---------------------------------- EiC BUILD INSTRUCTIONS by Ed Breen ---------TABLE-of-CONTENTS--------- 1. INTRODUCTION: 2. INSTALLING EIC FROM THE SOURCE DISTRIBUTION: Step 1 Step 2 Step 3 Step 4 Step 5 Step 6 3 BUILDING A TOY VERSION OF EiC 4. EXPLANATION OF NON-PORTABLE MACROS USED: $(addprefix PREFIX,NAMES...) (from GNU info Make) 5. TROUBLE SHOOTING: 6. PORTING EiC TO OTHER PLATFORMS --END-of-TABLE-of-CONTENTS--------- ------------------------------------ - INTRODUCTION: EiC's distribution plus binaries require approximately 4 Mbytes of disk space. To build EiC, you will need GNU make and gcc 2.6.3 or later. However, if you don't have GNU make then the section on 'explanation of non-portable macros' may help you over come this limitation. ------------------------------------------- - INSTALLING EiC FORM THE SOURCE DISTRIBUTION: There are just six easy steps to installing EiC. Please read all six steps before starting at step 1. -- Step 1 Untar the distribution. It will automatically unpack itself into a subdirectory off the current directory. This subdirectory will be named EiC and will be referred to as the top EiC directory or the HOMEofEiC. If you use GNU tar, then: % tar -xvzf EiC.tar.gz else % gunzip EiC.tar.gz % tar -xvf EiC.tar.gz -- Step 2 If you haven't already done so, then: % cd EiC -- Step 3 This step looks worse than it really is. You shouldn't have to do anything, other than setting the directory where EiC will be installed. In the project parameter file: /EiC/project.params you will need to set EiC's installation directory; this is where the EiC binary will be placed, via: INSTALL_DIR = $(HOME)/bin By default, it points to 'bin', which is assumed to be just off your home directory and within your search path. If you don't have a bin directory, make it or just change the assignment to point to any other directory that is in your search PATH, and that you have write access to. The rest of this step can now be skipped over and only if things fail, after step 4, will you need to refer to the rest of step 3. Now, you will need to: a) set the EiC project parameters, and b) check the appropriate platform parameters are set according to your site. Hopefully, the default settings will do. However, if you are uncertain about what to do, with respect to what the various parameters mean or platform types, then consult the DATA DICTIONARY section in the file: EiC/config/GuideLines.make. Now check the parameter settings in the file: EiC/config/$(PLATFORM)/make.params where $(PLATFORM) is the platform type that you are going to compile EiC for. Check the directory EiC/config for the platforms supported. They are indicated by directories with names starting with '_'; for example, _LINUX, _SOLARIS, _SUNOS, etc. If you find any parameter setting in the platform make.params file that are not to your liking, then you have can override these settings by placing a corresponding parameter in the file: EiC/override.params The main purpose of the override.params file is to allow for any peculiarities that are unique to any particular site. More information on this file can be found in the file itself. -- Step 4 From EiC's top directory type the following command: % config/makeconfig makeconfig will use its default procedures to determine your operating system, and other configuration settings. It will attempt to produce the file: EiC/make.proj that will contain the correct configuration setup for the EiC project Makefiles within your environment. To get more infomation about makeconfig type: % config/makeconfig -h -- Step 5 If makeconfig was successful, then from the EiC top directory, type: % make install % make clean % rehash % cd test % test.sh // run EiC's test procedures You will have to also set the environmental variable HOMEofEiC to point to directory where EiC is installed. See README.BIN for further information on HOMEofEiC. Hopefully everythings goes to plan -- if not, see the section on trouble shooting below. -- Step 6 To make the documentation then % cd EiC/doc % make install - BUILDING A TOY VERSION OF EiC To build a version of the EiC interpreter that does not include EiC's runtime library then change to EiC's src directory % cd EiC/src % make -f makefile.seic % rm *.o This will produce the binary `seic'. It is the starting point for experimenting with EiC. - EXPLANATION OF NON-PORTABLE MACROS