Difference between revisions of "Compile ECWolf on Linux"
Line 167: | Line 167: | ||
touch ecwolf && \ | touch ecwolf && \ | ||
echo '#!/bin/bash' >> ecwolf && \ | echo '#!/bin/bash' >> ecwolf && \ | ||
+ | echo >> ecwolf && \ | ||
echo '/usr/games/ecwolf/ecwolf "$@"' >> ecwolf && \ | echo '/usr/games/ecwolf/ecwolf "$@"' >> ecwolf && \ | ||
echo 'exit $?' >> ecwolf && \ | echo 'exit $?' >> ecwolf && \ |
Revision as of 17:43, 7 April 2014
This guide will demonstrate how to compile the Mercurial version of ECWolf on Linux.
Dependencies
The following programs/libraries are used by ECWolf. The versions listed below are known to work, however other versions may work.
In addition to the above, the following are optional dependencies.
Mercurial is also needed to checkout a copy of the latest source.
Install the following dependencies as superuser:
Debian & Ubuntu
sudo apt-get install cmake g++ libsdl1.2-dev libsdl-mixer1.2-dev \ zlib1g-dev libbz2-dev mercurial make libjpeg-dev libgtk2.0-dev
Fedora
yum install cmake gcc-c++ SDL-devel SDL_mixer-devel zlib-devel \ bzip2-devel mercurial make libjpeg-turbo-devel gtk2-devel
OpenSUSE
zypper install cmake gcc-c++ libSDL-devel libSDL_mixer-devel \ zlib-devel libbz2-devel mercurial make libjpeg-devel gtk2-devel
Mageia
if [ "$(uname -m)" = "x86_64" ]; then a="64" else a="" fi && \ urpmi cmake gcc-c++ lib"$a"SDL-devel lib"$a"SDL_mixer-devel \ lib"$a"zlib-devel lib"$a"bzip2-devel mercurial make \ lib"$a"jpeg-devel lib"$a"gtk+2.0-devel lib"$a"cairo-devel
Arch Linux
pacman -S --needed cmake gcc sdl sdl_mixer zlib bzip2 mercurial make libjpeg-turbo gtk2
Gentoo
emerge -avn dev-util/cmake sys-devel/gcc media-libs/libsdl media-libs/sdl-mixer \ sys-libs/zlib app-arch/bzip2 dev-vcs/mercurial sys-devel/make media-libs/libjpeg-turbo \ x11-libs/gtk+
PCLinuxOS
if [ "$(uname -m)" = "x86_64" ]; then a="64" else a="" fi && \ apt-get install cmake gcc-c++ lib"$a"SDL-devel lib"$a"SDL_mixer1.2-devel \ zlib1-devel lib"$a"bzip2-devel mercurial make lib"$a"jpeg62-devel \ lib"$a"gtk+2.0_0-devel
Do the following steps as normal user.
Make ecwolf_build directory
mkdir -pv $HOME/ecwolf_build
Retrieving the Source
Use Mercurial to retrieve the latest version of the source.
cd $HOME/ecwolf_build hg clone https://bitbucket.org/Blzut3/ecwolf
Compiling
It is recommended that you create a build directory in the newly created ecwolf directory.
cd ecwolf mkdir build cd build
Run CMake to generate a Makefile. Assuming there were no errors, you should be able to run make to compile.
If you are going to recompile, it is recommended to run make clean before the following.
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release -DGPL=ON .. make
An ecwolf binary should be produced.
./ecwolf
Current release version
If you want to compile the current release version, run the following:
cd $HOME/ecwolf_build/ecwolf && \ hg update -cr "max(tagged())"
and compile.
After compiling the current release version, run the following:
cd $HOME/ecwolf_build/ecwolf && \ hg update default
Backup ECWolf
Follow this step if you want or manually copy (backup) ecwolf and ecwolf.pk3.
