Annotation of gforth/INSTALL, revision 1.31
1.7 anton 1: You need gcc version 2.0 or later to compile gforth.
1.1 anton 2:
1.5 anton 3: First, type
1.3 anton 4:
1.8 anton 5: ./configure
1.1 anton 6:
1.21 anton 7: (see Section Configuration Options below for details).
8:
9: After configuration, type
10:
11: make
12:
13: Now you can check whether your shiny new Forth system works. Say
14:
1.30 anton 15: make check
1.21 anton 16:
17: You can run some benchmarks with
18:
19: make bench
20:
21: and compare them with the results in Benchres and in the manual.
22:
23: If everything is all right, you may want to install gforth. Type
24:
25: make install
26:
1.29 crook 27: You have to make an entry in the info directory file manually (see
28: Installing Info Files, below).
1.21 anton 29:
30: For paper documentation, print gforth.ps (a Postscript file (300dpi
31: fonts, i.e., it works, but does not produce best quality on better
32: printers)), or say
33:
34: make gforth.dvi
35:
36: and print the resulting file gforth.dvi. You can also get the
37: documentation in HTML format by typing
38:
39: make html
40:
1.28 anton 41: If you prefer plain ASCII documentation, you can
42:
43: make doc/gforth.txt
44:
45: or just concatenate the files gforth.info-* ('cat gforth.info-*' under
46: Unix); the result of the latter option is a little worse.
47:
48: You can find binary distributions, documentation in HTML and plain
49: text format and information on known installation problems at
50: http://www.complang.tuwien.ac.at/forth/gforth/.
1.21 anton 51:
52:
53: Configuration Options
54:
1.23 anton 55: If you use GNU make, you can build in a directory different from the
56: source directory by changing to the build directory and invoking
57: configure thus:
1.21 anton 58:
59: $srcdir/configure
60:
1.23 anton 61: where $srcdir is the source directory. (Note that we tested this only
1.21 anton 62: for installation; i.e., if you want to hack the Gforth sources, you
63: should probably build in the source directory).
64:
1.4 pazsan 65: configure has the following useful parameters:
1.9 anton 66: --prefix=PREFIX install architecture-independent files in PREFIX
67: [default: /usr/local]
68: --exec-prefix=PREFIX install architecture-dependent files in PREFIX
69: [default: same as prefix]
1.8 anton 70: --enable-force-reg Use explicit register declarations if they appear in
71: the machine.h file. This can cause a good speedup,
72: but also incorrect code with some gcc versions on
73: some processors (default disabled).
74: --enable-direct-threaded Force direct threading. This may not work on
75: some machines and may cause slowdown on others.
76: (default processor-dependent)
77: --enable-indirect-threaded Force indirect threading. This can cause a
78: slowdown on some machines.
79: (default processor-dependent)
80: --with-debug specifies option -g to compile with debug info (default)
1.22 anton 81: --without-debug omits the -g switch and creates smaller images on
82: machines where strip has problems with gcc style
83: debugging informations.
1.8 anton 84: --help: tells you about other parameters.
1.1 anton 85:
1.21 anton 86: The file Benchres shows which combination of the -enable options we
87: tried gave the best results for various machines.
88:
1.9 anton 89: If you don't like the defaults for the installation directories, you
90: should override them already during configure. E.g., if you want to
91: install in the /gnu hierarchy instead of in the default /usr/local
1.15 anton 92: hierarchy, say
1.5 anton 93:
1.9 anton 94: ./configure --prefix=/gnu
1.2 anton 95:
1.17 anton 96: Moreover, if your GCC is not called gcc (but, e.g., gcc-2.7.1), you
97: should say so during configuration. E.g.:
1.16 pazsan 98:
1.17 anton 99: env CC=gcc-2.7.1 ./configure
1.16 pazsan 100:
1.17 anton 101: You can also pass additional options to gcc in this way, e.g., if you
102: want to generate an a.out executable under Linux with gcc-2.7.0:
1.15 anton 103:
1.17 anton 104: env "CC=gcc -b i486-linuxaout -V 2.7.0" ./configure
1.15 anton 105:
1.22 anton 106: You can change the sizes of the various areas used in the default
107: image `gforth.fi' by passing the appropriate Gforth command line
108: options in the FORTHSIZES environment variable:
109:
1.26 anton 110: env "FORTHSIZES=--dictionary-size=256k --data-stack-size=16k --fp-stack-size=15872b --return-stack-size=15k --locals-stack-size=14848b" ./configure
1.22 anton 111:
112: The line above reaffirms the default sizes. Note that the locals
113: stack area is also used as input buffer stack.
