Prerequisites ============= - GNU g++ >= 4.5.0 http://gcc.gnu.org/ - libcutl >= 1.9.0 http://www.codesynthesis.com/projects/libcutl/ ODB requires the GCC compiler (g++) to be built with plugin support. If you are building GCC yourself, you can enable plugin support with the --enable-plugin configure option. If you are using a pre-packaged GCC (for example, as part of your distribution), then you can verify that GCC was built with plugin support by running g++ with the -v option and then making sure --enable-plugin is present in the output. Note also that for pre-packaged GCC, plugin headers are usually distributed in a separate package, normally called gcc-plugin-dev or similar. You will need to install this package in order to build ODB. For Debian/Ubuntu, this package is called gcc-X.Y-plugin-dev, for example: apt-get install gcc-4.7-plugin-dev For RedHat/Fedora, this package is called gcc-plugin-devel, for example: yum install gcc-plugin-devel Building on UNIX ================ The following build instructions are for the Linux/UNIX/Mac OS X operating systems. The standard autotools-based build system is used on these platforms. After unpacking the source code archive, change to the odb package directory (referred to as odb/ from now on) and run the configure script: ./configure To see the available configuration options run configure with --help: ./configure --help The configure script expects the libcutl headers and libraries to be installed in a directory where the C++ compiler and linker will search for them by default (normally /usr and /usr/local). If libcutl is installed in another directory, you can use the CPPFLAGS and LDFLAGS configure variables to specify its location, for example: ./configure CPPFLAGS=-I/opt/libcutl/include LDFLAGS=-L/opt/libcutl/lib If libcutl is not installed and you would like to use its build directory instead, you can use the --with-libcutl configure option to specify its location, for example: ./configure --with-libcutl=/tmp/libcutl As another example, the following configure command uses the specified GNU g++ compiler and compiles with optimization and without debug information: ./configure CXX=g++-4.5 CXXFLAGS=-O3 Once configuration is complete, run make to build odb: make Once the build is completed successfully, you can install odb using the install target (you may need to do this step as root depending on the installation directory): make install Building on Windows =================== Building odb on Windows involves a custom build procedure. Consider using the pre-compiled binary distribution of odb for Windows or write to odb-users@codesynthesis.com for more information.