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                   INSTALL GRASS from source code
		   ------------------------------

Please read *all* text below.

Table of contents
PREREQUISITES
(A) SOURCE CODE DISTRIBUTION
(B) COMPILATION
(C) COMPILATION NOTES for 64bit platforms
(D) INSTALLATION (first time)
(E) INSTALLATION ON MACOSX
(F) RUNNING GRASS
(G) UPDATE OF SOURCE CODE (SVN or SVN snapshot only)
(H) COMPILING INDIVIDUAL MODULES - OWN MODULES
(I) CODE OPTIMIZATION
(J) DEBUGGING OPTIONS
(K) LARGE FILE SUPPORT (for raster maps)
(L) SUPPORT
(M) GRASS PROGRAMMER'S MANUAL
(N) CONTRIBUTING CODE AND PATCHES
(O) DRAFT TUTORIAL


PREREQUISITES

The install order matters. GRASS needs at least two libraries
which have to be installed before installing/compiling GRASS:
For links to the software, see ./REQUIREMENTS.html in this
directory:

Installation order:
	1. PROJ4
	2. GDAL-OGR  (compiled without GRASS support)
        3. optionally: databases such as PostgreSQL, MySQL, sqlite
	4. GRASS
        5. optionally: GDAL-OGR-GRASS plugin

(A) SOURCE CODE DISTRIBUTION

GRASS source code is currently distributed in 2 forms:

1) Officially released source code (e.g. grass-7.0.0.tar.gz or later)

  The Full source code version contains all the GRASS source code
  required for compilation. It is distributed as one file (*.tar.gz
  package) and the version is composed of 3 numbers, e.g. 7.0.0, 7.0.1
  etc.

2) SVN or SVN Snapshots of source code (SVN or SVN snapshot)

  This version of the source code can be acquired either from the SVN
  repository (http://svn.osgeo.org/grass/) or as a snapshot
  (*.tar.gz package) of that SVN repository. The SVN snapshot name
  contains the date when the snapshot was created (checked out from
  the SVN repository), e.g. grass-7.0.svn_src_snapshot_2008_10_19.tar.gz
  Further instructions at http://trac.osgeo.org/grass/wiki/DownloadSource


(B) COMPILATION

IMPORTANT: All unix distributions are different.
           For Solaris, see hint below.

The command,

   ./configure --help 

explains the options used to disable the compilation of non-mandatory
GRASS modules. See REQUIREMENTS.html for details.
  
First step of the compilation (-g for debugging, or -O2 for optimization):

    CFLAGS="-g -Wall" ./configure


Explanation of make targets: 

    make install       - installs the binary

    make bindist       - make a binary package with install script

    make srcdist       - make a source package for distribution
    make srclibsdist   - make a source package for library distribution

    make libs          - make libraries only

    make clean         - delete all files created by 'make' 
    make distclean     - 'make clean' + delete all files created by './configure'
    make libsclean     - clean libraries compiled by 'make libs'

    make htmldocs      - generate programmer's documentation as HTML files
    make packagehtmldocs - package programmer's documentation in HTML
    make pdfdocs       - generate programmer's documentation as PDF files


Next step is the compilation itself:

    make       

Detailed Wiki notes for various operating systems:
http://grasswiki.osgeo.org/wiki/Compile_and_Install


Note for Solaris users:

To configure GRASS correctly on a system which doesn't have a suitable
install program (AC_PROG_INSTALL ignores versions which are known to
have problems), you need to ensure that $srcdir is an absolute path,
by using e.g.:

	`pwd`/configure ...
or:
	./configure --srcdir=`pwd` ...

Then proceed as described above.


Note for using a different compiler:

By setting environment variables, the compiler
names can be defined (C and C++):

	CC=cc CPP=cpp ./configure ...


(C) COMPILATION NOTES for 64bit platforms

To successfully compile GRASS on 64bit platforms, the required
FFTW2 library has to be compiled with -fPIC flag:

    #this applies to FFTW2, not GRASS:
    cd fftw-2.1.5/
    CFLAGS="-fPIC" ./configure
    make
    make install

To fully enable 64bit library usage for GRASS on 64bit platforms, 
the following additional parameters are recommended/required:

    ./configure \
       --enable-64bit \
       --with-libs=/usr/lib64 \
       ...

See also CODE OPTIMIZATION below.


(D) INSTALLATION (first time)

After compilation, the resulting code is stored in the directory
    ./dist.$ARCH
and the scripts (grass70, ...) in
    ./bin.$ARCH

To run GRASS, simply start
    ./bin.$ARCH/grass70

or run

    make install
    grass70


(E) INSTALLATION ON MACOSX

See the ReadMe.rtf in the ./macosx/ folder.