1.17 anton 114:
1.24 anton 115: If C's "long long" do not work properly on your machine (i.e., if the
116: tests involving double-cell numbers fail), you can build Gforth such
117: that it does not use "long long":
118:
119: env ac_cv_sizeof_long_long=0 ./configure
120:
121:
1.31 ! anton 122: Cross-Installation
1.24 anton 123:
1.31 ! anton 124: You need a cross-compilation toolchain for your target including gcc
! 125: (2.0 or later).
! 126:
! 127: The first step in cross-installation is the cross-configuration. A
! 128: few tests made by the configure script do not work in a
1.24 anton 129: cross-compilation situation. You have to provide the results of these
130: tests by hand. E.g., if you compile for a 386 architecture processor:
131:
1.31 ! anton 132: env ac_cv_sizeof_char_p=4 ac_cv_sizeof_char=1 ac_cv_sizeof_short=2 ac_cv_sizeof_int=4 ac_cv_sizeof_long=4 ac_cv_sizeof_long_long=8 ac_cv_c_bigendian=no ./configure
1.24 anton 133:
134: The ac_cv_sizeof_... variables give the sizes of various C types;
135: ac_cv_sizeof_char_p is the same as "sizeof(char*)" in C code. The
136: ac_cv_c_bigendian variable gives the byte order.
1.31 ! anton 137:
! 138: After the cross-configuration you type
! 139:
! 140: make gforths
! 141:
! 142: This produces the gforth engines for the target.
! 143:
! 144: The next step is to transfer everything to the target; on the target,
! 145: you do
! 146:
! 147: make
! 148:
! 149: to complete building gforth. If you do not have a make on the target,
! 150: run
! 151:
! 152: make -n
! 153:
! 154: on the host; manually execute on the target the last command output by
! 155: "make -n" (GFORTHD=...); the other commands output by "make -n" are
! 156: not necessary unless you have changed the Gforth sources. You can
! 157: then check and benchmark Gforth with
! 158:
! 159: make check
! 160: make bench
! 161:
! 162: or equivalent. Finally, perform
! 163:
! 164: make install
! 165:
! 166: or the equivalent commands on the target.
1.24 anton 167:
168:
1.17 anton 169: Preloading installation-specific code
170:
171: If you want to have some installation-specific files loaded when
172: Gforth starts (e.g., an assembler for your processor), put commands
1.28 anton 173: for loading them into /usr/local/share/gforth/site-forth/siteinit.fs
1.17 anton 174: (if the commands work for all architectures) or
1.28 anton 175: /usr/local/lib/gforth/site-forth/siteinit.fs (for
1.17 anton 176: architecture-specific commands);
1.28 anton 177: /usr/local/lib/gforth/site-forth/siteinit.fs takes precedence if both
1.17 anton 178: files are present (unless you change the search path). The file names
179: given above are the defaults; if you have changed the prefix, you have
180: to replace "/usr/local" in these names with your prefix.
181:
182: By default, the installation procedure creates an empty
1.28 anton 183: /usr/local/share/gforth/site-forth/siteinit.fs if there is no such
1.17 anton 184: file.
185:
1.28 anton 186: If you change the siteinit.fs file, you should run "make install"
1.17 anton 187: again for the changes to take effect (Actually, the part of "make
188: install" starting with "rm gforth.fi" is sufficient).
189:
190:
1.12 anton 191: Multiple Versions and Deinstallation
192:
193: Several versions of Gforth can be installed and used at the same
194: time. Version `foo' can be invoked with `gforth-foo'. We recommend to
195: keep the old version for some time after a new one has been installed.
1.10 anton 196:
1.12 anton 197: You can deinstall this version of Gforth with 'make uninstall' and
198: version foo with 'make uninstall VERSION=foo'. 'make uninstall' also
199: tells you how to uninstall Gforth completely.
1.29 crook 200:
201:
202: Installing Info Files
203:
204: Info is the GNU project on-line documentation format. You can read
205: info files either from within Emacs (Ctrl-h i) or using the
206: stand-alone Info reader, 'info'.
207:
208: If you use the default install root of '/usr/local' then the info
209: files will be installed in '/usr/local/info'.
210:
211: Many GNU/Linux distributions are set up to put all of their
212: documentation in '/usr/info', in which case you might have to do a
213: couple of things to get your environment set up to accommodate files
214: in both areas:
215:
216: 1. Add an INFOPATH environment variable. The easiest place to do
217: this is '/etc/profile', right next to PATH and MANPATH:
218:
219: INFOPATH=/usr/local/info:/usr/info
220:
221: 2. Create a file called 'dir' in 'usr/local/info'. Use the file
222: '/usr/info/dir' as a template. You can add the line for gforth
223: manually, or use '/sbin/install-info' (man install-info for details).
224:
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