USED: -- $(addprefix PREFIX,NAMES...) (from GNU info Make) The argument NAMES is regarded as a series of names, separated by whitespace; PREFIX is used as a unit. The value of PREFIX is prepended to the front of each individual name and the resulting larger names are concatenated with single spaces between them. For example, $(addprefix src/,foo bar) produces the result `src/foo src/bar'. - TROUBLE SHOOTING: If the compiler complains about duplicate definitions of standard C funtions, then make sure you are using gcc 2.6.3 or later, via: % gcc -v If the installation procedure completely fails, then check that make is being initiated correctly in each subdirectly. You may need to set the SHELL variable in the top level make file (../EiC/Makefile): SHELL = /bin/ksh If you don't have a ksh shell, then you may have to do most things by hand: % cd EiC % config/makeconfig % make install // let it fail % cd module/stdClib/src % make headers % cd ../../../src % make headers % cd ../module/stdClib/src % make install % cd ../../../src % make install % cd ../main % make install Check that you aren't installing EiC for a platform it doesn't know about (see porting EiC to other platforms below). If everything compiles, without errors, and your system reports after typing: % eic eic: Command not found Then check your search path and the directory where EiC was installed. Or maybe just enter % rehash Read all of step 3. ------------------------------------------------- - PORTING EiC TO OTHER PLATFORMS This part of the documentation explains how to port EiC to a new platform. It is also assumed that the following steps will be performed on the new platform. The following outlines the steps I took to port EiC to a Dec Alpha. -- Porting the EiC interpreter First get the platform name via `uname'. At the system prompt: % uname OSF1 Therefore, the DEC alpha platform name is: OSF1 Now change to the directory EiC/config and create the appropriate platform directory. % cd EiC/config % mkdir _OSF1 Note the leading underscore. Now pick one of the existing platforms that you feel is compatible with the new platform and copy over its `make.params' file. For example: % cp _LINUX/make.params _OSF1 Now edit the copy of make.params, to reflect to the new OS, in particular change the PLATFORM designation. Next, check for data alignment, pointer size and byte ordering, by compiling and running `alignment' in EiC/config: % gcc alignment.c % a.out #define EIC_LITTLE_ENDIAN 1 {1, 1}, /* char */ {2, 2}, /* short */ {4, 4}, /* int */ {8, 8}, /* long */ {4, 4}, /* float */ {8, 8}, /* double */ {8, 8}, /* pointer */ {0, 1}, /* struct*/ % rm a.out Now you need to inform EiC about this by adding the following structure to the EiC source file `EiC/src/metric.h': /* Dec Alpha */ #ifdef _OSF1 #define EIC_LITTLE_ENDIAN 1 short metric[8][2] = { /* size, alignment pairs */ {1, 1}, /* char */ {2, 2}, /* short */ {4, 4}, /* int */ {8, 8}, /* long */ {4, 4}, /* float */ {8, 8}, /* double */ {8, 8}, /* pointer */ {0, 1}, /* struct*/ }; #endif Now inform the makefile system of the new platform. In the directory EiC type: % config/makeconfig TOP_DIR = /home/edb/compilers/EiC CONFIG_DIR = /home/edb/compilers/EiC/config platform = _OSF1 This completes the porting of the EiC interpeter and the Makefile system to the new platform. Now the fun begins -- we have to port EiC's runtime library. -- Porting the runtime library. Change to the directory EiC/module/stdClib/src and add the appropriate patform directory: mkdir _OSF1 Copy the contents of an already established platform to this directory: cp -r _LINUX/* _OSF1 Now each header file in this directory must be made compatible with the platform header files in `/usr/include'. Also the file "fcntl.h" needs to be addressed. However, you don't have to worry about stdio.h stdlib.h errno.h stdtypes.h limits.h float.h signal.h termdefs.h As these files get automaticly constructed by EiC's build process during installation, by the EiC/config/genstdio.c program. As this document is usually as not as up todate as the gentstdio.c file you should also check it for any other .h files it may now be generating. To do this, just look at the contents of the main() function. To help with this process of generating header files, I used gcc and grep; for example, when inspecting termios.h: gcc -D_POSIX_SOURCE -E termios.h | less