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glibmm

This is glibmm, a C++ API for parts of glib that are useful for C++.

General information

glibmm-2.4 and glibmm-2.68 are different parallel-installable ABIs. This file describes glibmm-2.68.

Web site

Download location

Reference documentation

Tarballs contain reference documentation. In tarballs generated with Meson, see the untracked/docs/reference/html directory.

Discussion on GNOME's discourse forum

Git repository

Bugs can be reported to

Patches can be submitted to

Building

Whenever possible, you should use the official binary packages approved by the supplier of your operating system, such as your Linux distribution.

Building on Windows

See README.win32

Building from a release tarball

Extract the tarball and go to the extracted directory:

  $ tar xf glibmm-@[email protected]
  $ cd glibmm-@GLIBMM_VERSION@

It's easiest to build with Meson, if the tarball was made with Meson, and to build with Autotools, if the tarball was made with Autotools. Then you don't have to use maintainer-mode.

How do you know how the tarball was made? If it was made with Meson, it contains files in untracked/glib/glibmm/, untracked/gio/giomm/ and other subdirectories of untracked/.

Building from a tarball with Meson

Don't call the builddir 'build'. There is a directory called 'build' with files used by Autotools.

  $ meson setup --prefix /some_directory --libdir lib your_builddir .
  $ cd your_builddir

If the tarball was made with Autotools, you must enable maintainer-mode:

  $ meson configure -Dmaintainer-mode=true

Then, regardless of how the tarball was made:

  $ ninja
  $ ninja install

You can run the tests like so:

  $ ninja test

Building from a tarball with Autotools

If the tarball was made with Autotools:

  $ ./configure --prefix=/some_directory

If the tarball was made with Meson, you must enable maintainer-mode:

  $ ./autogen.sh --prefix=/some_directory

Then, regardless of how the tarball was made:

  $ make
  $ make install

You can build the examples and tests, and run the tests, like so:

  $ make check

Building from git

Building from git can be difficult so you should prefer building from a release tarball unless you need to work on the glibmm code itself.

jhbuild can be a good help

Building from git with Meson

Maintainer-mode is enabled by default when you build from a git clone.

Don't call the builddir 'build'. There is a directory called 'build' with files used by Autotools.

  $ meson setup --prefix /some_directory --libdir lib your_builddir .
  $ cd your_builddir
  $ ninja
  $ ninja install

You can run the tests like so:

  $ ninja test

You can create a tarball like so:

  $ ninja dist

Building from git with Autotools

  $ ./autogen.sh --prefix=/some_directory
  $ make
  $ make install

You can build the examples and tests, and run the tests, like so:

  $ make check

You can create a tarball like so:

  $ make distcheck

or

  $ make dist