| This document contains instructions how to build the FreeType library on |
| non-Unix systems with the help of GNU Make. Note that if you are |
| running Cygwin or MSys in Windows, you should follow the instructions in |
| the file INSTALL.UNX instead. |
| |
| |
| FreeType 2 includes a powerful and flexible build system that allows |
| you to easily compile it on a great variety of platforms from the |
| command line. To do so, just follow these simple instructions: |
| |
| 1. Install GNU Make |
| ------------------- |
| |
| Because GNU Make is the only Make tool supported to compile |
| FreeType 2, you should install it on your machine. |
| |
| The FreeType 2 build system relies on many features special to GNU |
| Make -- trying to build the library with any other Make tool will |
| *fail*. |
| |
| NEARLY ALL OTHER MAKE TOOLS WILL FAIL, INCLUDING "BSD MAKE", SO |
| REALLY INSTALL A RECENT VERSION OF GNU MAKE ON YOUR SYSTEM! |
| |
| Note that make++, a make tool written in Perl, supports enough |
| features of GNU make to compile FreeType. See |
| http://makepp.sourceforge.net for more information. |
| |
| Make sure that you are invoking GNU Make from the command line, by |
| typing something like: |
| |
| make -v |
| |
| to display its version number. |
| |
| VERSION 3.78.1 OR NEWER IS NEEDED! |
| |
| |
| 2. Invoke 'make' |
| ---------------- |
| |
| Go to the root directory of FreeType 2, then simply invoke GNU Make |
| from the command line. This will launch the FreeType 2 host |
| platform detection routines. A summary will be displayed, for |
| example, on Win32: |
| |
| |
| ============================================================== |
| FreeType build system -- automatic system detection |
| |
| The following settings are used: |
| |
| platform win32 |
| compiler gcc |
| configuration directory ./builds/win32 |
| configuration rules ./builds/win32/w32-gcc.mk |
| |
| If this does not correspond to your system or settings please |
| remove the file 'config.mk' from this directory then read the |
| INSTALL file for help. |
| |
| Otherwise, simply type 'make' again to build the library. |
| ============================================================= |
| |
| |
| If the detected settings correspond to your platform and compiler, |
| skip to step 5. Note that if your platform is completely alien to |
| the build system, the detected platform will be 'ansi'. |
| |
| |
| 3. Configure the build system for a different compiler |
| ------------------------------------------------------ |
| |
| If the build system correctly detected your platform, but you want |
| to use a different compiler than the one specified in the summary |
| (for most platforms, gcc is the defaut compiler), invoke GNU Make |
| with |
| |
| make setup <compiler> |
| |
| Examples: |
| |
| to use Visual C++ on Win32, type: "make setup visualc" |
| to use Borland C++ on Win32, type "make setup bcc32" |
| to use Watcom C++ on Win32, type "make setup watcom" |
| to use Intel C++ on Win32, type "make setup intelc" |
| to use LCC-Win32 on Win32, type: "make setup lcc" |
| to use Watcom C++ on OS/2, type "make setup watcom" |
| to use VisualAge C++ on OS/2, type "make setup visualage" |
| |
| The <compiler> name to use is platform-dependent. The list of |
| available compilers for your system is available in the file |
| `builds/<system>/detect.mk' |
| |
| If you are satisfied by the new configuration summary, skip to |
| step 5. |
| |
| |
| 4. Configure the build system for an unknown platform/compiler |
| -------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The auto-detection/setup phase of the build system copies a file to |
| the current directory under the name `config.mk'. |
| |
| For example, on OS/2+gcc, it would simply copy |
| `builds/os2/os2-gcc.mk' to `./config.mk'. |
| |
| If for some reason your platform isn't correctly detected, copy |
| manually the configuration sub-makefile to `./config.mk' and go to |
| step 5. |
| |
| Note that this file is a sub-Makefile used to specify Make variables |
| for compiler and linker invocation during the build. You can easily |
| create your own version from one of the existing configuration |
| files, then copy it to the current directory under the name |
| `./config.mk'. |
| |
| |
| 5. Build the library |
| -------------------- |
| |
| The auto-detection/setup phase should have copied a file in the |
| current directory, called `./config.mk'. This file contains |
| definitions of various Make variables used to invoke the compiler |
| and linker during the build. |
| |
| To launch the build, simply invoke GNU Make again: The top Makefile |
| will detect the configuration file and run the build with it. |
| |
| |
| Final note |
| |
| The build system builds a statically linked library of the font |
| engine in the "objs" directory. It does _not_ support the build of |
| DLLs on Windows and OS/2. If you need these, you have to either use |
| a IDE-specific project file, or follow the instructions in |
| "INSTALL.ANY" to create your own Makefiles. |
| |
| |
| --- end of INSTALL.GNU --- |