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Overview

Obtaining software directly from the source code is a common procedure on Unix computers, and generally involves the following three steps:

  • Configuring the Makefile : [./configure]
  • Compiling the code : [make]
  • Installing the executable : [make install]

The challenge of cross-platform is simplified by using GNU's AutoTools

AutoTool : The GNU Build System, also known as the Autotools, is a suite of programming tools designed to assist in making source code packages portable to many Unix-like systems. Autotools consists of the GNU utility programs Autoconf, Automake, and Libtool.

Configuration Files

  • Makefile.am
  • configure.ac
  • Makefile.in
  • Makefile

How do they work?

 configure.ac        Makefile.am
      |                  |
 [Autoconf]           [Automake]   
      |                  |
configure script     Makefile.in
      \                  /
       \________________/
               |
         config.status
               |
           Makefile
               |
            [make]
               |
         (Executable)
       
  • Source

  • Autoconf generates a configure script based on the contents of a configure.ac file which characterizes a particular body of source code.

  • The configure script, when run, scans the build environment and generates a subordinate config.status script which, in turn, converts other input files and most commonly Makefile.in into output files (Makefile)

  • Automake helps to create portable Makefiles, which are in turn processed with the make utility.

  • It takes its input as Makefile.am (programmer-defined file : so that they can write the make commands in developer friendly manner), and turns it into Makefile.in.

  • Finally the make program uses Makefile to generate executable programs from source code.

Implementation

  • Create configure.ac file
  • Create Makefile.am file
  • run command aclocal
    • first we need to generate m4 environment for autotools to use
  • run command autoconf
    • this command will generate configure script.
  • run command automake --add-missing
    • this command will generate Makefile.in file.
  • The end user doesn’t need to see our autotools setup, so we can distribute the configure script and Makefile.in without all of the files we used to generate them.
  • run command ./configure : to Generate Makefile from Makefile.in
  • run command make distcheck : Use Makefile to build and test a tarball to distribute

So on Maintainer's system:

aclocal # Set up an m4 environment
autoconf # Generate configure from configure.ac
automake --add-missing # Generate Makefile.in from Makefile.am
./configure # Generate Makefile from Makefile.in
make distcheck # Use Makefile to build and test a tarball to distribute

On the user's system:

./configure # Generate Makefile from Makefile.in
make # Use Makefile to build the program
make install # Use Makefile to install the program

Git Submodule

Initialize Submodule

To add a submodule

git submodule add -f -b master [email protected]:Vishwas1/democpplib.git lib/helloworld

First, we need to initialize the submodule(s). We can do that with the following command:

git submodule init

Then we need to run the update in order to pull down the files.

git submodule update

To remove a submodule?

  • Remove the submodule’s entry in the .gitmodules file.
  • Remove the submodule’s entry in the .git/config
  • Remove the path created for the submodule by using the command below.

git rm --cached lib/helloworld

To get the HEAD of each submodule

git submodule foreach 'echo $path git rev-parse HEAD'

Generating lib

  • cd lib/helloworld
  • ./autogen.sh
  • ./configure
  • make

http://inti.sourceforge.net/tutorial/libinti/autotoolsproject.html

  • static vs dynamic library.
  • static vs dynamic linking.

Using BOOST library in project

  • The Boost C++ Libraries are a collection of modern libraries based on the C++ standard.

references

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Boilerplate for cpp project with autotools

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