Make and name a directory with the corresponding ECWolf version/revision and copy ecwolf and ecwolf.pk3 to it:
cd $HOME/ecwolf_build && \ BACKUPECWOLF="$(sed -n 's/.*#define DOTVERSIONSTR_NOREV "\(.*\)".*/\1/p' \ $HOME/ecwolf_build/ecwolf/src/version.h)\ -r$(sed -n 's/.*#define SVN_REVISION_STRING "\(.*\)".*/\1/p' \ $HOME/ecwolf_build/ecwolf/src/svnrevision.h)" && \ mkdir -pv "$BACKUPECWOLF" && \ cp -v ecwolf/build/{ecwolf,ecwolf.pk3} "$BACKUPECWOLF"
Backup ECWolf (Optional)
Make and name a directory with the current year, month, day, hour and minute and copy ecwolf and ecwolf.pk3 to it:
cd $HOME/ecwolf_build && \ BACKUPECW="$(date +%Y%m%d%H%M)" && \ mkdir -pv "$BACKUPECW" && \ cp -v ecwolf/build/{ecwolf,ecwolf.pk3} "$BACKUPECW"
If you did "Backup ECWolf" or "(Optional)", the previous files should be located at:
- /home/<your username>/ecwolf_build/
Update ECWolf
When you wish to update ECWolf, copy and paste the following:
cd $HOME/ecwolf_build/ecwolf && \ hg pull ; hg update
When the update finish, go to Compiling.
Install ECWolf
The following steps contain commands that require to be run as superuser with the sudo command.
If you want to install ECWolf, do the following:
Make /usr/games/ecwolf directory:
sudo mkdir -pv /usr/games/ecwolf
Copy ecwolf and ecwolf.pk3 to /usr/games/ecwolf:
sudo cp -v /home/$USER/ecwolf_build/ecwolf/build/{ecwolf,ecwolf.pk3} /usr/games/ecwolf
Make ecwolf script, add executable permission and copy it to /usr/bin:
cd /tmp && \ touch ecwolf && \ echo '#!/bin/bash' >> ecwolf && \ echo >> ecwolf && \ echo '/usr/games/ecwolf/ecwolf "$@"' >> ecwolf && \ echo 'exit $?' >> ecwolf && \ chmod 755 ecwolf && \ sudo cp -v ecwolf /usr/bin && \ rm -fv ecwolf
Now from a terminal you should be able to execute ecwolf from any user account.
Remove ECWolf
To remove the previous installation steps:
Remove /usr/games/ecwolf directory and all its files:
cd /usr/games && \ sudo rm -rfv ecwolf
Remove ecwolf script:
cd /usr/bin && \ sudo rm -fv ecwolf
Debugging
Prerequisite:
In most cases it is good idea to generate a back trace when ECWolf crashes. To make a debug build of ecwolf simply replace the cmake command with the following.
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug make
You should now be able to use gdb to generate a back trace.
gdb ecwolf
You probably want to log the output, so lets output to a file ecwolfdebug.log.
set logging on ecwolfdebug.log
GDB has it's own command prompt. Use "run" to start ecwolf and use "bt" to get the back trace after a crash.
(gdb) run (gdb) bt
To exit GDB's command prompt, use "quit", "q" or Ctrl-D.
(gdb) quit
Build Options
Options | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
GPL=ON | Switch ECWolf's default original non-commercial license to GNU GPL. OPL emulator is changed from MAME's to the one from Dosbox. | cmake -DGPL=ON .. |
Types | Description | Example |
---|---|---|
Debug | Debug information, -O1 optimization. | cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug .. |
Release | No debug information, -O3 optimization. | cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release .. |
RelWithDebInfo | Debug information, -O3 optimization. Useful for finding optimization bugs that only show up in Release. | cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=RelWithDebInfo .. |
MinSizeRel | Similar to Release but with less optimizations in order to save space. | cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=MinSizeRel .. |