Commit b97b386d by Vicent Marti

Update the README with info about the new buildsys

Signed-off-by: Vicent Marti <tanoku@gmail.com>
parent 0ef70b4a
......@@ -5,27 +5,6 @@ libgit2 is a portable, pure C implementation of the Git core methods provided as
re-entrant linkable library with a solid API, allowing you to write native
speed custom Git applications in any language with bindings.
Installing libgit2
==================================
Libgit2 uses the waf build system. To build it, first configure the build
system by running:
$ ./waf configure
Then build the library:
$ ./waf build
You can then test the library with:
$ ./waf test
And finally you can install it with (you may need to sudo):
$ ./waf install
Why Do We Need It
==================================
......@@ -55,18 +34,127 @@ libgit2 is already very usable.
* tree traversal
* basic index file (staging area) operations
Building libgit2 - Unix systems
==================================
In Unix-like systems, like Linux, *BSD and Mac OS X, libgit2 has
the following dependencies:
Installing libgit2
- Python 2.5-3.1 <http://www.python.org>
Used by run the build system; no extra libraries required.
Should probably ship installed with your OS.
- zlib 1.2+ <http://www.zlib.net/>
- LibSSL <http://www.openssl.org/>
Only needed if you want to re-use OpenSSL's SHA1 routines;
libgit2 compiles its own routines by default.
To build it, first configure the build system by running:
$ ./waf configure
Then build the library, either in its shared (libgit2.so) or static form (libgit2.a)
$ ./waf build-static
$ ./waf build-shared
You can then test the library with:
$ ./waf test
And finally you can install it with (you may need to sudo):
$ ./waf install
Building libgit2 - Windows MSVC++
==================================
$ git clone git://github.com/libgit2/libgit2.git
$ cd libgit2
$ make
$ make install
When building under Windows using the MSVC compiler, libgit2 has
the following dependencies:
- Python 2.5-3.1 <http://www.python.org>
Used by run the build system; no extra libraries required.
- zlib 1.2+ (Windows API Version) <http://www.zlib.net/>
Make sure you compile the ZLib library using the MSVC solution
that ships in its source distribution.
Alternatively, you may download precompiled binaries from:
http://www.winimage.com/zLibDll/
- LibSSL <http://www.openssl.org/>
Only needed if you want to re-use OpenSSL's SHA1 routines;
libgit2 compiles its own routines by default.
To build it, first configure the build system by running:
$ ./waf configure
Then build the library, either in its shared (libgit2.dll) or static form (libgit2.lib)
$ ./waf build-static
$ ./waf build-shared
You can then test the library with:
$ ./waf test
Lastly, you can manually install the generated *.lib and *.dll files, depending on
your preferences.
Building libgit2 - Windows MinGW
==================================
When building under Windows using the GCC compiler that ships with MinGW,
libgit2 has the following dependencies:
- Python 2.5-3.1 <http://www.python.org>
Used by run the build system; no extra libraries required.
- zlib 1.2+ <http://www.zlib.net/>
- pthreads-w32 <http://sourceware.org/pthreads-win32/>
Or an equivalent pthreads implementation for non-POSIX systems
- LibSSL <http://www.openssl.org/>
Only needed if you want to re-use OpenSSL's SHA1 routines;
libgit2 compiles its own routines by default.
To build it, first configure the build system and force GCC as the compiler,
instead of the default MSVC:
$ ./waf configure --check-c-compiler=gcc
Then build the library, either in its shared (libgit2.so) or static form (libgit2.a)
$ ./waf build-static
$ ./waf build-shared
You can then test the library with:
$ ./waf test
And finally you can install it with:
$ ./waf install
Configuration settings
==================================
The waf build system for libgit2 accepts the following flags:
--debug
build the library with debug symbols.
Defaults to off.
--sha1=[builtin|ppc|openssl]
use the builtin SHA1 functions, the optimized PPC versions
or the SHA1 functions from LibCrypto (OpenSSL).
Defaults to 'builtin'.
That should get it installed on Mac, Linux or Windows.
Once that is done, you should be able to link the library to your program
with a normal "-lgit2".
You can run `./waf --help` to see a full list of install options and
targets.
Language Bindings
==================================
......
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