd ~/OrthancBuild # cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ~/Orthanc # make Note that to build the documentation, you will have to install doxyen. However, on some 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 Linux distribution, it is also sometimes required to fine-tune some options. You will find below build instructions for specific 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 \ 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 # cmake -DALLOW_DOWNLOADS=ON \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_MONGOOSE=OFF \ -DUSE_GTEST_DEBIAN_SOURCE_PACKAGE=ON \ -DDCMTK_LIBRARIES=dcmjpls \ ~/Orthanc Note: Have also a look at the official package: http://anonscm.debian.org/viewvc/debian-med/trunk/packages/orthanc/trunk/debian/ SUPPORTED - Ubuntu 12.04.5 LTS ------------------------------ # sudo apt-get install build-essential unzip cmake mercurial \ uuid-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev liblua5.1-0-dev \ libgtest-dev libpng-dev libsqlite3-dev libssl-dev libjpeg-dev \ zlib1g-dev libdcmtk2-dev libboost1.48-all-dev libwrap0-dev \ libcharls-dev # cmake "-DDCMTK_LIBRARIES=boost_locale;CharLS;dcmjpls;wrap;oflog" \ -DALLOW_DOWNLOADS=ON \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_MONGOOSE=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_JSONCPP=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_GOOGLE_LOG=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_PUGIXML=OFF \ -DUSE_GTEST_DEBIAN_SOURCE_PACKAGE=ON \ ~/Orthanc SUPPORTED - Ubuntu 14.04 LTS ---------------------------- # sudo apt-get install build-essential unzip cmake mercurial \ uuid-dev libcurl4-openssl-dev liblua5.1-0-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 # cmake -DALLOW_DOWNLOADS=ON \ -DUSE_GTEST_DEBIAN_SOURCE_PACKAGE=ON \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_MONGOOSE=OFF \ -DDCMTK_LIBRARIES=dcmjpls \ ~/Orthanc 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 # cmake "-DDCMTK_LIBRARIES=CharLS" \ -DSYSTEM_MONGOOSE_USE_CALLBACKS=OFF \ ~/Orthanc 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 # cmake -DALLOW_DOWNLOADS=ON \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_MONGOOSE=OFF \ -DDCMTK_LIBRARIES="dcmdsig;charls;dcmjpls" \ ~/Orthanc SUPPORTED - CentOS 6 -------------------- # yum install unzip make automake gcc gcc-c++ python cmake curl-devel \ libpng-devel sqlite-devel libuuid-devel openssl-devel \ lua-devel mercurial patch tar # cmake -DALLOW_DOWNLOADS=ON \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_JSONCPP=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_MONGOOSE=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_PUGIXML=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_SQLITE=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_BOOST=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_DCMTK=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_GOOGLE_TEST=OFF \ -DUSE_SYSTEM_LIBJPEG=OFF \ ~/Orthanc Other Linux distributions? -------------------------- Please send us your build instructions (by a mail to s.jodogne@gmail.com)! You can find build instructions for Orthanc up to 0.7.0 on the following Wiki page: https://code.google.com/p/orthanc/wiki/LinuxCompilationUpTo070 These instructions will not work as such beyond Orthanc 0.7.0, but they might give indications. Using ccache ============ Under 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 ~/Orthanc [Other Options]