NufxLib README, updated 2004/03/18 http://www.nulib.com/ See "COPYING-LIB" for distribution restrictions. UNIX ==== Run the "configure" script. Read through "INSTALL" if you haven't used one of these before, especially if you want to use a specific compiler or a particular set of compiler flags. You can disable specific compression methods with "--disable-METHOD" (run "sh ./configure --help" to see the possible options). By default, all methods are enabled except bzip2. Run "make depend" if you have makedepend, and then type "make". This will build the library and all of the programs in the "samples" directory. There are some useful programs in "samples", described in a README.txt file there. In particular, you should run samples/test-basic to verify that things are more or less working. If you want to install the library and header file into standard system locations (usually /usr/local), run "make install". To learn how to specify different locations, read the INSTALL document. There are some flags in "OPT" you may want to use. The "autoconf" default for @CFLAGS@ is "-g -O2". -DNDEBUG Disable assert() calls and extra tests. This will speed things up, but errors won't get caught until later on, making the root cause harder to locate. -DDEBUG_MSGS Enable debug messages. This increases the size of the executable, but shouldn't affect performance. When errors occur, more output is produced. The "debug dump" feature is enabled by this flag. -DDEBUG_VERBOSE (Implicitly sets DEBUG_MSGS.) Spray lots of debugging output. If you want to do benchmarks, use "-O2 -DNDEBUG". The recommended configuration during testing is "-g -O2 -DDEBUG_MSGS", so that verbose debug output is available when errors occur. The flags are stuffed into Version.c, so the application program can examine and display the flags that were used to build the library. BeOS ==== This works just like the UNIX version, but certain defaults have been changed. Running configure without arguments under BeOS is equivalent to: ./configure --prefix=/boot --includedir='${prefix}/develop/headers' --libdir='${exec_prefix}/home/config/lib' --mandir='/tmp' --bindir='${exec_prefix}/home/config/bin' If you're using BeOS/PPC, it will also do: CC=cc CFLAGS='-proc 603 -opt full' Mac OS X ======== This works just like the UNIX version, with the exception that when you link against nufxlib, your project must also link against the Carbon framework. This can be done in ProjectBuilder by using the Add Framework option in the Project menu, or by adding "-framework Carbon" to the gcc command line. You'll see some warnings due to some namespace collisions between nufxlib and Carbon, but everything will work fine. Carbon is used to provide support for file types and resource forks. Win32 ===== If you're using an environment that supports "configure" scripts, such as DJGPP, follow the UNIX instructions. NufxLib has been tested with Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0. To build NufxLib, start up a DOS shell and run vcvars32.bat to set your environment. Run: nmake -f makefile.msc to build with debugging info, or nmake -f makefile.msc nodebug=1 to build optimized. See the makefile for comments about including zlib or libbz2. These need to be enabled at compile time and linked into the sample apps. Once the library has been built, "cd samples" and run the same command there. When it finishes, run "test-basic.exe". If you want to build NufxLib as a DLL, use "makefile.dll" instead. If you're using zlib or libbz2, these will need to be linked into the DLL. The makefile currently assumes that you will want to use zlib.dll. Other Notes =========== All of the source code is now formatted with spaces instead of tabs. If you want to use the library in a multithreaded application, you should define "USE_REENTRANT_CALLS" to tell it to use reentrant versions of certain library calls. This defines _REENTRANT, which causes Solaris to add the appropriate goodies. (Seems to me you'd always want this on, but for some reason Solaris makes you take an extra step, so I'm not going to define it by default.) Legalese ======== NufxLib, a NuFX archive manipulation library. Copyright (C) 2000-2007 by Andy McFadden, All Rights Reserved. See COPYING for license.