(F) RUNNING GRASS GIS

Download a sample data package from the GRASS web site, see
http://grass.osgeo.org/download/sample-data/

Extract the data set and point "database" in the
GRASS startup menu to the directory.

Enjoy.


(G) UPDATE OF SOURCE CODE (SVN or SVN snapshot only)

Assuming that you want to update your current installation from
SVN, you have to perform a few steps. In general:

- update from SVN
- configure, compile

In detail:

    cd /where/your/grass7sourcecode/lives/
    svn update
    ./configure ...
    make
    make install


(H) COMPILING INDIVIDUAL MODULES - OWN MODULES

To compile (self-made) GRASS modules or to compile modified modules
at least the GRASS libraries have to be compiled locally. This is
done by launching:

    make libs

Then change into the module's directory and launch the "make" 
command. The installation can be either done with "make install" from
the main source code directory or locally with 
    "INST_NOW=y make"

You may want to define an alias for this:
    alias gmake7='INST_NOW=y make'
Then simply compile/install the current module with
    gmake7

Note: If you keep your module source code outside the standard GRASS
source code directory structure, you will have to change the relative
path(s) in the Makefile to absolute path(s).


(I) CODE OPTIMIZATION

If you would like to set compiler optimisations, for a possibly faster
binary, type (don't enter a ";" anywhere):

	CFLAGS=-O ./configure
or,
	setenv CFLAGS -O
	./configure

whichever works on your shell. Use -O2 instead of -O if your compiler
supports this (note: O is the letter, not zero). Using the "gcc" compiler,
you can also specify processor specific flags (examples, please suggest
better settings to us):

  CFLAGS="-mcpu=athlon -O2" # AMD Athlon processor with code optimisations
  CFLAGS="-mcpu=pentium"    # Intel Pentium processor
  CFLAGS="-mcpu=pentium4"   # Intel Pentium4 processor
  CFLAGS="-O2 -msse -msse2 -mfpmath=sse -minline-all-stringops" # Intel XEON 64bit processor
  CFLAGS="-mtune=nocona -m64 -minline-all-stringops"            # Intel Pentium 64bit processor

To find out optional CFLAGS for your platform, enter:
  gcc -dumpspecs

See also: http://gcc.gnu.org/

A real fast GRASS version (and small binaries) will be created with
LDFLAGS set to "stripping" (but this disables debugging):

  CFLAGS="-O2 -mcpu=<cpu_see_above> -Wall" LDFLAGS="-s" ./configure


(J) DEBUGGING OPTIONS

The LDFLAGS="" part must be undefined as "-s" will strip the debugging 
information.

Don't use -O for CFLAGS if you want to be able to step through function
bodies. When optimisation is enabled, the compiler will re-order statements
and re-arrange expressions, resulting in object code which barely resembles
the source code.

The -g and -Wall compiler flags are often useful for assisting debugging:

  CFLAGS="-g -Wall" ./configure

See also the file ./doc/debugging.txt and the Wiki page
http://grasswiki.osgeo.org/wiki/GRASS_Debugging


(K) LARGE FILE SUPPORT (for raster maps)

GRASS >= 7.0 includes improved support for reading and writing large files
(> 2GB) if it is possible in your operating system. If you compile with
  configure [...] --enable-largefile
you should be able to have raster and vector maps which are larger than 2GB.

While most code has been updated, individual programs may not yet work with
large files - please report.


(L) SUPPORT

Note that this code is still actively being developed and errors inevitably
turn up. If you find a bug, please report it to the GRASS bug tracking system
so we can fix it. See http://grass.osgeo.org/development/bug-tracking/

If you are interested in helping to develop GRASS, please join the GRASS
developers mailing list. See http://grass.osgeo.org/development/


(M) GRASS PROGRAMMER'S MANUAL

The Programmer's manual is generated with doxygen from the source code.
Please see the README file and the files at:
http://grass.osgeo.org/programming7/

(N) CONTRIBUTING CODE AND PATCHES

Please see ./SUBMITTING in this directory, or better,
http://trac.osgeo.org/grass/wiki/Submitting


(O) DRAFT TUTORIAL

http://grass.osgeo.org/documentation/first-time-users/

------------------
(C) 1999-2016 by The GRASS Development Team

Last changed: $Date: 2016-01-02 16:58:40 +0100 (Sat, 02 Jan 2016) $